Search results for " diffusion"
showing 10 items of 521 documents
Oxygen Diffusion in Alumina. Application to Synthetic and Thermally Grown Al<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>
2005
S. Chevalier, B. Lesage, C. Legros, G. Borchardt, G. Strehl, M. Kilo Laboratoire de Recherches sur la Reactivite des Solides, CNRS UMR 5613, Universite de Bourgogne, F-21078 Dijon, France Laboratoire d’Etudes des Materiaux Hors Equilibre, CNRS UMR 8647, Universite Paris XI, F-91405 Orsay, France. Institut fur Metallurgie, TU Clausthal, Robert Koch Strasse 42, D38678 Clausthal-Zellerfeld, Germany. * sebastien.chevalier@u-bourgogne.fr
Oxygen diffusivity in tumor tissue (DS-Carcinosarcoma) under temperature conditions within the range of 20?40�C
1977
The O2 diffusion constants D and K of tumor tissue (DS-Carcinosarcoma in the rat kidney) were determined at temperatures of 20, 30, 37, and 40 degrees C. The following mean values were obtained for the conditions of 37 degrees C: D = 1.75-10(-5) cm2/s and K = 1.9-10(-5) mlO2/cm-min-atm. Within the range of 20-40 degrees C, temperature variations in tumor tissue cause changes in the O2 diffusion coefficient D of 2.0-2.5%/C and in the Krogh O2 diffusion constant K of 0.5-1.5%/C. The measured O2 diffusion constants for tumor tissue correspond to values of normal tissue with similar water content. This indicates that the insufficient O2 supply in DS-Carcinosarcoma is due not to unfavorable O2 d…
Rafael l. Ninyoles: Recorregut biogràfic i intel·lectual
2020
This article presents the biography and intellectual legacy of Valencian sociologist Rafael L. Ninyoles (1943- 2019). It reviews his formative itinerary, his early contributions to the field of the sociology of language, his latest contributions to the sociology of cities and cultural spaces, and his key involvement in the promoti-on and consolidation of the sociological study of Valencian society. The article includes a note on public acknowledgements to the author, plus an annex with a selective bibliography aimed at serving the interested reader and the posthumous diffusion of Ninyoles? oeuvre.
A Positive Definite Advection Scheme Obtained by Nonlinear Renormalization of the Advective Fluxes
1989
Abstract A new method is developed to obtain a conservative and positive definite advection scheme that produces only small numerical diffusion. Advective fluxes are computed utilizing the integrated flux form of Tremback et al. These fluxes are normalized and then limited by upper and lower values. The resulting advection equation is numerically solved by means of the usual upstream procedure. The proposed treatment is not restricted to the integrated flux form but may also be applied to other known advection algorithms which are formulated in terms of advective fluxes. Different numerical tests are presented illustrating that the proposed scheme strongly reduces numerical and diffusion an…
Representation of solutions and large-time behavior for fully nonlocal diffusion equations
2017
Abstract We study the Cauchy problem for a nonlocal heat equation, which is of fractional order both in space and time. We prove four main theorems: (i) a representation formula for classical solutions, (ii) a quantitative decay rate at which the solution tends to the fundamental solution, (iii) optimal L 2 -decay of mild solutions in all dimensions, (iv) L 2 -decay of weak solutions via energy methods. The first result relies on a delicate analysis of the definition of classical solutions. After proving the representation formula we carefully analyze the integral representation to obtain the quantitative decay rates of (ii). Next we use Fourier analysis techniques to obtain the optimal dec…
Serotypes, Antibiotic Resistance, and Class 1 Integrons in Salmonella Isolates from Pediatric Cases of Enteritis in Tehran, Iran
2011
The present study was conducted to investigate serotype distribution, antimicrobial resistance patterns, carriage of class 1 integron, and clonality of Salmonella strains isolated from patients aged 0-12 years in Tehran, Iran, during 2007-2008. A total of 139 Salmonella isolates were studied. Salmonella serotypes Enteritidis, Infantis, and Typhimurium included 84.9% of isolates, Enteritidis accounting for 41.7%. The most prevalent resistances were to doxycycline (64.7%), nalidixic acid (61.2%), tetracycline (51.8%), and streptomycin (42.8%). Fifty-three (38.1%) isolates contained class 1 integron. Eight different gene cassettes were identified, aadA1 being the most frequently encountered. P…
New insights into seismic absorption imaging
2020
Abstract In recent years, attenuation has been used as a marker for source and dynamic Earth processes due to its higher sensitivity to small variations of lithospheric properties compared to seismic velocity. From seismic hazard analysis to oil and gas exploration and rock physics, many fields need a better reconstruction of energy absorption, a constituent of seismic attenuation generally considered a reliable marker of fluid saturation in space. Here, we propose absorption tomography (AT), a technique grounded on the principles of scattering tomography and Multiple Lapse Time Window Analysis. We benchmark its efficiency to image absorption in space by comparing its results with those obt…
Heterogeneity at the Glass Transition: Translational and Rotational Self-Diffusion
1997
Self-diffusion coefficients, D, have been measured in the glass forming liquids salol, glycerol, phenolphthaleine dimethyl ether (PDE), cresolphthaleine dimethyl ether (CDE), and ααβ-trinaphthylbenzene (TNB) in the supercooled regime. The NMR static magnetic field gradient technique was applied where D >10-14 m2 s-1 can be attained. The results are similar to previous diffusion experiments where an enhancement of translational diffusion was found in comparison with rotational diffusion and shear viscosity. Various models of spatial heterogeneity are related to a phenomenological environmental fluctuation model in view of recent diffusion and relaxation data close to the glass transition.
Si self-diffusion in cubic B20-structured FeSi
2008
Self-diffusion of implanted 31Si in the e-phase FeSi (cubic B20-structure) has been determined in the temperature range 660–810 °C using the modified radiotracer technique. With an activation enthalpy of 2.30 eV and a pre-exponential factor of 15×10−8 m2 s−1 the silicon diffusivity was found to be slightly slower than Ge impurity diffusion in FeSi. This difference is proposed to originate from attractive elastic interactions prevailing between the slightly oversized Ge atoms and the Si sublattice vacancies. The results confirm the argument that 71Ge radioisotopes may be used to substitute the short-lived 31Si radiotracers when estimating self-diffusion in silicides.