Search results for "Particle density"
showing 10 items of 15 documents
Poplar Biochar as an Alternative Substrate for Curly Endive Cultivated in a Soilless System
2020
Imminent necessity for eco-friendly and low-cost substitutes to peat is a defiance in the soilless plant cultivation systems. Wood biochar could entirely or partly substitute peat as a plant growing constituent to produce vegetables. Nevertheless, knowledge concerning potential plant performance of leafy green vegetables grown on wood biochar is restricted. The present study assessed the main physicochemical traits of various growing media constituted by decreasing the content of peat and by increasing the percentages of poplar wood biochar. Yield, nutritional and functional properties of curly endive plants cultivated in a protected environment were also tested. Biochar was pyrolyzed from …
Diffusion of colloids in one-dimensional light channels
2004
Single-file diffusion (SFD), prevalent in many chemical and biological processes, refers to the one-dimensional motion of interacting particles in pores which are so narrow that the mutual passage of particles is excluded. Since the sequence of particles in such a situation remains unaffected over time t, this leads to strong deviations from normal diffusion, e.g. an increase of the particle mean-square-displacement as the square root of t. We present experimental results of the diffusive behaviour of colloidal particles in one-dimensional channels with varying particle density. The channels are realized by means of a scanning optical tweezers. Based on a new analytical approach (Kollmann 2…
Monte Carlo Study of the Isotropic-Nematic Interface in Suspensions of Spherocylinders
2007
The isotropic to nematic transition in suspensions of anisotropic colloids is studied by means of grand canonical Monte Carlo simulation. From measurements of the grand canonical probability distribution of the particle density, the coexistence densities of the isotropic and the nematic phase are determined, as well as the interfacial tension.
Collective hydrodynamic transport of magnetic microrollers
2021
We investigate the collective transport properties of microscopic magnetic rollers that propel close to a surface due to a circularly polarized, rotating magnetic field. The applied field exerts a torque to the particles, which induces a net rolling motion close to a surface. The collective dynamics of the particles result from the balance between magnetic dipolar interactions and hydrodynamic ones. We show that, when hydrodynamics dominate, i.e. for high particle spinning, the collective mean velocity linearly increases with the particle density. In this regime we analyse the clustering kinetics, and find that hydrodynamic interactions between the anisotropic, elongated particles, induce p…
Interfacial tension of the isotropic-nematic interface in suspensions of soft spherocylinders.
2005
The isotropic to nematic transition in a system of soft spherocylinders is studied by means of grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations. The probability distribution of the particle density is used to determine the coexistence density of the isotropic and the nematic phases. The distributions are also used to compute the interfacial tension of the isotropic--nematic interface, including an analysis of finite size effects. Our results confirm that the Onsager limit is not recovered until for very large elongation, exceeding at least L/D=40, with L the spherocylinder length and D the diameter. For smaller elongation, we find that the interfacial tension increases with increasing L/D, in agreem…
Particle suspension in top-covered unbaffled tanks
2010
Abstract Unbaffled stirred tanks are seldom employed in the process industry as they are considered poorer mixers than baffled vessels. However, they may be expected to provide significant advantages in a wide range of applications (e.g. crystallization, food and pharmaceutical processes, etc.), where the presence of baffles is often undesirable. In the present work solid–liquid suspension in an unbaffled stirred tank is investigated. The tank was equipped with a top-cover in order to avoid vortex formation. A novel experimental method (the “steady cone radius method”, SCRM) is proposed to determine experimentally the minimum impeller speed at which solids are completely suspended. Experime…
A comparative study on the phase behaviour of highly charged colloidal spheres in a confining wedge geometry
2005
We studied the structures formed in aqueous dispersions of charged colloidal spheres under a constant low salt concentration of c = 6 × 10−6 mol l−1. Particles of diameter 2a = 1000 nm were confined to a low angle wedge geometry with plate separation 0<S<50 µm and observed with video microscopy. Irrespective of the initial particle density n we reproducibly observe the particles to migrate to the narrow wedge side on the timescale of a few days. Thereby an interface between a crystalline structure and a near particle free region is formed, which propagates slowly until the dilute region is exhausted of particles. While the origin of this separation is still unclear, the final extension of t…
Intrinsic linearity of bakelite Resistive Plate Chambers operated in streamer mode
2019
Abstract Resistive Plate Chambers have largely been used in High Energy Physics and Cosmic Ray research. In view of using this detector for calorimetry applications it is important to know the maximum measurable particle density, or its intrinsic linearity limit, which is tightly related to the dimension of the discharge region. In this paper we report the results of measurements performed at the Beam Test Facility (INFN National Laboratory of Frascati, Italy) where the intrinsic linearity of bakelite RPCs operated in streamer mode has been tested at different impinging particle densities.
Applications of Finite-Size-Scaling Techniques to the Simulation of Critical Fluids
1995
A finite-size scaling theory is described that takes account of the lack of symmetry between the coexisting phases of fluids. This broken symmetry is manifest in the so-called ‘field mixing’ phenomenon which is a central feature of the non-universal critical behaviour of fluids. It is shown that the presence of field mixing leads to an alteration to the limiting form of the critical energy distribution and to a finite-size correction to the critical order parameter (particle density) distribution. As a result, finite-size shifts occur in the critical particle and energy densities. The theoretical predictions are tested with an extensive Monte-Carlo study of the critical density and energy f…
Dimensionality effects in restricted bosonic and fermionic systems
2000
The phenomenon of Bose-like condensation, the continuous change of the dimensionality of the particle distribution as a consequence of freezing out of one or more degrees of freedom in the low particle density limit, is investigated theoretically in the case of closed systems of massive bosons and fermions, described by general single-particle hamiltonians. This phenomenon is similar for both types of particles and, for some energy spectra, exhibits features specific to multiple-step Bose-Einstein condensation, for instance the appearance of maxima in the specific heat. In the case of fermions, as the particle density increases, another phenomenon is also observed. For certain types of sing…