Search results for "Silicate"

showing 10 items of 413 documents

Photosensitivity of SiO2–Al and SiO2–Na glasses under ArF (193 nm) laser

2009

Abstract Photosensitivity of SiO 2 –Al and SiO 2 –Na glass samples was probed by means of the induced optical absorption and luminescence as well as by electron spin-resonance (ESR) after irradiation with excimer-laser photons (ArF, 193 nm). Permanent visible darkening in the case of SiO 2 –Al and transient, life time about one hour, visible darkening in the case of SiO 2 –Na was found under irradiation at 290 K. No darkening was observed at 80 K for either kind of material. This investigation is dedicated to revealing the electronic processes responsible for photosensitivity at 290 and 80 K. The photosensitivity of both materials is related to impurity defects excited directly in the case …

Electron mobilityPhotoluminescenceChemistryDopingAnalytical chemistryCondensed Matter PhysicsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsPhotosensitivityImpurityMaterials ChemistryCeramics and CompositesIrradiationRadiation effects Glasses Laser–matter interactions Optical spectroscopy Defects Optical properties Absorption Lasers Luminescence Photoinduced effects Time resolved measurements Oxide glasses Alkali silicates Aluminosilicates Silica Silicates Radiation Electron spin resonanceSpectroscopyLuminescence
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Composition and physicochemical properties of calcium silicate based sealers: A review article

2017

Background Recently a new generation of endodontic sealers has been developed based on calcium silicate as MTA Fillapex, Endoseal MTA, Total Fill BC Sealer, EndoSequence BC Sealer, iRoot SP, Endo CPM sealer, MTA-Angelus and ProRoot Endo Sealer. A review of literature was conducted to discuss the composition, physicochemical properties, and clinical perspectives of calcium silicate based sealers. Material and methods A literature search was conducted in PubMed and web of knowledge databases with appropriate MeSh terms and keywords. A total of 71 studies were reviewed for data extraction. Results and conclusions Calcium silicate based sealers showed suitable physical properties to be used as …

Endo-CPM-SealerMaterials scienceMesh termchemistry.chemical_elementReview030206 dentistry02 engineering and technologyCalcium:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyRoot Canal Filling MaterialsOperative Dentistry and Endodontics03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineChemical engineeringWeb of knowledgechemistryMTA-FillapexUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASCalcium silicate0210 nano-technologyGeneral DentistryJournal of Clinical and Experimental Dentistry
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Characterization of the Etna volcanic emissions through an active biomonitoring technique (moss-bags): Part 2 – Morphological and mineralogical featu…

2013

Volcanic emissions were studied at Mount Etna (Italy) by using moss-bags technique. Mosses were exposed around the volcano at different distances from the active vents to evaluate the impact of volcanic emissions in the atmosphere. Morphology and mineralogy of volcanic particulate intercepted by mosses were investigated using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) equipped with energy dispersive spectrometer (EDS). Particles emitted during passive degassing activity from the two active vents, Bocca Nuova and North East Crater (BNC and NEC), were identified as silicates, sulfates and halide compounds. In addition to volcanic particles, we found evidences also of geogenic, anthropogenic and marin…

Energy Dispersive SpectrometerPlumeEnvironmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisMineralogyVolcanic EruptionsPassive degassingSphagnumMass SpectrometryAtmosphereSphagnumImpact craterMetals HeavyVolcanic aerosols; Plume; Passive degassing; Sphagnum; SulfatesBiomonitoringSphagnopsidaEnvironmental ChemistryVolcanic aerosolSicilygeographySettore GEO/06 - Mineralogiageography.geographical_feature_categoryGeographybiologyAtmosphereSulfatesSilicatesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryParticulatesbiology.organism_classificationPollutionPlumeSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E VulcanologiaVolcanoMicroscopy Electron ScanningEnvironmental scienceParticulate MatterEnvironmental Monitoring
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Adsorption of a dye on clay and sand. Use of cyclodextrins as solubility-enhancement agents.

2007

Abstract Laboratory-scale studies were aimed at elucidating the physico-chemical aspects on the removal process of crystal violet (CV) from waters and solid substrates. The laponite clay (RD) and sand were chosen for the double aim at investigating them as CV adsorbents for water treatment and as substrates which mime the soil components. Sand is very effective in removing CV from waters. The cyclodextrins (CDs) were exploited as solubility-enhancement agents to remove CV from the solid substrates. They are powerful solvent media because they extract the CV from sand forming water-soluble CV/CD inclusion complexes and do not show affinity for sand. Optimum performance was shown by the modif…

Environmental EngineeringDyeHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisSolid substrateInclusion compoundWater Purificationchemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionCyclodextrinEnvironmental ChemistryCrystal violetSolubilityEquilibrium constantSettore CHIM/02 - Chimica Fisicachemistry.chemical_classificationCyclodextrinsInclusion complexChromatographyCyclodextrinChemistryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistrySilicon DioxidePollutionSolventModels ChemicalSolubilityClayThermodynamicsWater treatmentAluminum SilicatesGentian VioletAdsorptionFlushing agentWater Pollutants ChemicalNuclear chemistryChemosphere
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The use of lightweight expanded clay aggregate (LECA) as sorbent for PAHs removal from water.

2012

Author's version of an article in the journal: Journal of Hazardous Materials. Also available from the publisher at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2012.03.038 Lightweight expanded clay aggregate (LECA) has been explored as a sorbent for the removal of PAHs (phenanthrene, fluoranthene and pyrene) from water. The efficacy of LECA as a sorbent for PAHs was assessed using contact time, mass of sorbent and sorption isotherms in a series of batch experiments. Maximum (optimum) sorption was reached at 21 h after which the amount of PAHs sorbed remained almost constant. Batch experiments were conducted by shaking a 100 ml solution mixture of individual PAHs (containing 0.02 mg/L) with LECA. T…

Environmental EngineeringSorbentsorptionWaste managementVDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Chemistry: 440Health Toxicology and MutagenesisWater pollutantsPollutionGas Chromatography-Mass SpectrometryContaminated waterPAHsHazardous wasteLECAMicroscopy Electron ScanningEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceClayExpanded clay aggregatecontaminated waterAluminum SilicatesPolycyclic CompoundsAdsorptionParticle SizeWaste Management and DisposalWater Pollutants ChemicalJournal of hazardous materials
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Investigation of the noble gas solubility in H2O–CO2 bearing silicate liquids at moderate pressure II: the extended ionic porosity (EIP) model

2000

A semi-theoretical model is proposed to predict partitioning of noble gases between any silicate liquid and a H2O–CO2 gas phase with noble gas as a minor component, in a large range of pressures (at least up to 300 MPa). The model is based on the relationship between the concentration of dissolved noble gas and ionic porosity of the melt, found by Carroll and Stolper [Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 57 (1993) 5039–5051] for H2O–CO2 free melts. It evaluates the effect of dissolved H2O and CO2 on the melt ionic porosity and, consequently on Henry’s constants of noble gases. The fugacities of the noble gases in the H2O–CO2–noble gas mixtures are also considered in our equilibrium calculations of diss…

Equation of stateMineralogyNoble gaschemistry.chemical_elementIonic bondingThermodynamicsSilicatechemistry.chemical_compoundGeophysicsXenonchemistrySpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)SolubilityPorosityHeliumGeologyEarth and Planetary Science Letters
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Petrography and decay of a marly limestone in the cloister of a medieval cathedral in Sicily

2004

This paper deals with a significant process of decohesion of a marly limestone, taking place in the cloister of the medieval Cathedral of Cefalu, a pleasant town on the northern coast of Sicily. After desalination with deionised water and consolidation with ethyl silicate, the decay of the stone became faster. The aim of our study is to characterise the stony material and investigate the observed decay phenomena. The stone, that is a poor building material indeed, is characterised by means of petrographical, chemical and physical analyses on samples taken from the monument. Furthermore, experimental tests are performed in the laboratory in order to highlight the causes of incompatibility be…

Ethyl silicateCloisterGeneral EngineeringWeatheringDecayArchaeologyPetrographyMining engineeringEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)CefalùGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental ChemistryCarbonate rockSedimentary rockMarly limestoneSicilyGeologyGeneral Environmental ScienceWater Science and TechnologyEnvironmental Geology
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Influence of temperature on the hydration products of low pH cements

2012

International audience; The chemical evolution of two hydrated "low pH" binders prepared from binary (60% Portland cement + 40% silica fume) or ternary (37.5% Portland cement +32.5% silica fume + 30% fly-ash) mixtures was characterized over one year at 20 degrees C. 50 degrees C, and 80 degrees C. The main hydrates were Al-substituted C-S-H. Raising the temperature from 20 to 80 degrees C caused a lengthening and cross-linking of their silicate chains. Ettringite that formed in pastes stored at 20 degrees C was destabilized. Only traces of calcium sulfate (gypsum and/or anhydrite) reprecipitated after one year in some materials cured at 50 degrees C and 80 degrees C. The sulfates released w…

EttringiteGypsumSilica fume[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Inorganic chemistry0211 other engineering and technologiesMAS NMR-SPECTROSCOPYTRICALCIUM SILICATE02 engineering and technologyengineering.materialchemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionSI-29021105 building & construction[CHIM]Chemical SciencesGeneral Materials ScienceCALCIUM-SULFATEPART IIAL-27 NMRELEVATED-TEMPERATURESAnhydriteBuilding and ConstructionALUMINUM021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyAlkali metalSilicateC-S-HchemistryChemical engineeringengineering0210 nano-technologyTernary operationPORTLAND-CEMENT
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Le comportement du soufre et les conditions d'oxydoréduction dans les basaltes hydratés de l'Etna inférés par des inclusions vitreuses et des verres …

2017

Sulfur is an important volatile component of magmas that presents different oxidation states, depending on the redox conditions and on the phase of occurrence: in silicate melts it is typically dissolved as S⁶⁺ and/or S²⁻ , in the gas phase it occurs principally as SO₂ (S⁴⁺ ) and H₂S (S²⁻). Mount Etna, in which magmatic redox conditions are poorly constrained, is used as a case study to investigate sulfur behavior in hydrous basaltic magmas during magma differentiation and degassing. This research integrates the study of natural olivine-hosted melt inclusions with an experimental study on S solubility in hydrous alkali basalts at magmatic conditions.Experimental results suggest the importan…

ExpériencesInclusions vitreuses silicatiquesSoufreSettore GEO/07 - Petrologia E Petrografia[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciencesoxygen fugacitysilicate melt inclusionsexperimentsXANES Fe3+/ΣFe ratiosulfur silicate melt inclusions experiments XANES Fe3+/ΣFe ratio oxygen fugacityXANES Fe³⁺/ΣFe ratioSilicate melt inclusionssulfurFugacité d'oxygèneExperimentsSulfurOxygen fugacity
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Osmium and lithium isotope evidence for weathering feedbacks linked to orbitally paced organic carbon burial and Silurian glaciations

2022

Abstract The Ordovician (∼487 to 443 Ma) ended with the formation of extensive Southern Hemisphere ice sheets, known as the Hirnantian glaciation, and the second largest mass extinction in Earth History. It was followed by the Silurian (∼443 to 419 Ma), one of the most climatically unstable periods of the Phanerozoic as evidenced by several large scale ( > 5 ‰ ) carbon isotope (δ13C) perturbations associated with further extinction events. Despite several decades of research, the cause of these environmental instabilities remains enigmatic. Here, we provide osmium (187Os/188Os) and lithium (δ7Li) isotope measurements of marine sedimentary rocks that cover four Silurian δ13C excursions. Osmi…

Extinction eventeccentricity and precessionHirnantian glaciationosmium ( Os/ Os) and lithium (δ Li) isotopesGeologic recordorbital obliquityPaleontologysilicate weatheringGeophysicsIsotopes of carbonGeochemistry and PetrologySpace and Planetary SciencePhanerozoicOrdovicianEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Sedimentary rockGlacial periodGlobal coolingGeologySilurian palaeoclimate
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