Search results for "Wetting"

showing 10 items of 235 documents

Comparative study of degassing membrane modules for the removal of methane from Expanded Granular Sludge Bed anaerobic reactor effluent

2016

Abstract The feasibility of an emergent technology for in situ removal/recovery of methane from the effluent of an Expanded Granular Sludge Bed (EGSB) anaerobic reactor has been studied. For this purpose, the performances of two commercial hollow fibre degassing contactors with different membrane materials – microporous (polypropylene, PP) and non-porous (polydimethylsiloxane, PDMS) – were compared. The influence of water fluxes (Q L /A membrane ranging from 22.6 to 377.4 L h −1  m −2 ), vacuum pressure (140–800 mbar), sweep gas fluxes (Q N2 /A membrane ranging from 0.14 × 10 3 to 4.44 × 10 3  L h −1  m −2 ), and mode of operation (liquid flowing in the lumen side or the shell side) was stu…

ChromatographyGasos d'efecte hivernaclePolydimethylsiloxaneFiltration and Separation02 engineering and technologyMicroporous material010501 environmental sciences021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesMethaneAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundMembranechemistryChemical engineeringMass transferWetting0210 nano-technologyPorosityEffluent0105 earth and related environmental sciencesSeparation and Purification Technology
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Preparation, characterization and hydrolytic degradation of PLA/PCL co-mingled nanofibrous mats prepared via dual-jet electrospinning

2017

Abstract PLA/PCL co-mingled nanofibrous mats were prepared via multi-jet electrospinning. The concentration of PLA and PCL in the co-mingled mats were controlled by changing the flow rate of the two polymer solutions. The amount of PLA and PCL in the co-mingled nanofibrous mats was monitored by UV–Vis measurements through a colored dye added to PLA and by FTIR-ATR analysis. Morphology and mechanical properties of the nanofibrous mats were respectively examined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and tensile tests. Water contact angles measurements were also carried out in order to investigate the wettability of the materials. Finally, the hydrolytic degradation of the mats in buffer solut…

Co-mingled nanomatCo-electrospinningMaterials scienceHydrolytic degradationPolymers and PlasticsScanning electron microscopeGeneral Physics and Astronomy02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesContact anglechemistry.chemical_compoundPhysics and Astronomy (all)Polymer degradationUltimate tensile strengthMaterials ChemistryComposite materialchemistry.chemical_classificationPolymers and PlasticpH dependent degradationOrganic ChemistryPolymerBuffer solutionPolymer degradation021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyElectrospinning0104 chemical scienceschemistryChemical engineeringDual-jet electrospinningWetting0210 nano-technology
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From connected pathway flow to ganglion dynamics

2015

During imbibition, initially connected oil is displaced until it is trapped as immobile clusters. While initial and final states have been well described before, here we image the dynamic transient process in a sandstone rock using fast synchrotron-based X-ray computed microtomography. Wetting film swelling and subsequent snap off, at unusually high saturation, decreases nonwetting phase connectivity, which leads to nonwetting phase fragmentation into mobile ganglia, i.e., ganglion dynamics regime. We find that in addition to pressure-driven connected pathway flow, mass transfer in the oil phase also occurs by a sequence of correlated breakup and coalescence processes. For example, meniscus…

Coalescence (physics)HydrologyLength scaleGeophysicsMaterials scienceMass transferMultiphase flowGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesImbibitionWettingMechanicsBreakupSaturation (chemistry)Geophysical Research Letters
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How do droplets on a surface depend on the system size?

2002

Abstract We investigate the thermodynamics of inhomogeneous polymer melts in the framework of a coarse grained off-lattice model. Properties of the liquid–vapour interface and the packing of the melt in contact with an attractive wall are considered. We employ Monte Carlo simulations in the grand canonical ensemble to determine excess free energies, the wetting temperature and the pre-wetting line, as well as the pre-wetting critical point. Having determined the wetting properties and the phase diagram of the model polymer, we perform canonical Monte Carlo simulations of small droplets on a surface. This allows us to study the dependence of droplet size on the wetting properties. It is foun…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterPhysics::Fluid DynamicsContact angleSurface tensionGrand canonical ensembleColloid and Surface ChemistryWetting transitionChemistryCritical point (thermodynamics)Monte Carlo methodThermodynamicsWettingPhase diagram
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Method for wettability characterization based on contact line pinning.

2010

We demonstrate an efficient and reliable method for wettability characterization by determining the contact angle theta which a liquid-vapor interface makes with a solid wall. The purpose is to overcome the difficulties, related to the curvature of the liquid-vapor interface, which make measurements of theta rather uncertain, especially on the micro- and nanoscale. The method employs a specially designed slitlike channel in contact with a reservoir whereby the wettability of one of the slit walls is to be examined whereas the other (auxiliary) wall is separated by half into a lyophilic and a lyophobic part so as to pin the incoming fluid and fix the one end of the liquid-vapor interface. In…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterPhysics::Fluid DynamicsContact angleWork (thermodynamics)Materials scienceInterface (computing)Contact lineThermodynamicsWettingMechanicsCurvatureNanoscopic scaleCharacterization (materials science)Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics
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Phase transitions and phase equilibria in spherical confinement

2013

Phase transitions in finite systems are rounded and shifted and affected by boundary effects due to the surface of the system. This interplay of finite size and surface effects for fluids confined inside of a sphere of radius $R$ is studied by a phenomenological theory and Monte Carlo simulations of a model for colloid-polymer mixtures. For this system the phase separation in a colloid-rich phase and a polymer-rich phase has been previously studied extensively in the bulk. It is shown that spherical confinement can strongly enhance the miscibility of the mixture. Depending on the wall potentials at the confining surface, the wetting properties of the wall can be controlled, and this interpl…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterQuantum phase transitionsymbols.namesakePhase transitionMaterials scienceCondensed matter physicsPhase (matter)symbolsRadiusWettingAtomic packing factorKelvin equationCritical exponentPhysical Review E
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Spinodal Decomposition Kinetics of Colloid-Polymer Mixtures Including Hydrodynamic Interactions

2012

The phase separation dynamics of a model colloid-polymer mixture is studied by taking explicitly the hydrodynamic interactions caused by the solvent into account. Based on the studies on equilibrium phase behavior we perform a volume quench from the homogeneous region of the phase diagram deep into the region where colloid-rich and polymer-rich phases coexist. We demonstrate that the Multiparticle Collision Dynamics (MPCD) algorithm is well suited to study spinodal decomposition and present first results on the domain growth behavior of colloid-polymer mixtures in quasi two-dimensional confinement. On the one hand side we find that the boundary condition of the solvent with respect to the r…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterSolventchemistry.chemical_classificationColloidMaterials sciencechemistryChemical physicsSpinodal decompositionKineticsBoundary value problemWettingPolymerPhase diagram
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Wetting and phase separation at surfaces

2005

We study the problem ofsurfacedirected spinodal decomposition, viz., the dynamical interplay of wetting and phase separation at surfaces. In particular, we focus on the kinetics of wetting-layer growth in a semi-infinite geometry for arbitrary surface potentials and mixture compositions. We also present representative results for phase separation in confined geometries, e.g., cylindrical pores, thin films, etc.

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterSurface (mathematics)Materials scienceChemical physicsSpinodal decompositionKineticsGeneral Physics and AstronomyPhysical chemistryWettingThin filmFocus (optics)Pramana
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The interplay between wetting and phase behaviour in binary polymer films and wedges: Monte Carlo simulations and mean field calculations

2005

By confining a binary mixture, one can profoundly alter its miscibility behaviour. The qualitative features of miscibility in confined geometry are rather universal and are shared by polymer mixtures as well as small molecules, but the unmixing transition in the bulk and the wetting transition are typically well separated in polymer blends. We study the interplay between wetting and miscibility of a symmetric polymer mixture via large scale Monte Carlo simulations in the framework of the bond fluctuation model and via numerical self-consistent field calculations. The film surfaces interact with the monomers via short-ranged potentials, and the wetting transition of the semi-infinite system …

Condensed matter physicsAntisymmetric relationChemistry02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciencesCritical point (mathematics)Tricritical pointWetting transition0103 physical sciencesDouble wedgeGeneral Materials ScienceIsing modelWetting010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyPhase diagramJournal of Physics: Condensed Matter
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Heterogeneous nucleation at a wall near a wetting transition: a Monte Carlo test of the classical theory

2009

While for a slightly supersaturated vapor the free energy barrier ΔF(hom)(*), which needs to be overcome in a homogeneous nucleation event, may be extremely large, nucleation is typically much easier at the walls of the container in which the vapor is located. While no nucleation barrier exists if the walls are wet, for incomplete wetting of the walls, described via a nonzero contact angle Θ, classical theory predicts that nucleation happens through sphere-cap-shaped droplets attracted to the wall, and their formation energy is ΔF(het)(*) = ΔF(hom)(*)f(Θ), with f(Θ) = (1-cosΘ)(2)(2+cosΘ)/4. This prediction is tested through simulations for the simple cubic lattice gas model with nearest-nei…

Condensed matter physicsChemistryEvaporationNucleationThermodynamicsCondensed Matter PhysicsPhysics::Fluid DynamicsContact angleWetting transitionPhenomenological modelPeriodic boundary conditionsGeneral Materials ScienceIsing modelWettingJournal of Physics: Condensed Matter
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