96 research outputs found

    The deflocculation of kaolin suspensions : the effect of various electrolytes

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    The deflocculation effect of conventional additives to kaolin suspensions is evaluated from the results standard rheological measurements. Several widely used electrolytes (NaOH, Na2C03, Na2Si03, SHMP = sodium hexametaphosphate, and CMC = sodium salts of carboxymethylcellulose) have been tested. The optimal concentrations of these deffloculants, in respect to reaching the maximum reduction of initial suspension viscosity, are found. The stability of deflocculated kaolin suspensions against sedimentation is evaluated and different aspects of the observed flow enhancement discussed. Inorganic electrolytes are found to be more effective in viscosity reduction, but on the other hand, low-molecular organic CMC additives produce more stable final suspensions.Czech Science Foundation GACR through the contract P101/12/058

    Deflocculation of kaolin suspensions - The effect of various electrolytes

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    Viscosity reduction of aqueous kaolin suspensions by conventional additives (deflocculation) is studied, using standard viscosity measurements. Apparent viscosity at 100 s-1, and flow behavior index n give complex information about changes of viscosity and flow character of deflocculated suspensions. Several widely used deflocculants - electrolytes and polyelectrolytes - are tested in a wide range of concentrations. The optimum concentrations of these deflocculants, which result in minimum apparent viscosity of suspension, are found. Sedimentation stability of deflocculated suspensions is monitored. Inorganic electrolytes are found to be more effective in viscosity reduction. On the other hand, low-molecular-weight polyelectrolytes produce more stable final suspensions.The support by Czech Science Foundation GACR through the contract P101/12/0585 is gratefully acknowledged

    Efficient analysis of high impedance metasurface with an interstitial-currents approach

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    An efficient surface integral equation approach is proposed for the electromagnetic analysis of multilayered doubly periodic arrays of high impedance surfaces. It makes use of equivalent electric and magnetic currents on the interfaces between layers. Interfaces may be physical or fictitious. In the case where the interfaces are physical, the background medium in a given layer can be treated as a homogeneous unbounded medium for which the computation of Green’s function for an infinite doubly periodic array is sufficient. The resulting method-of-moments matrix has a block-tridiagonal structure, which leads to a computational complexity proportional to the number of layers for both matrix filling and solution. The numerical results from a two-layer high impedance surface prove the accuracy and efficiency of the interstitial-currents approac
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