1,213 research outputs found

    Efficient and tunable white‐light emission using a dispersible porous polymer

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    A dispersible porous polymer (PEG113‐b ‐DVB800‐co ‐AA200) based on the controlled radical polymerization of divinylbenzene and acrylic acid with a poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) macrochain transfer agent (macro‐CTA) is synthesized and postsynthetically modified with anthracene. This blue‐emitting porous polymer is used to encapsulate the yellow‐emitting fluorophore rhodamine B into its core, resulting in a white‐light emitting dispersion with a quantum yield of 38% and commission internationale de l’éclairage coordinates of (X = 0.33, Y = 0.32)

    DC CICC retrofit magnet preliminary design, protection analysis and software development

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    Advanced superconducting MHD magnet design for a retrofit power plant

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    Develop and test an ICCS for large scale MHD magnets

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    Design requirements definition report for ICCS for large scale MHD magnets

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    DC CICC retrofit magnet preliminary design, protection analysis and software development

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    In the past few years, several computer codes have been written for the purpose of analyzing transient recovery and quench in internally-cooled cable-in-conduit superconductors (ICCS). These codes all include a transient, compressible helium flow model. They differ in the dimensionality'' of the models, ranging from one- to three-dimensional finite element modeling of thermal conduction. The code used in this study, Wong's CICC, is a 1-{1/2} D code that models thermal conduction through the insulation of an individual conduit. Until recently, the calibration of CICC was restricted to measurements of helium expulsion in normal conductor. No actual quenches in ICCS coils had been simulated. In the past year, several experiments on ICCS conductors of differing topology have been performed and compared with CICC simulations, with varying success. This paper reports on the capability of CICC to predict and analyze ICCS recovery and quench, and on the code's limitations and need for further improvements

    Selective environmental remediation of strontium and cesium using sulfonated hypercrosslinked polymers (SHCPs)

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    Sulfonated hypercrosslinked polymers based on 4,4’-bis(chloromethyl)-1,1’-biphenyl (BCMBP) were synthesized via metal-free (SHCP-1) and conventional Lewis acid-catalyzed (SHCP-2) Friedel-Crafts alkylation routes. The sulfonated polymers possessed BET surface areas in excess of 500 m2 g-1. SHCP-1 was investigated for its ability to extract Sr and Cs ions from aqueous solutions via the ion-exchange reaction of the sulfonic acid moiety. Equilibrium uptake data could be accurately modelled by the Dubinin-Radushkevich isotherm, with maximum calculated loading values of 95.6 ± 2.8 mg g-1 (Sr) and 273 ± 37 mg g-1 (Cs). Uptake of both target ions was rapid, with pseudo 2nd-order rate constants calcu-lated as 7.71 ± 1.1 (x 10-2) for Sr and 0.113 ± 0.014 for Cs. Furthermore, the polymer was found to be selective towards the target ions over large excesses of naturally occurring competing metal ions such as Na and K. We conclude that hyper-crosslinked polymers may offer intrinsic advantages over other adsorbents for the remediation of aqueous Sr and Cs contamination
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