227 research outputs found

    Temporal Variation of Cross-Shore Bottom Profile along an Observational Pier at Joetsu-Ogata Coast

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    Source: ICHE Conference Archive - https://mdi-de.baw.de/icheArchiv

    Numerical Investigation on Effects of a Diversion Channel along a Meandering River Based on a 2D Model

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    Source: ICHE Conference Archive - https://mdi-de.baw.de/icheArchiv

    Straightforward synthesis of functionalized cyclic polymers in high yield via RAFT and thiolactone-disulfide chemistry

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    An efficient synthetic pathway toward cyclic polymers based on the combination of thiolactone and disulfide chemistry has been developed. First, heterotelechelic linear polystyrene (PS) containing an alpha-thiolactone (TLa) and an omega-dithiobenzoate group was synthesized via reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization, employing a newly designed TLa-bearing chain transfer agent (CTA). The subsequent reaction of this heterotelechelic polymer with an amine, which acts as a nucleophile for both the TLa and dithiobenzoate units, generated the alpha,omega-thiol-telechelic PS under ambient conditions without the need for any catalyst or other additives. The arrangement of thiols under a high dilution afforded single cyclic PS (c-PS) through an oxidative disulfide linkage. The cyclic PS (c-PS) disulfide ring formation was evidenced by SEC, MALDI-TOF MS and H-1-NMR characterization. Moreover, we demonstrated a controlled ring opening via either disulfide reduction or thiol-disulfide exchange to enable easy and clean topology transformation. Furthermore, to illustrate the broad utility of this synthetic methodology, different amines including functional ones were employed, allowing for the one-step preparation of functionalized cyclic polymers with high yields

    Debris-Flow Deposition and Erosion Processes of the Sediment Deposit Upstream of a Check Dam

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    Source: ICHE Conference Archive - https://mdi-de.baw.de/icheArchiv

    Observed Features of Langmuir Turbulence Forced by Misaligned Wind and Waves Under Destabilizing Buoyancy Flux

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    Several features of Langmuir turbulence remain unquantified despite its potentially large impacts on ocean surface mixing. For example, its vertical velocity variance, expected to be proportional to based on numerical simulations, was proportional to in recent field observations, where is the friction velocity and is surface Stokes velocity. To investigate unquantified features of Langmuir turbulence, we conducted a field experiment around a marine observation tower in a shallow sea off the southern coast of Japan in early winter when winds and waves (often swells) were often misaligned. Coherent structures similar to Langmuir cells were successfully identified in the horizontal and vertical structures of turbulent flows measured with upward- and horizontally looking acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCPs). ADCPs and several anemometers attached at the tower showed that turbulent vertical velocity variance was large when the Langmuir number and Hoenikker number (; where B is surface buoyancy flux and H is the water depth) were both small and that the orientation of the cells was generally aligned in the direction of Lagrangian current shear. These results agree well with the previous numerical results. As in the previous observations, however, the vertical velocity variance appeared to be proportional to . In our experiment, this curious feature was explained by compensatory effects between waves and convection. Misaligned wind with waves also seems to characterize the observed Langmuir turbulence, though further quantitative analysis is required to confirm this result

    Transient Slope Stability Analysis of Landslide Dam Failure

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    Source: ICHE Conference Archive - https://mdi-de.baw.de/icheArchiv
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