379 research outputs found

    The added mass coefficient of a dispersion of spherical gas bubbles in liquid

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    Models published in the two-phase flow literature for the added mass coefficient of a dilute bubbly dispersion are discussed and compared. It is shown that the differences between the models are mainly due to the different ways in which the added mass is defined. Also, approximate expressions for the added mass coefficient of non-dilute bubbly dispersions are given. Finally, the use of the models in an equation for the average motion of the bubbles is briefly discussed

    Work and its effect on personality development in Africans

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    Social Sciences Research Conference, Institute for Social Research, 196

    Theory of membrane capacitive deionization including the effect of the electrode pore space

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    Membrane capacitive deionization (MCDI) is a technology for water desalination based on applying an electrical field between two oppositely placed porous electrodes. Ions are removed from the water flowing through a channel in between the electrodes and are stored inside the electrodes. Ion-exchange membranes are placed in front of the electrodes allowing for counterion transfer from the channel into the electrode, while retaining the coions inside the electrode structure. We set up an extended theory for MCDI which includes in the description for the porous electrodes not only the electrostatic double layers (EDLs) formed inside the porous (carbon) particles, but also incorporates the role of the transport pathways in the electrode, i.e., the interparticle pore space. Because in MCDI the coions are inhibited from leaving the electrode region, the interparticle porosity becomes available as a reservoir to store salt, thereby increasing the total salt storage capacity of the porous electrode. A second advantage of MCDI is that during ion desorption (ion release) the voltage can be reversed. In that case the interparticle porosity can be depleted of counterions, thereby increasing the salt uptake capacity and rate in the next cycle. In this work, we compare both experimentally and theoretically adsorption/desorption cycles of MCDI for desorption at zero voltage as well as for reversed voltage, and compare with results for CDI. To describe the EDL-structure a novel modified Donnan model is proposed valid for small pores relative to the Debye length

    Attractive forces in microporous carbon electrodes for capacitive deionization

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    The recently developed modified Donnan (mD) model provides a simple and useful description of the electrical double layer in microporous carbon electrodes, suitable for incorporation in porous electrode theory. By postulating an attractive excess chemical potential for each ion in the micropores that is inversely proportional to the total ion concentration, we show that experimental data for capacitive deionization (CDI) can be accurately predicted over a wide range of applied voltages and salt concentrations. Since the ion spacing and Bjerrum length are each comparable to the micropore size (few nm), we postulate that the attraction results from fluctuating bare Coulomb interactions between individual ions and the metallic pore surfaces (image forces) that are not captured by meanfield theories, such as the Poisson-Boltzmann-Stern model or its mathematical limit for overlapping double layers, the Donnan model. Using reasonable estimates of the micropore permittivity and mean size (and no other fitting parameters), we propose a simple theory that predicts the attractive chemical potential inferred from experiments. As additional evidence for attractive forces, we present data for salt adsorption in uncharged microporous carbons, also predicted by the theory.Comment: 19 page

    Non-Gaussian curvature distribution of actin-propelled biomimetric colloid trajectories

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    We analyze the motion of colloids propelled by a comet-like tail of polymerizing actin filaments. The curvature of the particle trajectories deviates strongly from a Gaussian distribution, implying that the underlying microscopic processes are fluctuating in a non-independent manner. Trajectories for beads of different size all showed the same non-Gaussian behavior, while the mean curvature decreased weakly with size. A stochastic simulation that includes nucleation, force-dependent dissociation, growth, and capping of filaments, shows that the non-Gaussian curvature distribution can be explained by a positive feedback mechanism in which attached chains under higher tension are more likely to sna

    High-resolution Laser Spectroscopy of NO2 just above the X2 A1-A2B conical intersection: Transitions of K_=1 stacks

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    The complexity of the absorption spectrum of NO2NO2 can be attributed to a conical intersection of the potential energy surfaces of the two lowest electronic states, the electronic ground state of 2A12A1 symmetry and the first electronically excited state of 2B22B2 symmetry. In a previous paper we reported on the feasibility of using the hyperfine splittings, specifically the Fermi-contact interaction, to determine the electronic ground state character of the excited vibronic states in the region just above the conical intersection; 10 000 to 14 000 cm−114 000 cm−1 above the electronic ground state. High-resolution spectra of a number of vibronic bands in this region were measured by exciting a supersonically cooled beam of NO2NO2 molecules with a narrow-band Ti:Sapphire ring laser. The energy absorbed by the molecules was detected by the use of a bolometer. In the region of interest, rovibronic interactions play no significant role, with the possible exception of the vibronic band at 12 658 cm−1,12 658 cm−1, so that the fine- and hyperfine structure of each rotational transition could be analyzed by using an effective Hamiltonian. In the previous paper we restricted ourselves to an analysis of transitions of the K⎯=0K−=0 stack. In the present paper we extend the analysis to transitions of the K⎯=1K−=1 stack, from which, in addition to hyperfine coupling constants, values of the AA rotational constants of the excited NO2NO2 molecules can be determined. Those rotational constants also contain information about the electronic composition of the vibronic states, and, moreover, about the geometry of the NO2NO2 molecule in the excited state of interest. The results of our analyses are compared with those obtained by other authors. The conclusion arrived at in our previous paper that determining Fermi-constants is useful to help characterize the vibronic bands, is corroborated. In addition, the AA rotational constants correspond to geometries that are consistent with the electronic composition of the relevant excited states as expected from the Fermi-constants
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