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Stretching of a capillary bridge featuring a particle-laden interface: particle sedimentation in the interface
This paper was presented at the 4th Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2014), which was held at University College, London, UK. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute, ASME Press, LCN London Centre for Nanotechnology, UCL University College London, UCL Engineering, the International NanoScience Community, www.nanopaprika.eu.Colloidal particles adsorbed at fluid interfaces can be subject to external forces, for instance of magnetic,
electrical, or gravitational origin. To develop a tool that will enable to study the effect of these forces
on interfacial particle transport, we derive a transport equation for the surface particle concentration using the
method of volume averaging. This equation is specialised to the problem of particle sedimentation induced by
external forces on an axisymmetric capillary bridge stretched with assigned constant velocity between two circular plates. The equation for the interfacial concentration is one-way coupled to the unsteady Stokes equation in the capillary bridge, and solved in the thin-thread approximation, in the limit of small capillary and Bond numbers and for moderate area fractions. We find that owing to the competition between particle settling in one direction, and fluid velocity in the opposite direction, a concentration peak develops between the neck region and the moving plate. Hydrodynamic interactions, modelled through a concentration-dependent hindrance function, have the effect of steepening the shock-like concentration gradients that develop in the interface
Buckling vs. particle desorption in a particle-covered drop subject to compressive surface stresses: a simulation study
We study via a new simulation method the transition between buckling and particle desorption when a particle-covered drop is compressed.</p
Affine actions on non-archimedean trees
We initiate the study of affine actions of groups on -trees for a
general ordered abelian group ; these are actions by dilations rather
than isometries. This gives a common generalisation of isometric action on a
-tree, and affine action on an -tree as studied by I. Liousse. The
duality between based length functions and actions on -trees is
generalised to this setting. We are led to consider a new class of groups:
those that admit a free affine action on a -tree for some .
Examples of such groups are presented, including soluble Baumslag-Solitar
groups and the discrete Heisenberg group.Comment: 27 pages. Section 1.4 expanded, typos corrected from previous versio
Vibrational spectra of sodium paratungstate 26 hydrate, Na<SUB>10</SUB>(H<SUB>2</SUB>W<SUB>12</SUB>O<SUB>42</SUB>)·26H<SUB>2</SUB>O
A great number of polymolybdates and tungstates have been identified and subjected to a series of investigations. These types of compounds are interesting in several fields of chemistry including catalysis, solid-state applications and medicine [4-6]. X-ray studies of these phases show the existence of corner- and edge-shared XO6 octahedra (X = Mo and W).Centro de QuĂmica Inorgánic
X-ray Imaging of Transplanar Liquid Transport Mechanisms in Single Layer Textiles
Understanding the
penetration of liquids within textile fibers
is critical for the development of next-generation smart textiles.
Despite substantial research on liquid penetration in the plane of
the textile, little is known about how the liquid penetrates in the
thickness direction. Here we report a time-resolved high-resolution
X-ray measurement of the motion of the liquid–air interface
within a single layer textile, as the liquid is transported across
the textile thickness following the deposition of a droplet. The measurement
of the time-dependent position of the liquid meniscus is made possible
by the use of ultrahigh viscosity liquids (dynamic viscosity from
10<sup>5</sup> to 2.5 Ă— 10<sup>6</sup>Â times larger than
water). This approach enables imaging due to the slow penetration
kinetics. Imaging results suggest a three-stage penetration process
with each stage being associated with one of the three types of capillary
channels existing in the textile geometry, providing insights into
the effect of the textile structure on the path of the three-dimensional
liquid meniscus. One dimensional kinetics studies show that our data
for the transplanar penetration depth Δ<i>x</i><sub>L</sub> vs time do not conform to a power law, and that the measured
rate of penetration for long times is smaller than that predicted
by Lucas–Washburn kinetics, challenging commonly held assumptions
regarding the validity of power laws when applied to relatively thin
textiles
Nonlinear dynamic analysis of gas turbine combustor leaf seal
The leaf seals are one of the typical sealing systems in gas turbine and jet engines. In Baker Hughes LT family gas turbines, they are used to create sealing between the combustion chamber and the first stage nozzle. The leaf seals are thin metallic plates and subjected to dynamic loads and high temperatures. They have curved contacts, and depending on the inclination, they can experience partial contact. Furthermore, when excited by dynamic loads, the leaf seal can be subject to intermittent contact, possibly triggering wear out or vibratory phenomena. Due to its flexibility and its partial seating, it exhibits a complex nonlinear dynamic behaviour, strongly variable with the operating conditions. This study presents a numerical investigation using coupled static/dynamic harmonic balance method (HBM) frequency-based solution technique. The reported solutions include nonlinear forced response and contact studies for various operating and kinematic conditions along with brief insights
Towards biological control strategies for the bronze bug, Thaumastocoris peregrinus, on eucalyptus plantations in South America.
Edição dos abstracts do 24º IUFRO World Congress, 2014, Salt Lake City. Sustaining forests, sustaining people: the role of research
A Neutral and Stable Macrocyclic Mn(II) Complex for MRI Tumor Visualization
A stable and inert amphiphilic Mn(II) complex based on a bisamide derivative of 1,4-DO2A (DO2A=tetraazacyclododecane-1,4-diacetic acid) was synthesized and its H-1 NMR relaxometric behavior was investigated as a function of the magnetic field strength, pH and temperature. The interaction with human serum albumin (HSA) was also studied via relaxometry showing a good relaxivity enhancement at low field (at 1T and 298 K the relaxivity increases from 4.5 mM(-1) s(-1) of the Mn(II)-complex to 14.0 mM(-1) s(-1) of the complex-HSA supramolecular adduct). In vivo biodistribution and MRI studies highlighted a rapid and mixed renal/liver elimination without spleen accumulation from healthy mice and good contrast enhancing properties in a breast tumor murine model. A comparison with a clinically approved Gd(III) agent (GdBOPTA, Multihance (R)) underlined that the proposed Mn(II) contrast agent gave comparable tumor contrast enhancement up to 3 hours post-injection
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