25 research outputs found
Analyses chimiques des eaux du fleuve Niger à Niamey : premiers résultats d'une campagne annuelle de mesures
Nous avons déterminé, d'août 1984 à février 1986, les concentrations des silicates, chlorures, nitrites, phosphates, potassium, sodium, calcium, magnésium, ammonium et fer ferrique ainsi que le pH, la conductivité, la turbidité, l'oxygène dissous, l'alcalinité et la D.B.O. dans l'eau du fleuve Niger à hauteur de la ville de Niamey. L'exploitation statistique de ces résultats fait apparaître l'existence de deux périodes stables et d'une période instable au cours de l'année. (Résumé d'auteur
Using Conducting Polymers as Active Agents for Marine Antifouling Paints
Antifouling coatings were prepared with paints containing polyaniline (PAni) and derivatives as active pigment, and evaluated by antifouling performance on metallic or polyvinyl chloride substrates. The paints, PAni and its derivatives were characterized by FT-IR spectrophotometry, thermogravimetric analysis, electrical conductivity and scanning electron microscopy. Coatings were also characterized by salt spray, leaching and erosion tests. Antifouling coatings’ performance was evaluated by immersion tests in a marine environment or in fresh water. Paints containing PAni-ES, PAni/DBSA and SPAN, and a co-biocide PyZn, showed antifouling performance similar to a commercial antifouling paint
Poly(dimethylsiloxane)-Stabilized Polymer Particles from Radical Dispersion Polymerization in Nonpolar Solvent: Influence of Stabilizer Properties and Monomer Type
Particles used in electrophoretic display applications (EPD) must possess a number of specific properties ranging from stability in a nonaqueous solvent, high reflectivity, low polydispersity, and high charge density to name but a few. The manufacture of such particles is best carried out in the solvent of choice for the EPD. This opens up new interests in the study of nonaqueous dispersion polymerization methods, which deliver polymer particles suspended in low dielectric constant solvents. We explore in this article the use of a poly(dimethylsiloxane) macromonomer for the stabilization of poly(methyl methacrylate) polymer particles in dodecane, a typical solvent of choice for EPDs. The use of this stabilizer is significant for this method as it is directly soluble in the reaction medium as opposed to traditionally used poly(12-hydroxystearic acid)-based stabilizers. Additionally, the present study serves as a baseline for subsequent work, where nonaqueous dispersion polymerization will be used to create polymer particles encapsulating liquid droplets and solid pigment particles. In this article, the influence of the macromonomer molecular weight and concentration on the properties of the synthesized particles is studied. In addition, we investigate the possibility of synthesizing polymer particles from other monomers both as a comonomer for methyl methacrylate and as the only monomer in the process. The influence of macromonomer concentration is also studied throughout all experiments
Analyses chimiques des eaux du fleuve Niger à Niamey : premiers résultats d'une campagne annuelle de mesures
Nous avons déterminé, d'août 1984 à février 1986, les concentrations des silicates, chlorures, nitrites, phosphates, potassium, sodium, calcium, magnésium, ammonium et fer ferrique ainsi que le pH, la conductivité, la turbidité, l'oxygène dissous, l'alcalinité et la D.B.O. dans l'eau du fleuve Niger à hauteur de la ville de Niamey. L'exploitation statistique de ces résultats fait apparaître l'existence de deux périodes stables et d'une période instable au cours de l'année. (Résumé d'auteur
Evaluation of a mesoscale dispersion modelling tool during the CAPITOUL experiment
Atmospheric transport and dispersion were investigated during the CAPITOUL campaign using measurements of sulphur hexafluoride (SF6) tracer. Six releases of SF6 tracer were performed (March 9-11 and July 1-3, 2004) in the same suburban area of Toulouse conurbation, during the Intensive Observing Periods (IOP) of CAPITOUL. Concentration data were collected both at ground-level along axes perpendicular to the wind direction (at distances ranging between 280 m and 5000 m from the release point), and above the ground at 100 m and 200 m height using aircraft flights. Meteorological conditions were all associated with daytime anticyclonic conditions with weak winds and convective clear and cloudy boundary layers. A meso-scale dispersion modelling system, PERLE, developed at Meteo-France for environmental emergencies in case of atmospheric accidental release, was evaluated in terms of meteorology and dispersion, for the different tracer experiments, in its operational configuration. PERLE is based on the combination of the non-hydrostatic meso-scale MESO-NH model, running at 2 km horizontal resolution, and the Lagrangian particle model SPRAY. The statistical meteorological evaluation includes two sets of simulations with initialisation from ECMWF or ALADIN. The meteorological day-to-day error statistics show fairly good Meso-NH predictions, in terms of wind speed, wind direction and near-surface temperature. A strong sensitivity to initial fields concerns the surface fluxes, crucial for dispersion, with an excessive drying of the convective boundary layer with ALADIN initial fields, leading to an overprediction of surface sensible heat fluxes. A parameterization of dry and shallow convection according to the Eddy-Diffusivity-Mass-Flux (EDMF) approach (Pergaud et al. 2008) allows an efficient mixing in the Convective Boundary Layer (CBL) and improves significantly the wind fields. A statistical evaluation of the dispersion prediction was then performed and shows a realistic behaviour of the system, with a good location of the concentration maxima. But the lateral spread of the plumes is quasi-systematically underestimated, mainly in July, even when meteorological conditions are well reproduced. In the same way, higher integrated concentration values are slightly overestimated. The remove of the EDMF scheme in Meso-NH artificially improves the horizontal dispersion, underlying compensating errors. Sensitivity tests performed on the Lagrangian time scales in the coupling Meso-NH-SPRAY have been conducted. But they don't solve the shortcoming and lead to the conclusion that SPRAY could have some difficulties to correctly reproduce the mixing for daytime thermal convection. © Springer-Verlag 2008