106 research outputs found
Stages of steady diffusion growth of a gas bubble in strongly supersaturated gas-liquid solution
Gas bubble growth as a result of diffusion flux of dissolved gas molecules
from the surrounding supersaturated solution to the bubble surface is studied.
The condition of the flux steadiness is revealed. A limitation from below on
the bubble radius is considered. Its fulfillment guarantees the smallness of
fluctuation influence on bubble growth and irreversibility of this process.
Under the conditions of steadiness of diffusion flux three stages of bubble
growth are marked out. With account for Laplace forces in the bubble intervals
of bubble size change and time intervals of these stages are found. The trend
of the third stage towards the self-similar regime of the bubble growth, when
Laplace forces in the bubble are completely neglected, is described
analytically.Comment: 22 page
Theory of the nonsteady diffusion growth of a gas bubble in a supersaturated solution of gas in liquid
Using a self-similar approach a general nonsteady theory is elaborated for
the case of the diffusion growth of a gas bubble in a supersaturated solution
of gas in liquid. Due to the fact that the solution and the bubble in it are
physically isolated, the self-similar approach accounts for the balance of the
number of gas molecules in the solution and in the bubble that expells
incompressible liquid solvent while growing. The rate of growth of the bubble
radius in its dependence from gas solubility and solution supersaturation is
obtained. There is a nonsteady effect of rapid increase of the rate of bubble
growth simultaneous with the growth of the product of gas solubility and
solution supersaturation. This product is supplied with a limitation from
above, which also stipulates isothermal conditions of bubble growth. The
smallness of gas solubility is not presupposed.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure
Grand potential in thermodynamics of solid bodies and surfaces
Using the chemical potential of a solid in a dissolved state or the
corresponding component of the chemical potential tensor at equilibrium with
the solution, a new concept of grand thermodynamic potential for solids has
been suggested. This allows generalizing the definition of Gibbs' quantity
(surface work often called the solid-fluid interfacial free energy) at
a planar surface as an excess grand thermodynamic potential per unit surface
area that (1) does not depend on the dividing surface location and (2) is
common for fluids and solids.Comment: 6 page
Self-similar solution of a nonsteady problem of nonisothermal vapour condensation on a droplet growing in diffusion regime
This paper presents a mathematically exact self-similar solution to the joint
nonsteady problems of vapour diffusion towards a droplet growing in a
vapour-gas medium and of removal of heat released by a droplet into a
vapour-gas medium during vapour condensation. An equation for the temperature
of the droplet is obtained; and it is only at that temperature that the
self-similar solution exists. This equation requires the constancy of the
droplet temperature and even defines it unambiguously throughout the whole
period of the droplet growth. In the case of strong display of heat effects,
when the droplet growth rate decreases significantly, the equation for the
temperature of the droplet is solved analytically. It is shown that the
obtained temperature fully coincides with the one that settles in the droplet
simultaneously with the settlement of its diffusion regime of growth. At the
obtained temperature of the droplet the interrelated nonsteady vapour
concentration and temperature profiles of the vapour-gas medium around the
droplet are expressed in terms of initial (prior to the nucleation of the
droplet) parameters of the vapour-gas medium. The same parameters are used to
formulate the law in accordance with which the droplet is growing in diffusion
regime, and also to define the time that passes after the nucleation of the
droplet till the settlement of diffusion regime of droplet growth, when the
squared radius of the droplet becomes proportionate to time. For the sake of
completeness the case of weak display of heat effects is been studied.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Kinetic description of the relaxation of surfactant solutions in the absence of activation barrier between spherical and cylindrical micelles
Abstract -The realistic situation, where there is no potential barrier of aggregation work between the spherical and cylindrical micelles, is analyzed within the framework of the kinetic description of the relaxation of nonionic surfactant solution containing spherical and cylindrical micelles. The variations in the sum of the total concentrations of spherical and cylindrical micelles caused by the total flux of molecular aggregates over the potential barrier of aggregation work between the monomers and spherical micelles is taken into account; it is also accounted for that, in the absence of the potential barrier of aggregation work between the spherical and cylindrical micelles, they are present in the mutual quasi-equilibrium. The closed linearized relaxation equation determining the variations (with time) in the total concentrations of spherical and cylindrical micelles in a materially isolated surfactant solution is derived and solved. The variations (with time) of the total concentrations of spherical and cylindrical micelles, the concentration of surfactant monomers, as well as the total amount of surfactant in cylindrical micelles, in the process of approach of a materially isolated micellar solution to the final equilibrium state are described analytically. It is disclosed that, at the mutual quasi-equilibrium of spherical and cylindrical micelles, the opposite-sign deviations of the total amount of substance in cylindrical micelles and the total amount of cylindrical micelles from their values in the final equilibrium state of a materially isolated solution is attributed to the relatively large cylindrical micelles. The agreement between the results obtained and analogous results of the description of micellar relaxation in the presence of the potential barrier of aggregation work between spherical and cylindrical micelles whose relative height is at least slightly lower than that between monomers and spherical micelles is demonstrated. Comparison is performed for the cases of the absence of either spherical or cylindrical micelles. Analytical expressions, which are accessible for experimental verification, for the ratios of relaxation times of surfactant solutions containing spherical and cylindrical micelles to those of surfactant solutions containing either spherical or cylindrical micelles alone are derived
Heterogeneous condensation in dense media
The theoretical description of the heterogeneous nucleation kinetics is
presented. This description takes into account the perturbation of the vapor
phase initiated by the growing droplets. The form of the density profile around
the growing droplet is analyzed which leads to some special approximations.
Then the process of nucleation in the whole system is described. As the result
all main characteristics of the process are determined analytically.Comment: 50 pages, LATE
SnoRNAs and miRNAs networks underlying COVID-19 disease severity
There is a lack of predictive markers for early and rapid identification of disease progression in COVID-19 patients. Our study aims at identifying microRNAs (miRNAs)/small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) as potential biomarkers of COVID-19 severity. Using differential expression analysis of microarray data (n = 29), we identified hsa-miR-1246, ACA40, hsa-miR-4532, hsa-miR-145-5p, and ACA18 as the top five differentially expressed transcripts in severe versus asymptomatic, and ACA40, hsa-miR-3609, ENSG00000212378 (SNORD78), hsa-miR-1231, hsa-miR-885-3p as the most significant five in severe versus mild cases. Moreover, we found that white blood cell (WBC) count, absolute neutrophil count (ANC), neutrophil (%), lymphocyte (%), red blood cell (RBC) count, hemoglobin, hematocrit, D-Dimer, and albumin are significantly correlated with the identified differentially expressed miRNAs and snoRNAs. We report a unique miRNA and snoRNA profile that is associated with a higher risk of severity in a cohort of SARS-CoV-2 infected patients. Altogether, we present a differential expression analysis of COVID-19-associated microRNA (miRNA)/small nucleolar RNA (snoRNA) signature, highlighting their importance in SARS-CoV-2 infection
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