176 research outputs found

    Underground bio-methanation: Concept and potential

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    As a major part of the energy turn around, the European Union and other countries are supporting the development of renewable energy technologies to decrease nuclear and fossil energy production. Therefore, efficient use of renewable energy resources is one challenge, as they are influenced by environmental conditions and hence, the intensity of resources such as wind or solar power fluctuates. To secure constant energy supply, suitable energy storage and conversion techniques are required. An upcoming solution is the utilization and storage of hydrogen or hydrogen-rich natural gas in porous formations in the underground. In the past, microbial methanation was observed as a side effect during these gas storage operations. The concept of underground bio-methanation arised, which uses the microbial metabolism to convert hydrogen and carbon dioxide into methane. The concept consists of injecting gaseous hydrogen and carbon dioxide into an underground structure during energy production peaks which are subsequently partly converted into methane. The resulting methane-rich gas mixture is withdrawn during high energy demand. The concept is comparable to engineered bio-reactors which are already locally integrated into the gas infrastructure. In both technologies, the conversion process of hydrogen into methane is driven by hydrogenotrophic methanogenic archaea present in the aqueous phase of the natural underground or above-ground engineered reactor. Nevertheless, the porous medium in the underground provides, compared to the engineered bio-reactors, a larger interface between the gas and aqueous phase caused by the enormous volume in the underground porous media. The following article summarizes the potential and concept of underground methanation and the current state of the art in terms of laboratory investigations and pilot tests. A short system potential analysis shows that an underground bio-reactor with a storage capacity of 850 Mio. Sm could deliver methane to more than 600,000 households, based on a hydrogen production from renewable energies

    Experimental and analytical investigation of an immiscible displacement process in real structure micromodels

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    The recovery of oil from a reservoir can be accomplished with various methods, one of the most commonly applied types being waterflooding. A common theory used to describe immiscible displacement is the Buckley–Leverett theory. A brand new type of micromodel, generated and fabricated by using a micro-computer tomography (μCT) image stack of a real sandstone core, was used to conduct immiscible displacement experiments. Critical logging data were recorded, and a high-resolution camera took pictures of the displacement process. In an image processing tool (MATLAB), an algorithm was developed to evaluate the pictures of the experiment and to examine the changes in the saturations of the displacing and the displaced fluid. The main objective of the displacement experiment was to validate the new microchip in two-phase displacement experiments and to assess the feasibility of the image processing algorithm. This was performed by comparing the results of the experimental to the analytical solutions, which were derived from the Buckley–Leverett theory. The comparison of the results showed a good match between the two types of solutions. The applicability of the analytical results to the experimental procedures was observed. Additionally, the usage of the newly fabricated micromodel and its potential to visualize the fluid flow behavior in porous media were assessed

    On the role of polymer viscoelasticity in enhanced oil recovery: extensive laboratory data and review

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    Polymer flooding most commonly uses partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamides (HPAM) injected to increase the declining oil production from mature fields. Apart from the improved mobility ratio, also the viscoelasticity-associated flow effects yield additional oil recovery. Viscoelasticity is defined as the ability of particular polymer solutions to behave as a solid and liquid simultaneously if certain flow conditions, e.g., shear rates, are present. The viscoelasticity related flow phenomena as well as their recovery mechanisms are not fully understood and, hence, require additional and more advanced research. Whereas literature reasonably agreed on the presence of these viscoelastic flow effects in porous media, there is a significant lack and discord regarding the viscoelasticity effects in oil recovery. This work combines the information encountered in the literature, private reports and field applications. Self-gathered laboratory data is used in this work to support or refuse observations. An extensive review is generated by combining experimental observations and field applications with critical insights of the authors. The focus of the work is to understand and clarify the claims associated with polymer viscoelasticity in oil recovery by improvement of sweep efficiency, oil ganglia mobilization by flow instabilities, among others

    Manufacturing and characterization of femtosecond laser-inscribed Bragg grating in polymer waveguide operation in an IR-A wavelength range

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    Optical sensors, such as fiber Bragg gratings, offer advantages compared to other sensors in many technological fields due to their outstanding characteristics. This sensor technology is currently transferred to polymer waveguides that provide the potential for cost-effective, easy, and flexible manufacturing of planar structures. While sensor production itself, in the majority of cases, is performed by means of phase mask technique, which is limited in terms of its degrees of freedom, other inscription techniques enable the manufacture of more adaptable sensor elements for a wider range of applications. In this article, we demonstrate the point-by-point femtosecond laser direct inscription method for the processing of polymer Bragg gratings into waveguides of the epoxy-based negative photoresist material EpoCore for a wavelength range around 850 nm. By characterizing the obtained grating back-reflection of the produced sensing element, we determined the sensitivity for the state variables temperature, humidity, and strain to be 45 pm/K, 19 pm/%, and 0.26 pm/με, respectively. Individual and more complex grating structures can be developed from this information, thus opening new fields of utilization

    Conformable Nanowire-in-Nanofiber Hybrids for Low-Threshold Optical Gain in the Ultraviolet

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    The miniaturization of diagnostic devices that exploit optical detection schemes requires the design of light sources combining small size, high performance for effective excitation of chromophores, and mechanical flexibility for easy coupling to components with complex and nonplanar shapes. Here, ZnO nanowire-in-fiber hybrids with internal architectural order are introduced, exhibiting a combination of polarized stimulated emission, low propagation losses of light modes, and structural flexibility. Ultrafast transient absorption experiments on the electrospun material show optical gain which gives rise to amplified spontaneous emission with a threshold lower than the value found in films. These systems are highly flexible and can conveniently conform to curved surfaces, which makes them appealing active elements for various device platforms, such as bendable lasers, optical networks, and sensors, as well as for application in bioimaging, photo-cross-linking, and optogenetics

    Tailoring optical properties and stimulated emission in nanostructured polythiophene

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    Polythiophenes are the most widely utilized semiconducting polymers in organic electronics, but they are scarcely exploited in photonics due to their high photo-induced absorption caused by interchain polaron pairs, which prevents the establishment of a window of net optical gain. Here we study the photophysics of poly(3-hexylthiophene) configured with different degrees of supramolecular ordering, spin-coated thin films and templated nanowires, and find marked differences in their optical properties. Transient absorption measurements evidence a partially-polarized stimulated emission band in the nanowire samples, in contrast with the photo-induced absorption band observed in spin-coated thin films. In combination with theoretical modeling, our experimental results reveal the origin of the primary photoexcitations dominating the dynamics for different supramolecular ordering, with singlet excitons in the nanostructured samples superseding the presence of polaron pairs, which are present in the disordered films. Our approach demonstrates a viable strategy to direct optical properties through structural control, and the observation of optical gain opens the possibility to the use of polythiophene nanostructures as building blocks of organic optical amplifiers and active photonic devices

    Unravelling the intricated photophysical behavior of 3-(pyridin-2-yl)triimidazotriazine AIE and RTP polymorphs

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    The development of purely organic materials showing multicolor fluorescent and phosphorescent behaviour represents a formidable challenge in view of practical applications. Herein the rich photophyisical behaviour of 3-(pyridin-2- yl)triimidazotriazine (TT-Py) organic molecule, comprising excitation-dependent fluorescence and phosphorescence under ambient conditions in both blended film and crystalline phase, is investigated by means of steady state, time resolved and ultrafast spectroscopies and interpreted on the basis of X-ray diffraction studies and DFT/TDDFT calculations. In particular, by proper excitation wavelength, dual fluorescence and dual phosphorescence of molecular origin can be observed together with low energy phosphorescences resulting from aggregate species. It is demonstrated that the multiple emission property is originated by the copresence, in the investigated system, of an extended polycyclic nitrogen-rich moiety (TT), strongly rigidified by p-p stacking interactions and short C\u2013H...N hydrogen bonds, and a fragment (Py) featuring partial conformational freedom
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