50 research outputs found
Electrical conductivity of dispersions: from dry foams to dilute suspensions
We present new data for the electrical conductivity of foams in which the
liquid fraction ranges from two to eighty percent. We compare with a
comprehensive collection of prior data, and we model all results with simple
empirical formul\ae. We achieve a unified description that applies equally to
dry foams and emulsions, where the droplets are highly compressed, as well as
to dilute suspensions of spherical particles, where the particle separation is
large. In the former limit, Lemlich's result is recovered; in the latter limit,
Maxwell's result is recovered
Compact Polyelectrolyte Complexes: âSaloplasticâ Candidates for Biomaterials
Precipitates of polyelectrolyte complexes were transformed into rugged shapes suitable for bioimplants by ultracentrifugation in the presence of high salt concentration. Salt ions dope the complex, creating a softer material with viscous fluid-like properties. Complexes that were compacted under the centrifugal field (CoPECs) were made from poly(diallyldimethyl ammonium), PDADMA, as polycation, and poly(styrene sulfonate), PSS, or poly(methacrylic acid), PMAA, as polyanion. Dynamic mechanical testing revealed a rubbery plateau at lower frequencies for PSS/PDADMA with moduli that decreased with increasing salt concentration, as internal ion pair cross-links were broken. CoPECs had significantly lower modulii compared to similar polyelectrolyte complexes prepared by the âmultilayering â method. The difference in mechanical properties was ascribed to higher water content (located in micropores) for the former and, more importantly, to their nonstoichiometric polymer composition. The modulus of PMAA/PDADMA CoPECs, under physiological conditions, demonstrated dynamic mechanical properties that were close to those of the nucleus pulposus in an intervertebral disk
Removal of phenol from aqueous solution using polymer inclusion membrane based on mixture of CTA and CA
Abstract Nowadays, there are increasingly stringent regulations requiring more and more treatment of industrial effluents to generate product waters which could be easily reused or disposed of to the environment without any harmful effects. In the present work, the removal of phenol from aqueous solution across polymer inclusion membrane (PIM), based on mixture of cellulose triacetate and cellulose acetate as support (75/25%), calix[4]resorcinarene derivative as a carrier and 2-nitrophenyl octyl ether (2-NPOE) as plasticizer was investigated. The experimental part of this investigation involved the influence of carrier nature, plasticizer concentration, pH phases, and phenol initial concentration on the removal efficiency of phenol from synthetic wastewater. A PIM containing 0.1Â g (of mixture polymer), (0.15Â g/g mixture of polymer) of carrier and (0.03Â ml/g mixture of polymer) of 2-NPOE provided the highest percentage of phenol removal efficiency over a 6-day transport; the removal was found to be about 95%, indeed the removal was found to be highly dependent of pH phases. The feed solution in these transport experiments was at pH 2, while the stripping solution contained 0.20Â M NaOH. This study claims that the PIM with a mixture of cellulose derivatives can be used effectively to remove phenols from wastewaters
Aqueous foam drainage. Role of the rheology of the foaming fluid
We have studied the drainage of foams made with viscous solutions. In this way, drainage is slowed down, and microgravity conditions are approached. The behaviour of mixtures of water and glycerol follows the theoretical predictions, but that of aqueous solutions of a polymer (polyethylene oxide) do not : drainage is much faster than for water-glycerol mixtures of the same bulk viscosity.
The origin of this puzzling behavior is still not understood
Viscosity effects in foam drainage: Newtonian and non-newtonian foaming fluids
We have studied the drainage of foams made from Newtonian and non-Newtonian
solutions of different viscosities. Forced-drainage experiments first show
that the behavior of Newtonian solutions and of shear-thinning ones (foaming
solutions containing either Carbopol or Xanthan) are identical, provided one
considers the actual viscosity corresponding to the shear rate found inside
the foam. Second, for these fluids, a drainage regime transition occurs as
the bulk viscosity is increased, illustrating a coupling between surface and
bulk flow in the channels between bubbles. The properties of this transition
appear different from the ones observed in previous works in which the
interfacial viscoelasticity was varied. Finally, we show that foams made of
solutions containing long flexible PolyEthylene Oxide (PEO) molecules
counter-intuitively drain faster than foams made with Newtonian solutions of
the same viscosity. Complementary experiments made with fluids having all
the same viscosity but different responses to elongational stresses
(PEO-based Boger fluids) suggest an important role of the elastic properties
of the PEO solutions on the faster drainage
Diagnosis of Partial Retrograde Ejaculation in Non-Azoospermic Infertile Men with Low Semen Volume.
In non-azoospermic patients with low semen volume (LSV), looking for partial retrograde ejaculation (PRE) by searching sperm in the postejaculatory urine (PEU) is required. The use of a retro-ejaculatory index (R-ratio) was suggested to define PRE, but none of the studies indicated a specific threshold above which PRE must be considered. Our objective was to propose a threshold value for the R-ratio as indicative of PRE in patients with LSV selected to be devoid of any known causes or risk factors for retrograde ejaculation or LSV. Among our data base (2000-2009) including 632 patients with PEU, 245 male patients from infertile couples who had had a first semen analysis with LSV (< 2mL) and a second semen analysis associated with PEU, were selected on the previous criteria. A prospective control group was randomly constituted (2007-2008) of 162 first consulting male patients from infertile couples, with a normal semen volume (⼠2mL) on a first semen analysis and who accepted to collect PEU with their usual second semen analysis, selected on the previous criteria. To define an R-ratio threshold indicative of PRE, we used a ROC curve analysis and a regression tree based on a classification and regression tree (CART) algorithm. Of the 245 LSV patients, 146 still presented low semen volume (< 2 mL) on the second semen analysis. From the use of the CART algorithm, two low (1.5% and 2.8%) and two high R-values (7.1% and 8.3%) were defined, according to the lower reference limit for semen volume of 2.0 mL (WHO 1999) or 1.5 mL (WHO 2010) respectively. As only one or no patient with normal semen volume was observed above the two high R-values, we suggest an R-value higher than the range of [7.1-8.3]% as indicative of PRE until confirmation by a prospective multicenter study
A Microwave-Assisted and Heteropolyacids-Catalysed Cyclocondensation Reaction for the Synthesis of 4(3H)-Quinazolinones
We have investigated a microwaveĂ¢ĂâŹĂâassisted synthesis of 4(3H)Ă¢ĂâŹĂâquinazolinonesby condensation of anthranilic acid, orthoesters (or formic acid) and substituted anilines,using Keggin-type heteropolyacids (H3PW12O40ĂâĂ¡13H2O, H4SiW12O40ĂâĂ¡13H2O,H4SiMo12O40ĂâĂ¡13H2O or H3PMo12O40ĂâĂ¡13H2O) as catalysts. We found that the the use of H3PW12O40ĂâĂ¡13H2O acid coupled to microwave irradiation allows a solvent-free, rapid (~ 13min) and high-yielding reaction