12 research outputs found

    Saturated phase densities of (CO2 + H2O) at temperatures from (293 to 450) K and pressures up to 64 MPa

    Get PDF
    An apparatus consisting of an equilibrium cell connected to two vibrating tube densimeters and two syringe pumps was used to measure the saturated phase densities of (CO2 + H2O) at temperatures from (293 to 450) K and pressures up to 64 MPa, with estimated average standard uncertainties of 1.5 kg · m−3 for the CO2-rich phase and 1.0 kg · m−3 for the aqueous phase. The densimeters were housed in the same thermostat as the equilibrium cell and were calibrated in situ using pure water, CO2 and helium. Following mixing, samples of each saturated phase were displaced sequentially at constant pressure from the equilibrium cell into the vibrating tube densimeters connected to the top (CO2-rich phase) and bottom (aqueous phase) of the cell. The aqueous phase densities are predicted to within 3 kg · m−3 using empirical models for the phase compositions and partial molar volumes of each component. However, a recently developed multi-parameter equation of state (EOS) for this binary mixture, Gernert and Span [32], was found to under predict the measured aqueous phase density by up to 13 kg · m−3. The density of the CO2-rich phase was always within about 8 kg · m−3 of the density for pure CO2 at the same pressure and temperature; the differences were most positive near the critical density, and became negative at temperatures above about 373 K and pressures below about 10 MPa. For this phase, the multi-parameter EOS of Gernert and Span describes the measured densities to within 5 kg · m−3, whereas the computationally-efficient cubic EOS model of Spycher and Pruess (2010), commonly used in simulations of subsurface CO2 sequestration, deviates from the experimental data by a maximum of about 8 kg · m−3

    Scalable soft matter patterning from the macro to the nanoscale

    Get PDF
    Surface patterning is important for a range of engineering applications, including controlled wetting and spreading of liquids, adhesion and assembly of smart coatings. There is therefore a need of simple, cost-effective and scalable techniques for pattern formation over a wide range of scales. Conventional methods fail to comply with these requirements, as costs and complexity increase in the attempt to impress nm to µm scale features. By contrast, wrinkling of bi-(multi- )layers is inherently inexpensive, scalable and robust, and has the potential for soft matter patterning from the nano- to the macro-scale. This work investigates the controlled multi-layer generation of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) glassy skins via surface oxidation using plasma exposure and/or ultraviolet ozonolysis (UVO). Uniaxial mechanical compression is then employed to induce pattern formation via a well-known wrinkling instability. Topographies with wavelengths down to 45 nm are achieved, for the first time, as well as features with characteristic lengthscales of ∼ 10s µm. Moreover, simple design routes for double frequency nested pattern formation, imposed by compression of tri-layer laminate films, are established. The work concludes by exploiting wrinkling as a method for the mechanical characterisation of thin drying films. A time-resolved wrinkling interrogation during film drying is established as a simple and reliable approach to determining evolving mechanical properties of films, overcoming the difficulties associated with handling very thin free-standing films and the limited sensitivity of conventional methods, with potential applications extending to coatings, personal care items, and foods.Open Acces

    Wrinkling Measurement of the Mechanical Properties of Drying Salt Thin Films

    Get PDF
    We report a time-resolved approach to probe the mechanical properties of thin films during drying and solidification based on surface wrinkling. The approach is demonstrated by measuring the modulus of a ternary system comprising an inorganic salt (aluminum chlorohydrate), a humectant (glycerol), and water across the glassy film formation pathway. The topography of mechanically induced wrinkling of supported films on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) is experimentally monitored during mechanical extension and relaxation cycles. Nontrivial aspects of our method include the need to oxidize the (hydrophobic) PDMS surface prior to solution deposition to enable surface wetting, which simultaneously creates a glassy-layer skin, whose wrinkling can contribute to the overall topography. Film drying is studied as a function of solution concentration and time, and a range of pattern morphologies are found: sinusoidal wrinkling, transient double-wavelength wrinkling accompanying film “crust” formation, ridging associated with stress localization, and cracking. We quantify the evolution of the elastic modulus during the sinusoidal wrinkling stage, employing bi- and trilayer models, which are independently confirmed by nanoindentation. The method provides thus a simple and robust approach for the mechanical characterization of out-of-equilibrium thin films

    Microfluidic SAXS Study of Lamellar and Multilamellar Vesicle Phases of Linear Sodium Alkylbenzenesulfonate Surfactant with Intrinsic Isomeric Distribution

    No full text
    The structure and flow behaviour of a concentrated aqueous solution (45 w.t. %) of the ubiquitous linear sodium alkylbenzene sulfonate (NaLAS) surfactant is investigated by microfluidic small-angle X-ray scatterong (SAXS) at 70 ⁰C. NaLAS is an intrinsically complex mixture of over 20 surfactant molecules, presenting coexisting micellar (L1) and lamellar (Lα) phases. Novel microfluidic devices were fabricated to ensure pressure and thermal resistance, ability to handle viscous fluids, and low SAXS background. Polarized light optical microscopy showed that the NaLAS solution exhibits wall slip in microchannels, with velocity profiles approaching plug flow. Microfluidic SAXS demonstrated the structural spatial heterogeneity of the system with a characteristic lengthscale of 50 nL. Using a statistical flow-SAXS analysis we identified the micellar phase and multiple coexisting lamellar phases with a continuous distribution of d spacings between 37.5 Å - 39.5 Å. Additionally, we showed that the orientation of NaLAS lamellar phases is strongly affected by a single microfluidic constriction. The bilayers align parallel to the velocity field upon entering a constriction and perpendicular to it upon exiting. On the other hand, multi-lamellar vesicle phases are not affected under the same flow conditions. Our results demonstrate that, despite the compositional complexity inherent to NaLAS, microfluidic SAXS can rigorously elucidate its structure and flow response
    corecore