910 research outputs found
Measuring The Co2 Flux At The Air/water Interface In Lakes Using Flow Injection Analysis.
The carbon dioxide flux at the air/water interface in lakes was calculated after the determination of H2CO3* (free CO2) and atmospheric CO2 using flow injection analysis (FIA) coupled to a conductometric detector. The method is based on the diffusion of CO2 through a hydrophobic membrane into a flow of deionized water, generating a gradient of conductivity proportional to the concentration of CO2 in the sample. Using one experimental set-up, the speciation of the inorganic carbon (H2CO3* and dissolved inorganic carbon) was accomplished by simply adjusting the sample pH. The determination of CO2 in the atmosphere was carried out by direct injection of the gaseous samples. The FIA apparatus was taken into the field and CO2 fluxes were evaluated in several Brazilian lakes. In these lakes, representing different eutrophic stages, the CO2 flux varied from -242 (invasive) up to 3227 (evasive) mumol CO2 m-2 h-1.3317-2
Magnetic properties of Fe3O4 nanoparticles coated with oleic and dodecanoic acids
Magnetic nanoparticles (NP) of magnetite (Fe3O4) coated with oleic acid (OA)
and dodecanoic acid (DA) were synthesized and investigated through Transmission
Electron Microscopy (TEM),magnetization M, and ac magnetic susceptibility
measurements. The OA coated samples were produced with different magnetic
concentrations (78, 76, and 65%) and the DA sample with 63% of Fe3O4. Images
from TEM indicate that the NP have a nearly spherical geometry and mean
diameter ~ 5.5 nm. Magnetization measurements, performed in zero field cooled
(ZFC) and field cooled (FC) processes under different external magnetic fields
H, exhibited a maximum at a given temperature TB in the ZFC curves, which
depends on the NP coating (OA or DA), magnetite concentration, and H. The
temperature TB decreases monotonically with increasing H and, for a given H,
the increase in the magnetite concentration results in an increase of TB. The
observed behavior is related to the dipolar interaction (DI) between NP which
seems to be an important mechanism in all samples studied. This is supported by
the results of the ac magnetic susceptibility Xac measurements, where the
temperature in which X' peaks for different frequencies follows the
Vogel-Fulcher model, a feature commonly found in systems with dipolar
interactions. Curves of H vs. TB/TB(H=0) for samples with different coatings
and magnetite concentrations collapse into a universal curve, indicating that
the qualitative magnetic behavior of the samples may be described by the NP
themselves, instead of the coating or the strength of the dipolar interaction.
Below TB, M vs. H curves show a coercive field (HC) that increases
monotonically with decreasing temperature. The saturation magnetization (MS)
follows the Bloch's law and values of MS at room temperature as high as 78
emu/g were estimated, a result corresponding to ~80% of the bulk value. The
overlap of M/MS vs. H/T curves for a given sample and the low HC at high
temperatures suggest superparamagnetic behavior in all samples studied. The
overlap of M/MS vs. H curves at constant temperature for different samples
indicates that the NP magnetization behavior is preserved, independently of the
coating and magnetite concentration.Comment: 8 pages and 9 figure
Role of dipolar interactions in a system of Ni nanoparticles studied by magnetic susceptibility measurements
The role of dipolar interactions among Ni nanoparticles (NP) embedded in an
amorphous SiO2/C matrix with different concentrations has been studied
performing ac magnetic susceptibility Chi_ac measurements. For very diluted
samples, with Ni concentrations < 4 wt % Ni or very weak dipolar interactions,
the data are well described by the Neel-Arrhenius law. Increasing Ni
concentration to values up to 12.8 wt % Ni results in changes in the
Neel-Arrhenius behavior, the dipolar interactions become important, and need to
be considered to describe the magnetic response of the NPs system. We have
found no evidence of a spin-glasslike behavior in our Ni NP systems even when
dipolar interactions are clearly present.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 3 table
Increase in the magnitude of the energy barrier distribution in Ni nanoparticles due to dipolar interactions
The energy barrier distribution Eb of five samples with different
concentrations x of Ni nanoparticles using scaling plots from ac magnetic
susceptibility data has been determined. The scaling of the imaginary part of
the susceptibility Chi"(nu, T) vs. Tln(t/tau_0) remains valid for all samples,
which display Ni nanoparticles with similar shape and size. The mean value
increases appreciably with increasing x, or more appropriately with
increasing dipolar interactions between Ni nanoparticles. We argue that such an
increase in constitutes a powerful tool for quality control in magnetic
recording media technology where the dipolar interaction plays an important
role.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Traversable Casimir Wormholes in D Dimensions
In this paper, we study Casimir wormholes in arbitrary spacetime dimensions
D. Wormholes require negative energy, and therefore an exotic matter source.
Since Casimir energy is negative, it has been speculated as a good candidate to
source that objects a long time ago. However only very recently a full solution
has been found by Garattini [1]. The author found an appropriate redshift
function and proved that in four-dimensional spacetime, the Casimir energy can
be a source of traversable wormholes. Soon later Alencar et al have shown, in
[2], that this is not true in D = 3 and additional sources must be considered.
In this paper, we show that Casimir energy can be a source of the Morris-Thorne
wormhole for all spacetime dimensions with D > 3.Comment: 6 pages, 0 figure
Automatic determination of mercury in samples of environmental interest
An automatic flow injection (FI) system for the determination of mercury was developed using a commercial Gold vapour atomic absorption spectrophotometer (CVAAS). Control and data acquisition in the FI system was done with an IBM-PC 286 XI compatible microcomputer and a home-made interface, using software written in QuickBasic 4.5. Mercury content was determined by: sampling using a combination of four electromechanical three-way poly(tetrafluoroethylene) valves; separation of the dissolved reduced mercury in a gas/liquid separation cell using nitrogen as carrier, followed by amalgamation of the stripped metal on a gold wire column; after stripping the metal, cleaning the separation cell using vacuum, which was controlled by a three-way electromechanical valve; heating the gold wire column automatically to release the amalgamated mercury using an external nichrome wire coil; storing the output signals automatically to calculate the final mercury concentration, using commercially available software. The optimized system presents a detection limit of 5.3 ng l(-1) of mercury (30 pg absolute) using 5.7 ml (three injections of 1900 mu l of the sample) with an analytical frequency of six samples per hour and reproducibility of 5%. The procedure was used to determine mercury in fish, hair and natural water samples.18619319
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