33 research outputs found

    MODELING THE FORMATION OF POLYIMIDE MICROSPHERES

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    High temperature polyimide microspheres have been developed from polyimide solid residuum by a simple inflation process. Microspheres have been fabricated from several polyimide precursors through the use of a circulating air oven. Microsphere formation and final physical property characterization have been limited to simple mechanical and thermal testing. The present paper focuses on developing an understanding of microsphere formation through simple geometric rules for an incompressible polymeric material and microscopic observations of precursor residuum inflation. Inflation kinematics of the hollow polyimide microspheres as a function of time and temperature is discussed

    Fracture Characterization

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    Microfracture Surface Characterizations: Implications for In Situ Remedial Methods in Fractured Rock

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    Agreement No. CR-827878-01-0 to the USEPA. It has been subjected to the Agency’s peer and administrative review and has been approved for publication as an EPA document. Mention of trade names or commercial products does not constitute endorsement or recommendation for use. All research projects making conclusions or recommendations based on environmentally related measurements and funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency are required to participate in the Agency Quality Assurance Program. This project did not involve environmentally related measurements and, as such, did not require a Quality Assurance Plan. ii Foreword The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is charged by Congress with protecting the Nation’s land, air, and water resources. Under a mandate of national environmental laws, the Agency strives to formulate and implement actions leading to a compatible balance between human activities and the ability of natural systems to support and nurture life. To meet this mandate, EPA’s research program is providing dat

    Microfracture Surface Geochemistry and Adherent Microbial Population Metabolism in TCE-Contaminated Competent Bedrock

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    A TCE-contaminated competent bedrock site in Portsmouth, NH was used to determine if a relation existed between microfracture surface geochemistry and the ecology and metabolic activity of attached microbes relative to terminal electron accepting processes (TEAPs) and TCE biodegradation. The bedrock is a metasandstone and metashale of the Silurian Kittery Formation. Eleven microfractures (MF 01-11) were extracted from cores of competent rock from 2 boreholes (BBC5 and BBC6) at depths \u3e 21.3 m below ground. The host rock had 3 nominal pore width sizes (131.1, 1.136, and 0.109 μ m), a porosity of 0.8%, and a permeability of \u3c 1 μ d. Microfracture surface precipitates were polycrystalline with grain sizes ranging from 10 to 100 μ m. Petrography and XRD revealed that carbonates and quartz were the dominant microfracture surface precipitates. Mineral distribution was heterogeneous at the 10 μ m scale. Oxidized and reduced iron species were identified with XPS on the microfracture precipitate surfaces. Carbon functional groups characteristic of NOM were also identified. SIMS mass fragment fingerprints suggested that TCE, PCE and/or VC were possibly adsorbed to NOM on the microfracture surfaces. Packer waters were alkaline (131–190 mg/L as CaCO3, pH 8.8 to 9.6), mildly reducing (Eh of −208 to 160 mV, DO of 0.4 to 2.5 mg/L), with low NPDOC values (0.8–1.7 mg/L), and measurable Fe (II) (0.1 mg/L) and Fe (III) (0.02 to 0.3 mg/L). Sulfate was the dominant anion in the packer sample water (110–120 mg/L). No sulfide was detected. H 2 was present in a number of the BBC wells at the site (2.2–7.3 nM). Amplification with specific primer sets of seven microfractures from BBC5 showed the presence of bacteria, Archaea, anaerobic dehalorespirers (Dehalococcoides sp.), sulfate reducing bacteria, and iron reducing bacteria (Geobacteraceae). Redox zonation may exist relative to spatial distance from within the microfracture network to the open fracture system. The microfracture surface precipitates, frequently spatially complex and comprised of a variety of C-, Fe- and S-containing minerals, may be another region for redox zonation. Fe was the dominant microfracture surface element and active Fe cycling is suspected. However, the primer data suggest that the microfracture network may have been more reducing than the open fracture system. In this case, the microfracture network may constitute a zone where more reductive metabolic processes occur, making this system similar to biogeochemical redox zones found in other environments
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