5 research outputs found
Evaluation of Nanoporous Polymer Membranes for Electrokinetic Energy Conversion in Power Applications
Electrokinetic energy conversion for pumping or power
generation has for the past decade regained attention with focus on
applications within pumping in nanofluidics or microgenerators. Little
experimental work has been published and mostly in relation to clean-room
fabricated nanopores. In the present study, it is suggested that electrokinetic
energy conversion has a potential as future decentralized electrical
energy sources, if polymer membranes are used. On the basis of new
electrokinetic measurements and literature data, we have made a systematic
study of commercially available nanoporous polymer membranes and found
a promising first law efficiency of 5.5% in one polymerâelectrolyte
system. It is likely that future more rigorous and targeted studies
will find even larger conversion efficiencies
Data_Sheet_1_Stable and Efficient Time Integration of a Dynamic Pore Network Model for Two-Phase Flow in Porous Media.pdf
<p>We study three different time integration methods for a dynamic pore network model for immiscible two-phase flow in porous media. Considered are two explicit methods, the forward Euler and midpoint methods, and a new semi-implicit method developed herein. The explicit methods are known to suffer from numerical instabilities at low capillary numbers. A new time-step criterion is suggested in order to stabilize them. Numerical experiments, including a Haines jump case, are performed and these demonstrate that stabilization is achieved. Further, the results from the Haines jump case are consistent with experimental observations. A performance analysis reveals that the semi-implicit method is able to perform stable simulations with much less computational effort than the explicit methods at low capillary numbers. The relative benefit of using the semi-implicit method increases with decreasing capillary number Ca, and at Ca~ 10<sup>â8</sup> the computational time needed is reduced by three orders of magnitude. This increased efficiency enables simulations in the low-capillary number regime that are unfeasible with explicit methods and the range of capillary numbers for which the pore network model is a tractable modeling alternative is thus greatly extended by the semi-implicit method.</p
DataSheet2_Defining the pressures of a fluid in a nanoporous, heterogeneous medium.CSV
We describe the thermodynamic state of a single-phase fluid confined to a porous medium with Hillâs thermodynamics of small systems, also known as nanothermodynamics. This way of defining small system thermodynamics, with a separate set of control variables, may be useful for the study of transport in non-deformable porous media, where presently no consensus exists on pressure computations. For a confined fluid, we observe that there are two pressures, the integral and the differential pressures. We use molecular simulations to investigate and confirm the nanothermodynamic relations for a representative elementary volume (REV). For a model system of a single-phase fluid in a face-centered cubic lattice of solid spheres of varying porosity, we calculate the fluid density, fluid-solid surface tension, replica energy, integral pressure, entropy, and internal energy.</p
Effect of the Ion, Solvent, and Thermal Interaction Coefficients on Battery Voltage
In order to increase the adoption of batteries for sustainable
transport and energy storage, improved charging and discharging capabilities
of lithium-ion batteries are necessary. To achieve this, accurate
data that describe the internal state of the cells are essential.
Several models have been derived, and transport coefficients have
been reported for use in these models. We report for the first time
a complete set of transport coefficients to model the concentration
and temperature polarization in a lithium-ion battery ternary electrolyte,
allowing us to test common assumptions. We include effects due to
gradients in chemical potentials and in temperature. We find that
the voltage contributions due to salt and solvent polarization are
of the same order of magnitude as the ohmic loss and must be taken
into account for more accurate modeling and understanding of battery
performance. We report new Soret and Seebeck coefficients and find
thermal polarization to be significant in cases relevant to battery
research. The analysis is suitable for electrochemical systems, in
general
Fick Diffusion Coefficients in Ternary Liquid Systems from Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics Simulations
An approach for computing Fick diffusivities directly
from equilibrium molecular dynamics (MD) simulations is presented
and demonstrated for a ternary chloroformâacetoneâmethanol
liquid mixture. In our approach, Fick diffusivities are calculated
from the MaxwellâStefan (MS) diffusivities and the so-called
matrix of thermodynamic factors. MS diffusivities describe the friction
between different molecular species and can be directly computed from
MD simulations. The thermodynamic factor describes the deviation from
ideal mixing behavior and is difficult to extract from both experiments
and simulations. Here, we show that the thermodynamic factor in ternary
systems can be obtained from density fluctuations in small subsystems
embedded in a larger simulation box. Since the computation uses the
KirkwoodâBuff coefficients, the present approach provides a
general route toward the thermodynamics of the mixture. In experiments,
Fick diffusion coefficients are measured, while previously equilibrium
molecular dynamics simulation only provided MS transport diffusivities.
Our approach provides an efficient and accurate route to predict multicomponent
diffusion coefficients in liquids based on a consistent molecular
picture and therefore bridges the gap between theory and experiment