27,606 research outputs found
Impacts of Mixed-Wettability on Brine Drainage and Supercritical CO2 Storage Efficiency in a 2.5-D Heterogeneous Micromodel
Geological carbon storage (GCS) involves unstable drainage processes, the formation of patterns in a morphologically unstable interface between two fluids in a porous medium during drainage. The unstable drainage processes affect CO2 storage efficiency and plume distribution and can be greatly complicated by the mixed-wet nature of rock surfaces common in hydrocarbon reservoirs where supercritical CO2 (scCO2) is used in enhanced oil recovery. We performed scCO2 injection (brine drainage) experiments at 8.5 MPa and 45°C in heterogeneous micromodels, two mixed-wet with varying water- and intermediate-wet patches, and one water-wet. The flow regime changes from capillary fingering through crossover to viscous fingering in the micromodels of the same pore geometry but different wetting surfaces at displacement rates with logCa (capillary number) increasing from −8.1 to −4.4. While the mixed-wet micromodel with uniformly distributed intermediate-wet patches yields ~0.15 scCO2 saturation increase at both capillary fingering and crossover flow regimes (−8.1 ≤ logCa ≤ − 6.1), the one heterogeneous wetting to scCO2 results in ~0.09 saturation increase only at the crossover flow regime (−7.1 ≤ logCa ≤ − 6.1). The interconnected flow paths in the former are quantified and compared to the channelized scCO2 flow through intermediate-wet patches in the latter by topological analysis. At logCa > − 6.1 (near well), the effects of wettability and pore geometry are suppressed by strong viscous force. Both scCO2 saturation and distribution suggest the importance of wettability on CO2 storage efficiency and plume shape in reservoirs and capillary leakage through caprock at GCS conditions
The effects of height and frequency of previous defoliation on nodulation, nitrogen fixation and regrowth of phasey bean
Inoculated seeds of phasey bean (Macroptilium lathyroides cv. Murray) were sown in a sand
culture in a naturally-lit glasshouse, and imgated daily with nitrogen-Free nutrient solution. At early
flowering, the plants were either left uncut or cut at node 5 (high) or node 1 (low), retaining the
corresponding residual leaf areas of 74, 11 and Ocm 2 plant 1respectively. Following this initial cutting,
new shoots were individually harvested at the frequency of one, two, three, four or eight times
over a penriod of 56 days in Phase 1. Total dry weight of new shoots, seed yields and nitrogen concentrations
in the herbage were assessed. A II plants were allowed to regrow during the next 21-day
recovery period in Phase 2. Then, the root systems and plant tops were harvested. Nodulation,nitrogen fixation (total N) and regression analyses on s011Je plant parameters were computed. In Phase
1, cumulative yields of new shoots harvested following high or low-level cutting declined significantly
with increasing harvesting frequency, but yield reductions due to low-level cutting were detected only
under high harvesting frequencies. In Phase 2, recovery growth was always better following high than
low-level cutting, but unexpectedly, the various harvesting frequencies had no effect on recovery
growth following high cutting. After low-level cutting, high or low harvesting frequency reduced
recovery growth compared with moderately frequent defoliation (two harvests in 56 days), which
coincided with early flowering on the new top growth. Recovery growth had a positive linear correlation
(r = 0.98 ***) with nitrogen fixation, which was also linearly correlated with nodulation. These
results are briefly discussed with reference to the current concept that regrowth of nodulated forage
legumes is largely dependent on symbiotic nitrogen fixation
Caging phenomena in reactions: Femtosecond observation of coherent, collisional confinement
We report striking observations of coherent caging of iodine, above the B state dissociation threshold, by single collisions with rare gas atoms at room-temperature. Despite the random nature of the solute–solvent interaction, the caged population retains coherence of the initially prepared unbound wave packet. We discuss some new concepts regarding dynamical coherent caging and the one-atom cage effect
Nonlinear ac response of anisotropic composites
When a suspension consisting of dielectric particles having nonlinear
characteristics is subjected to a sinusoidal (ac) field, the electrical
response will in general consist of ac fields at frequencies of the
higher-order harmonics. These ac responses will also be anisotropic. In this
work, a self-consistent formalism has been employed to compute the induced
dipole moment for suspensions in which the suspended particles have nonlinear
characteristics, in an attempt to investigate the anisotropy in the ac
response. The results showed that the harmonics of the induced dipole moment
and the local electric field are both increased as the anisotropy increases for
the longitudinal field case, while the harmonics are decreased as the
anisotropy increases for the transverse field case. These results are
qualitatively understood with the spectral representation. Thus, by measuring
the ac responses both parallel and perpendicular to the uniaxial anisotropic
axis of the field-induced structures, it is possible to perform a real-time
monitoring of the field-induced aggregation process.Comment: 14 pages and 4 eps figure
Bragg spectroscopy of a superfluid Bose-Hubbard gas
Bragg spectroscopy is used to measure excitations of a trapped,
quantum-degenerate gas of 87Rb atoms in a 3-dimensional optical lattice. The
measurements are carried out over a range of optical lattice depths in the
superfluid phase of the Bose-Hubbard model. For fixed wavevector, the resonant
frequency of the excitation is found to decrease with increasing lattice depth.
A numerical calculation of the resonant frequencies based on Bogoliubov theory
shows a less steep rate of decrease than the measurements.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Effects of Solution, Soil and Sand Cultures on Nodulation and Growth of Phasey Bean
Plants of phasey bean (Macroptilium lathyroides cv. Murray) were grown in nitrogen-free
nutrient solution, sod, or sand culture in a naturally-Nt glasshouse. Nodulation, dry matter accumulation in plant parts, and seed yields were assessed. Partitioning of symbiotic nitrogen into various
plant parts during vegetative and reproductive growth stages was also determined. In all culture
media, nodule number and size increased with plant age but the rate of increase was generally greater
in solution than in the other cultures. In sand culture, the dry weight per nodule and per plant, and
plant growth were significantly suppressed. Although tap root elongation was consistently better in
solution than soil or sand culture, leaf development and dry matter accumulation in roots and stems
were enhanced by solution culture only during flowering and fruiting stage. Seed yields were significantly
increased by solution culture, an effect apparently associated with increased symbiotic nitrogen
fixation. During vegetative growth, nitrogen accumulated largely in the leaves and stems but pods
were major sinks of nitrogen during the reproductive growth stage. The benefits and applications of
solution culture in the study of nodule development and collection of root samples for acetylene reduction
assays are discussed
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