5,311 research outputs found

    The flow properties of foam

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    The rheological behaviour of foam, prepared from an aqueous solution with lauryl sulphate as surfactant, has been measured with a viscometer as a function of the blow ratio, bubble diameter distribution and concentration of the thickener used. The influence of wall slip and of hysteresis effects on the rheological behaviour have been determined. Calculations and measurements pertaining to the pressure drop in pipes have been performed, in which the foam was considered as a compressible pseudoplastic whose rheology depended on blow ratio. The distribution of the foam passing through a closed distribution unit has been studied. This distribution unit consisted of a pipe and a cross-head distribution slit. Complementary measurements of the flow of foam through narrow slits have been made. The design of a closed foam distribution unit is discussed. The consequences of the choice of several design parameters are examined

    New detection method for atrazine pesticides with the optical waveguide Mach-Zehnder immunosensor

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    Concentrations of analytes can be determined within a few minutes using on-line analysis of the immunobinding kinetics in a solid phase immunoassay. This approach has been applied to the detection of atrazine. Atrazine is detected, at concentrations around the European Community limit (0.1 ¿g/l) by a competitive assay. To this end, the two channels of a Mach-Zehnder waveguide sensor are used simultaneously in a difference measurement. The advantage of this way of measuring is discussed with the atrazine measurements

    Friction Analysis on Scratch Deformation Modes of Visco-Elastic-Plastic Materials

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    Understanding of abrasion resistance and associated surfaces deformation mechanisms is of primary importance in materials engineering and design. Instrumented scratch testing has proven to be a useful tool for characterizing the abrasion resistance of materials. Using a conical indenter in a scratch test may result in different deformation modes, like as elastic deformation, ironing, ductile ploughing and cutting. This paper presents the friction analysis of some deformation modes of visco-elastic-plastic behaving polymer materials, especially PEEK (poly etheretherketone). In general, it is accepted that the friction consist of an adhesion and a deformation component, which can be assumed to be independent to each others. During a scratch test, the friction coefficient is influenced by some parameters, such as the sharpness of indenter, the deformation modes and the degree of elastic recovery. Results show that the adhesion component strongly influences the friction in the elastic and ironing deformation mode (scratching with a blunt cone), friction for the cutting deformation mode (scratching with a sharp cone) is dominantly influenced by the deformation component. From the analysis, it can be concluded that the adhesion friction model is suitable for ironing - elastic deformation mode and the deformation friction model with elastic recovery is good for cutting mode. Moreover, the ductile ploughing mode is combination of the adhesion and plastic deformation friction model

    The critical sensor: a new type of evanescent wave immunosensor

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    A new planar waveguide immunosensor has been developed in which adsorption at a surface, changing the refractive index contrast, is measured. In this ¿critical¿ sensor the change in the effective refractive index contrast is transducted to a shift of the critical reflection angle. The sensor's response after a specific binding of antigens to antibodies is discussed theoretically. In addition, an experimental sensitivity evaluation on the basis of several immunosensing experiments is presented. The obtained lower detection limit is 2 × 10¿2 nm in adlayer growth, equivalent to 12 pg/mm2 of analyte coverage. This sensitivity is comparable to the performance of the surface plasmon resonance sensors or the grating coupler sensors. However, the ¿critical¿ sensor has some advantages. These are mainly the ease of fabrication and adjustment prior to a measurement, and the fact for an experiment no metal layer has to be used

    Optical-trapping micromanipulation using 780-nm diode lasers

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    We have designed and implemented an optical-trapping configuration that uses near-infrared laser diodes. The highly divergent output beam of the diode laser was collimated by using only one aspheric compact disc lens. The resulting output beams are astigmatic and elliptic and have a flat, non-Gaussian intensity profile. Calculations and measurements were performed to investigate the influence of this profile on the trapping forces. The results show that use of a laser diode, collimated with a compact disc lens, provides a near-infrared light source that can be used for optical trapping. The light source is compact and relatively cheap and can be easily incorporated into an existing microscope

    Train Tribometer Design and Feasibility

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    The realization of an integrated Mach-Zehnder waveguide immunosensor in silicon technology

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    We describe the realization of a symmetric integrated channel waveguide Mach-Zehnder sensor which uses the evanescent field to detect small refractive-index changes (¿nmin ¿ 1 × 10¿4) near the guiding-layer surface. This guiding layer consists of ridge structures with a height of 3 nm and a width of 4 ¿m made in Si3N4. This layer has a thickness of 100 nm. The sensor device has been tested with glucose solutions of different bulk refractive indices. Results of a slab-model calculation are in good agreement with obtained experimental results. The feasibility of applying this sensor for immunosensing, detecting directly the binding of antigen to an antibody receptor surface, is shown with antibody-antigen binding experiments

    Low noise amplifier for capacitive detectors

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    Deformation due to contact between a rough surface and a smooth ball

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    Theoretical and experimental results are presented to evaluate the deformation behavior of the contact between a real rough flat surface and a smooth ball. There are three deformation responses: plastic deformation of the asperities only, plastic deformation of the bulk only and combined plastic deformation of both the asperities and the bulk. The effects of the surface roughness and the Hertzian contact parameters on the effective contact pressure are presented. The experimental results confirmed the theoretical prediction very well. For a given Hertzian contact situation the surface roughness plays an important role in controlling the deformation behavior of the contacting surfaces. A criterion is presented to predict the deformation behavior of contacting engineering surfaces
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