The effect of neighbors on the effective inertial collision efficiency of cylindrical collectors

2021 ◽  
pp. 105910
Author(s):  
Jayesh Jeevesh Ratnam ◽  
Weihao Cheng ◽  
Ismail E. Kurtyigit ◽  
Edward P. DeMauro ◽  
German Drazer
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 163 ◽  
pp. 106744
Author(s):  
S. Li ◽  
M.P. Schwarz ◽  
Y. Feng ◽  
P. Witt ◽  
C. Sun

Development ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 499-509
Author(s):  
Janet E. Hornby

Cell suspensions were prepared from the kidney, liver and heart of chick embryos of 5 or 8 days of incubation, and from the limb-buds of chick embryos of 5, 6, 7, 8 or 9 days of incubation. When these suspensions were aggregated under laminar shear in a Couette viscometer or random motion in a reciprocating shaker they obeyed the theoretical relationships derived for flocculating lyophobic sols. The values of the collision efficiency found for the different cell types under given conditions were used to calculate the force of interaction between cells of each type. The force of interaction ranged between 9 × 10−11 N (8-day heart) and 3 × 10−9 N (8-day liver). The forces of interaction between cells appear to be responsible for aligning the membranes of adjacent cells with a 10–20 nm gap. It is possible to arrange the cell types in a hierarchy based on the forces of interaction between them. The possible role of these forces in cell specificity is considered.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linlin Cui ◽  
Courtney K. Harris ◽  
Danielle R. N. Tarpley

When oil spills occur in turbid waters, the oil droplets and mineral grains can combine to form oil-particle aggregates (OPAs). The formation of OPAs impacts the vertical transport of both the oil and the mineral grains; especially increasing deposition of oil to the seabed. Though the coastal oceans can be very turbid, to date, few numerical ocean models have accounted for aggregation processes that form OPAs. However, interactions between oil and mineral aggregates may be represented using techniques developed to account for sediment aggregation. As part of Consortium for Simulation of Oil Microbial Interactions in the Ocean (CSOMIO), we modified an existing, population dynamics-based sediment flocculation model to develop OPAMOD, a module that accounts for the formation of OPAs. A zero-dimensional model using OPAMOD is shown to be capable of reproducing the size distribution of aggregates from existing laboratory experimental results. Also using the zero-dimensional model, sensitivity tests were performed on two model parameters, the fractal dimension and collision efficiency. Results showed that fractal dimension played a role in the OPA size distribution by influencing the effective particle density, which modified the number concentration of flocs for a given mass concentration. However, the modeled particle characteristics and oil sequestration were relatively insensitive to collision efficiency. To explore OPA formation for an outer continental shelf site, two simulations were conducted using a one-dimensional (vertical) implementation of the model. One scenario had high sediment concentration near the seabed to mimic storm-induced resuspension. The other scenario represented river plume sediment delivery by having high sediment concentration in surface waters. Results showed that OPA formation was sensitive to the vertical distribution of suspended sediment, with the river plume scenario creating more OPA, and sequestering more oil within OPA than the storm resuspension scenario. OPAMOD was developed within the Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere-Wave-and-Sediment Transport (COAWST) modeling system, therefore the methods and parameterizations from this study are transferrable to a three-dimensional coupled oil-sediment-microbial model developed by CSOMIO within the COAWST framework.


1984 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 157-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. O. Pritchard

A new formula for the weak-collision unimolecular rate constant is readily interpretable in terms of bottleneck concepts. This formula is used to explore the correlation between variations in relaxation structure and fall-off shape in weak-collision thermal unimolecular reactions; some information is also presented relating to collision efficiency factors βc, and to incubation times.It is conjectured that randomisation failure is an important feature which causes near-Lindemann behaviour to occur in practical weak-collision thermal reactions.


1999 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 297-303
Author(s):  
Sabit Adanur ◽  
Sayavur Bakhtiyarov

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