scholarly journals Determination of Swelling Behavior and Mechanical and Thermal Resistance of Acrylamide–Acrylic Acid Copolymers under High Pressures and Temperatures

ACS Omega ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (37) ◽  
pp. 23862-23872
Author(s):  
Samira Heidari ◽  
Masoumeh Mohammadi ◽  
Feridun Esmaeilzadeh ◽  
Dariush Mowla
Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 344
Author(s):  
William A. Bassett

The late Taro Takahashi earned a particularly well-deserved reputation for his research at Lamont Geological Observatory on carbon dioxide and its transfer between the atmosphere and the oceans. However, his accomplishments in Mineral Physics, the field embracing the high-pressure–high-temperature properties of materials, has received less attention in spite of his major contributions to this emerging field focused on the interiors of Earth and other planets. In 1963, I was thrilled when he was offered a faculty position in the Geology Department at the University of Rochester, where I had recently joined the faculty. Taro and I worked together for the next 10 years with our talented students exploring the blossoming field just becoming known as Mineral Physics, the name introduced by Orson Anderson and Ed Schreiber, who were also engaged in measuring physical properties at high pressures and temperatures. While their specialty was ultrasonic velocities in minerals subjected to high pressures and temperatures, ours was the determination of crystal structures, compressibilities, and densities of such minerals as iron, its alloys, and silicate minerals, especially those synthesized at high-pressure, such as silicates with the spinel structure. These were materials expected to be found in the Earth’s interior and could therefore provide background for the interpretation of geophysical observations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 124 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz H. Cogollo-Olivo ◽  
Sananda Biswas ◽  
Sandro Scandolo ◽  
Javier A. Montoya

1990 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 598-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaus-Jürgen Range ◽  
Helmut Meister ◽  
Ulrich Klement

The polymorphism of CeVO4 was investigated at high pressures and temperatures in a Belttype high-pressure apparatus. In addition to the normal-pressure modification CeVO4— I with zircon-type structure two high-pressure modifications have been found, viz. monazite-type CeVO4—II and scheelite-type CeVO4—III. CeVO4—II is stable between 1 bar and 30 kbar at 1300 °C. Its region of existence decreases rapidly at lower temperatures. From the observed p,T-relations for the I-II and I-III transformations a triple point CeVO4—I,II,III at about 27 kbar, 500 °C can be estimated. For kinetic reasons, however, the experimental determination of phase relations becomes difficult at temperatures below 600 °C.The crystal structures of CeVO4— I and —II have been refined from single-crystal data. Crystallographic data for the three modifications are given and discussed (CeVO4—I: I 41/amd, a = 7.383(1)Å, c = 6.485(1)Å, Z = 4; CeVO4—II: P21/n, a = 7.003(1)Å, b = 7.227(1)Å, c = 6.685(1)Å, β = 105.13(1)°, Z = 4; CeVO4—III: I 41/α, a = 5.1645(2)Å, c = 11.8482(7)Å, Z = 4).


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yulia Aleksiayenak ◽  
Oleg Ignatenko ◽  
Valery Komar ◽  
Aliaksandr Zhaludkevich ◽  
Alexandra Konovalova ◽  
...  

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