barrier materials
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Author(s):  
А.Ю. Маслов ◽  
О.В. Прошина

Abstract The specific features of the interaction of charged particles with polar optical phonons have been studied theoretically for quantum wells with the barriers that are asymmetric in their dielectric properties. It is shown that the interaction with interface phonon modes makes the greatest contribution in narrow quantum wells. The parameters of the electron-phonon interaction were found for the cases of different values of the phonon frequencies in the barrier materials. It turned out that a significant (by almost an order of magnitude) change in the parameters of the electron-phonon interaction can occur in such structures. This makes it possible, in principle, to trace the transition from weak to strong interactions in quantum wells of the same type but with different compositions of barrier materials. The conditions are found under which an enhancement of the electron-phonon interaction is possible in an asymmetric structure in comparison with a symmetric one with the barriers of the same composition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (6-2) ◽  
pp. 125-132
Author(s):  
M. G. Shurygin ◽  
I. A. Shurygina

The article is devoted to the problem of prevention of adhesions in cardiac surgery. It was determined that the problem is urgent due to the increase in the number of heart surgeries. The formation of adhesions is a reaction of the body after surgery, which is a stage of healing and partly performs a protective function. Nevertheless, the presence of adhesions violates the mechanical properties of the heart, negatively affects central hemodynamics, complicates the surgeon’s task during repeated surgical interventions and increases the risk of repeated operations.It has been shown that at present, for the prevention of adhesions, researchers tend to use biodegradable barrier materials with biocompatibility and the ability to dissolve after performing the barrier function. The main anti-adhesion agents used in cardiac surgery are membranes and gels. The requirements for an “ideal” agent for the prevention of adhesion were determined: biocompatibility, no irritating effect, no effect on wound healing, suppression of the growth of connective tissue in the pericardium.Conclusions. Until now, none of the funds has all the necessary qualities to prevent adhesion in the pericardium. Therefore, the search for effective methods for the prevention of postoperative adhesions remains relevant for cardiac surgery.


Author(s):  
Benyi Cao ◽  
Jian Xu ◽  
Fei Wang ◽  
Yunhui Zhang ◽  
David O’Connor

Soil pollution is one of the major threats to the environment and jeopardizes the provision of key soil ecosystem services. Vertical barriers, including slurry trench walls and walls constructed with soil mix technology, have been employed for decades to control groundwater flow and subsurface contaminant transport. This paper comprehensively reviewed and assessed the typical materials and mechanical and permeability properties of soil–bentonite, cement–bentonite and soil mix barriers, with the values of mix design and engineering properties summarized and compared. In addition, the damage and durability of barrier materials under mechanical, chemical, and environmental stresses were discussed. A number of landmark remediation projects were documented to demonstrate the effectiveness of the use of barrier systems. Recent research about crack-resistant and self-healing barrier materials incorporating polymers and minerals at Cambridge University and performance monitoring techniques were analyzed. Future work should focus on two main areas: the use of geophysical methods for non-destructive monitoring and the optimization of resilient barrier materials.


Coatings ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 1451
Author(s):  
Wen Zhong ◽  
Xiaobin Yang ◽  
Jikun Sun ◽  
Hongwei Gao ◽  
Yongping Bai ◽  
...  

Polymeric barrier materials are critical in contemporary industries for food, medicine, and chemical packaging. However, these materials, such as PET films, are impeded by the optimization of barrier properties by virtue of molecular design. Herein, a new methyl methacrylate-methyl acrylate-diallyl maleate-maleic acid (MMA-MAc-DAM-MA) was synthesized to tailor the surface properties of PET films for maximizing oxygen barrier properties. During the MMA-MAc-DAM-MA coating and curing process, the chemical structure evolutions of MMA-MAc-DAM-MA coatings were characterized, indicating that the cross-linking conversion and proportion of –COOH groups are critical for the oxygen barrier properties of coatings. The inherent –COOH groups are transformed into designed structures, including intramolecular anhydride, inter-chain anhydride and retained carboxylic acid. Therein, the inter-chain anhydride restraining the activity of coated polymer chain mainly contributes to enhanced barrier properties. The thermal properties of novel coatings were analyzed, revealing that the curing behavior is strongly dependent on the curing temperatures. The impacts of viscosity of the coating solution, coating velocity, and coating thickness on the oxygen permeability (Po2) of the coatings were investigated using a gas permeability tester to explore the optimum operating parameters during practical applications, which can reduce the Po2 of PET film by 47.8%. This work provides new insights on advanced coating materials for excellent barrier performance.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (22) ◽  
pp. 7000
Author(s):  
Iftikhar Ahmed Channa ◽  
Aqeel Ahmed Shah ◽  
Muhammad Rizwan ◽  
Muhammad Atif Makhdoom ◽  
Ali Dad Chandio ◽  
...  

Silica is one of the most efficient gas barrier materials, and hence is widely used as an encapsulating material for electronic devices. In general, the processing of silica is carried out at high temperatures, i.e., around 1000 °C. Recently, processing of silica has been carried out from a polymer called Perhydropolysilazane (PHPS). The PHPS reacts with environmental moisture or oxygen and yields pure silica. This material has attracted many researchers and has been widely used in many applications such as encapsulation of organic light-emitting diodes (OLED) displays, semiconductor industries, and organic solar cells. In this paper, we have demonstrated the process optimization of the conversion of the PHPS into silica in terms of curing methods as well as curing the environment. Various curing methods including exposure to dry heat, damp heat, deep UV, and their combination under different environments were used to cure PHPS. FTIR analysis suggested that the quickest conversion method is the irradiation of PHPS with deep UV and simultaneous heating at 100 °C. Curing with this method yields a water permeation rate of 10−3 g/(m2⋅day) and oxygen permeation rate of less than 10−1 cm3/(m2·day·bar). Rapid curing at low-temperature processing along with barrier properties makes PHPS an ideal encapsulating material for organic solar cell devices and a variety of similar applications.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 295-297
Author(s):  
Ben Laurich

Abstract. The German repository site selection procedure calls for a radioactive waste containment zone with a low-permeability host rock (kf<10-10 m s−1, StandAG §23, 5) and long-term sealing by barrier materials (EndlSiAnfV, 2020; ESK, 2019). The potential host rocks, clay and rock salt, as well as the considered barrier materials, bentonite and compacted crushed salt, show permeability in the range of kf∼10-16 m s−1 (K∼10-21 m2). These low values suggest that advective flow is as slow as diffusive mass flux. Measuring such low permeability with adequate accuracy challenges measurement setups and respective error evaluation. Methodologies. Several low-permeability measurements are carried out by transient tests, e.g. by monitoring controlled fluid pressure changes in: (1) pressure decay and (2) oscillating pulse tests. The first method (1) deviates permeability from the time needed to compensate pressure differences through the sample. The latter (2) monitors phase shift and amplitude attenuation of controlled pressure pulses passing through the sample. Any permeability measurement needs to be post-processed, e.g. for: (1) material-intrinsic controls (saturation state, storativity, the fluids' compressibility, etc.), (2) environmental controls (temperature, confining pressures, etc.) and (3) theoretical considerations (Klinkenberg correction, multi-phase wetting angles, etc.). Salts. A porosity-permeability relation was found down to K=10-19 m2 (e.g., Popp et al., 2007). Testing fluids were NaCl brine, oils, He and N2 as a fluid. As a matter of current research, a critical, low-permeability value might be associated with the so-called “percolation threshold” that defines the minimal requirements for an interconnected pore system (e.g., DAEF, 2016). Clays. A major challenge is the long duration of sample saturation (up to several months) and pressure equilibration (often days), as well as precise, temperature-compensated measuring and the determination of the samples' storativity (e.g., Winhausen et al., 2021). Testing fluids are commonly designed mixtures mimicking the rocks' pore waters. Geotechnical barrier materials. The permeability testing performed is similar to that of salt and clays mentioned above. However, both barrier materials, crushed salt and bentonite, have significant permeability early after emplacement. This is beneficial, as it allows the outflow of unwanted canister corrosion gases. Eventually, the permeability drops by orders of magnitude and the barriers become tight seals in the long-term. Here, identifying the gas entry/breakthrough pressure has been valuable (e.g., Rothfuchs et al., 2007). Figure 1 shows a preliminary sensitivity analysis as an example of pressure decay measurements. It suggests that the pressure equilibration term (c), and hence the test duration, is most sensitive to the calculation of low permeability. However, the large variation of (representative) material and environmental controls make permeability measurements complex. This workshop aims to encourage discussions on uncertainty and sensitivity of the influencing controls, such that it may lead to a “best-practice” guide for permeability measurements.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 293-294
Author(s):  
Johannes Kulenkampff ◽  
Till Bollermann ◽  
Maria A. Cardenas Rivera ◽  
Cornelius Fischer

Abstract. The analysis of fluid transport through tight barrier materials poses two major challenges: (i) Long equilibration periods require long minimum experiment durations, and (ii) the fluid transport frequently results in complex pattern formation. Measuring times that are too short may feign transport rates that are too low; intact homogeneous samples are often missing problematic features, e.g. fractures. Both issues are detected and analyzed by using process tomography techniques, thereby providing an improved understanding of transport processes in complex materials. We thus continuously develop and apply the positron emission tomography (PET) method for geomaterials (Kulenkampff et al., 2016). This is able to trace very low concentrations of β+-emitting radionuclides during their passage through drill cores of barrier material with reasonable resolution (1 mm) and over variable periods (hours to years). The method yields time-resolved quantitative tomographic images of the tracer concentration (e.g. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.166509), in contrast to input-output experiments like common permeability measurements, diffusion cells or break-through curves. Our current research includes the analysis of diffusive transport in heterogeneous shales (sandy facies of the Opalinus Clay) (BMBF and HGF iCross project), the reactive flow in fracture-filling materials of crystalline rocks (Eurad FUTURE project) and transport in engineered barriers and the contact zone (Euratom Cebama, Eurad Magic, as well as MgO and Stroefun BMWi projects). The efforts combine flow field tomography, structural imaging and reactive transport modelling to improve process understanding and to provide a bridge from the molecular to the macroscopic scale. The benefits include: Insight into temporal stability and spatial heterogeneity of the observed transport process Parameterization of local velocity distribution and effective volume as well as comparability with pore-scale model simulations Ability to quantify multiple internal transport rates without the need to register the delayed output signal Transparent and palpable visualization of processes hidden in the opaque material The method requires specific constraints of the experimental setup (size, fluid pressure, temperature). Nevertheless, it provides unique insight into reactive transport processes observed in potential materials for nuclear waste management.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 239-240
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Martin ◽  
Ingo Blechschmidt

Abstract. Nagra and its international partners have been conducting underground research projects at the Grimsel Test Site (GTS, https://www.grimsel.com, last access: 8 November 2021) for more than 35 years. The results have been incorporated directly into modelling, safety and engineering feasibility studies necessary for the siting and construction of deep geological repositories. Various types of experiments are carried out at the GTS, each involving field testing, laboratory studies, design and modelling tasks, thus integrating all scientific aspects. Projects are typically planned over a 5 year period with the option to extend depending on the latest findings from the experiment. In the current 5 year programme (2019–2023) new phases of running in situ experiments using radionuclides were started and include the Long-Term Diffusion experiment (LTD) and the Colloid Formation and Migration project (CFM). A completely new experiment studying the migration of C-14 and I-129 in aged cement (CIM) was also initiated. Other experiments focusing mostly on engineered barrier materials were continued such as the Material Corrosion Test (MaCoTe), which is studying anaerobic corrosion of candidate canister materials in bentonite (Fig. 1). Also, a 1:1 scale experiment studying the high-temperature (>175∘C) effects on bentonite materials (HotBENT project) was started last year. In this paper we provide an overview of the CIM, LTD and MaCoTe projects, including key findings so far. In addition to research, the GTS, as part of the Grimsel Training Centre (GTC), is also used as an education platform for knowledge transfer to the next generation of scientists and engineers in the area of radioactive waste disposal and geosciences.


Foods ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 2702
Author(s):  
Anna-Sophia Bauer ◽  
Manfred Tacker ◽  
Ilke Uysal-Unalan ◽  
Rui M. S. Cruz ◽  
Theo Varzakas ◽  
...  

Multilayer flexible food packaging is under pressure to redesign for recyclability. Most multilayer films are not sorted and recycled with the currently available infrastructure, which is based on mechanical recycling in most countries. Up to now, multilayer flexible food packaging was highly customizable. Diverse polymers and non-polymeric layers allowed a long product shelf-life and an optimized material efficiency. The need for more recyclable solutions asks for a reduction in the choice of material. Prospectively, there is a strong tendency that multilayer flexible barrier packaging should be based on polyolefins and a few recyclable barrier layers, such as aluminium oxide (AlOx) and silicon oxide (SiOx). The use of ethylene vinyl alcohol (EVOH) and metallization could be more restricted in the future, as popular Design for Recycling Guidelines have recently reduced the maximum tolerable content of barrier materials in polyolefin packaging. The substitution of non-recyclable flexible barrier packaging is challenging because only a limited number of barriers are available. In the worst case, the restriction on material choice could result in a higher environmental burden through a shortened food shelf-life and increased packaging weights.


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