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Convective equilibrium

At equilibrium convective heat transfer from air to water (or ice) equals radiant heat loss from water Cot ice) to space. Hence... [Pg.196]

Several mechanisms may be proposed to explain the process of spontaneous emulsification, all of which are related to the properties of the interfacial film. The first mechanism is due to interfacial turbulence that may occur as a result of mass transfer or by non-uniform adsorption of the surfactant molecules at the OAV interface. The interface shows unsteady motions - streams of one phase are ejected and penetrate into the second phase. This is illustrated in Figure 4.1(a) which shows the localized reduction in interfacial tension caused by non-uniform adsorption of surfactants or mass transfer of surfactants across the interface (5-7). When the two phases are not in chemical equilibrium, convection currents may be formed which transfers the liquid rich in surfactants towards the areas deficient in surfactants. These convection currents may give rise to... [Pg.74]

The scan rate, u = EIAt, plays a very important role in sweep voltannnetry as it defines the time scale of the experiment and is typically in the range 5 mV s to 100 V s for nonnal macroelectrodes, although sweep rates of 10 V s are possible with microelectrodes (see later). The short time scales in which the experiments are carried out are the cause for the prevalence of non-steady-state diflfiision and the peak-shaped response. Wlien the scan rate is slow enough to maintain steady-state diflfiision, the concentration profiles with time are linear within the Nemst diflfiision layer which is fixed by natural convection, and the current-potential response reaches a plateau steady-state current. On reducing the time scale, the diflfiision layer caimot relax to its equilibrium state, the diffusion layer is thiimer and hence the currents in the non-steady-state will be higher. [Pg.1927]

There are many potential advantages to kinetic methods of analysis, perhaps the most important of which is the ability to use chemical reactions that are slow to reach equilibrium. In this chapter we examine three techniques that rely on measurements made while the analytical system is under kinetic rather than thermodynamic control chemical kinetic techniques, in which the rate of a chemical reaction is measured radiochemical techniques, in which a radioactive element s rate of nuclear decay is measured and flow injection analysis, in which the analyte is injected into a continuously flowing carrier stream, where its mixing and reaction with reagents in the stream are controlled by the kinetic processes of convection and diffusion. [Pg.622]

Influence of Chemical Reactions on Uq and When a chemical reaction occurs, the transfer rate may be influenced by the chemical reac tion as well as by the purely physical processes of diffusion and convection within the two phases. Since this situation is common in gas absorption, gas absorption will be the focus of this discussion. One must consider the impacts of chemical equilibrium and reac tion kinetics on the absorption rate in addition to accounting for the effec ts of gas solubility, diffusivity, and system hydrodynamics. [Pg.615]

Wet-bulb temperature is the dynamic equilibrium temperature attained by a water surface when the rate of heat transfer to the surface by convection equals the rate of mass transfer away from the surface. At equilibrium, if neghgible change in the dry-bulb temperature is assumed, a heat balance on the surface is... [Pg.1151]

The liquid-liquid extraction process is based on the specific distribution of dissolved components between two immiscible fluids, for instance, between aqueous and organic liquids. The process refers to a mass exchange processes in which the mass transport of component (j) from phase (1) to phase (2) by means of convection or molecular diffusion acts to achieve the chemical potential (p) equilibrium (134) ... [Pg.267]

Wall temperatures drop after reaching the maximum in the case of the two highest heat flux levels in Fig. 8, and this is due to increasing convective heat transfer through the steam film, which now completely blankets the surface. The improved heat transfer is caused by the higher flow velocities in the tube as more entrained liquid is evaporated. Finally, at about 100% quality, based on the assumption of thermal equilibrium, only steam is present, and wall temperatures rise once more due to decreasing heat-transfer coefficients as the steam becomes superheated. [Pg.225]

Similar convection-diffusion equations to the Navier-Stokes equation can be formulated for enthalpy or species concentration. In all of these formulations there is always a superposition of diffusive and convective transport of a field quantity, supplemented by source terms describing creation or destruction of the transported quantity. There are two fundamental assumptions on which the Navier-Stokes and other convection-diffusion equations are based. The first and most fundamental is the continuum hypothesis it is assumed that the fluid can be described by a scalar or vector field, such as density or velocity. In fact, the field quantities have to be regarded as local averages over a large number of particles contained in a volume element embracing the point of interest. The second hypothesis relates to the local statistical distribution of the particles in phase space the standard convection-diffusion equations rely on the assumption of local thermal equilibrium. For gas flow, this means that a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution is assumed for the velocity of the particles in the frame-of-reference co-moving with the fluid. Especially the second assumption may break dovm when gas flow at high temperature or low pressure in micro channels is considered, as will be discussed below. [Pg.128]

Benard convection cells [27, 28] a liquid with an inverse temperature gradient (hot below and cool on top) may exhibit thermal convection. Less dense parts of the liquid well upward whereas denser parts show down-welling. The convection cells may arrange in hexagonal order in which the center of each cell wells downwards and the rim wells upwards. The cells stem from the concerted movement of many molecules and cease when the temperature gradient is below a threshold at which the thermal equilibrium canbe reached solely bythermalconductionandnotconvection. [Pg.190]

In order to asses the analytical aspects of the rotating electrodes we must consider the convective-diffusion processes at their bottom surface, and in view of this complex matter we shall confine ourselves to the following conditions (1) as a model of electrode process we take the completely reversible equilibrium reaction ... [Pg.203]

Mathematical approaches used to describe micelle-facilitated dissolution include film equilibrium and reaction plane models. The film equilibrium model assumes simultaneous diffusive transport of the drug and micelle in equilibrium within a common stagnant film at the surface of the solid as shown in Figure 7. The reaction plane approach has also been applied to micelle-facilitated dissolution and has the advantage of including a convective component in the transport analysis. While both models adequately predict micelle-facilitated dissolution, the scientific community perceives the film equilibrium model to be more mathematically tractable, so this model has found greater use. [Pg.141]

JR Crison, VP Shah, JP Skelly, GL Amidon. Drug dissolution into micellar solutions Development of a convective diffusion model and comparison to the film equilibrium model with application to surfactant-facilitated dissolution of carbama-zepine. J Pharm Sci 85 1005-1011, 1996. [Pg.160]

If the supply of surfactant to and from the interface is very fast compared to surface convection, then adsorption equilibrium is attained along the entire bubble. In this case the bubble achieves a constant surface tension, and the formal results of Bretherton apply, only now for a bubble with an equilibrium surface excess concentration of surfactant. The net mass-transfer rate of surfactant to the interface is controlled by the slower of the adsorption-desorption kinetics and the diffusion of surfactant from the bulk solution. The characteris-... [Pg.484]

Again, as expected, in Figure 5 there is an excess of surfactant near the rear stagnation ring due to surface convection towards that point. Forward from that location, however, there is also a depletion relative to equilibrium adsorption. This is caused by the traveling wave in the rear bubble profile as demonstrated in Figure 2 and in Figure 7 to follow. [Pg.490]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.55 ]




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Equilibrium radiative convective

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