Cylindrical Samples (cylindrical + sample)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


EFFECTS OF THERMAL AND ELECTROTHERMAL PRETREATMENTS ON HOT AIR DRYING RATE OF VEGETABLE TISSUE

JOURNAL OF FOOD PROCESS ENGINEERING, Issue 4 2000
WEI-CHI WANG
ABSTRACT Cylindrical samples of carrot, potato and yam were dried in a hot-air dehydrator after preheating to 50C or 80C by three different heating methods (conventional, microwave and ohmic). The results showed that enhancement of drying rate increased with pretreatment temperature. Ohmic pretreatment increased the drying rate more than conventional and microwave heating. Desorption isotherms showed that in the low aw range, desorption data of preheated and raw materials were similar. However, the isotherms of preheated samples shifted when aw was high, which indicated that thermal pretreatments altered the structure, and apparently, the water distribution within these materials. For all samples, ohmic pretreatment showed stronger influences on isotherms than microwave heating, while the pretreatment effect of conventional heating was only observed for potato tissue. [source]


Approximal caries development in surfaces in contact with fluoride-releasing and non-fluoride-releasing restorative materials: an in situ study

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORAL SCIENCES, Issue 6 2007
Áine M. Lennon
This study investigated the effect of compomer on initial interproximal caries development. One-hundred and sixty cylindrical, and 40 semispherical, bovine enamel samples (control) were prepared, polished, and sterilized. Sixty semicircular samples were prepared from each of the compomer Dyract eXtra and the fluoride-free composite Spectrum TPH. Samples were stored in water and fluoridated twice daily for 28 d. A baseline quantitative light fluorescence (QLF) image was made of each cylindrical sample. Twenty volunteers received intra-oral appliances with eight sample chambers. Each wing contained 1 control sample and either 3 Dyract eXtra or 3 Spectrum TPH samples in contact with the enamel surface of a cylindrical enamel sample. Appliances were worn for 24 h a day for 28 d except during toothbrushing (twice daily) and placement in 10% sucrose solution (five times daily). A final QLF image was made after 28 d. Caries development was analyzed as the lesion area × mean fluorescence loss (,Q % mm2) between these and the baseline images using QLF subtract software. The median ,Q was significantly lower in the Dyract eXtra group (,6.1% mm2) than in the Spectrum TPH (,13.9% mm2, P , 0.001) or control (,11.4% mm2, P = 0.03) groups. Teeth in contact with the compomer developed less caries compared with controls. [source]


Heat and mass transfer during microwave-convective drying

AICHE JOURNAL, Issue 1 2010
Stefan J. Kowalski
Abstract The article presents a mathematical model of drying that describes the kinetics of combined microwave-convective drying for the process as a whole. Based on this model, the drying curves and the temperature evolutions of the drying body were constructed by a number of computer-simulated drying programs, which were chosen to follow the respective experimental processes carried out on a cylindrical sample made of kaolin. The experimental data allowed both the estimate of material coefficients arising in the model and the validation of the theory. A very satisfactory correlation of the theoretical predictions with the experimental data is found. The main novelty of this article is the mathematically complete drying model that describes all periods of the microwave-convective drying process. Application of such a complete model is necessary if we want to optimize drying processes with respect to drying time and consumption of energy via computer simulations. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 2009 [source]


Bioluminescent monitoring of turbulent bioconvection

LUMINESCENCE: THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL LUMINESCENCE, Issue 2 2006
imkus
Abstract Under adjusted experimental conditions, open-to-air cultures of lux gene-engineered Ralstonia eutropha (wholecell biosensors of copper) exhibit bioconvection, which accounts for fluctuating bioluminescence. The power spectrum of bioluminescence intensity fluctuations recorded from a cylindrical sample 9 mm in diameter and ,10 mm in height is characterized by a dominant low-frequency oscillation (with a characteristic period of ,8,12 min), which is occasionally accompanied by a few weaker oscillations. The corresponding spectral peaks emerge on a high-noise background. The spectra of bioluminescence intensity fluctuations qualitatively resemble the spectra of temperature or fluid velocity fluctuations in an appropriate turbulent thermal convection system. It has been suggested that in a bioconvective system, like in thermal convection systems, the emergence of oscillation reflects the large-scale convective circulation that spans the height of the cylindrical cell. The velocity of large-scale bioconvective circulation was estimated to be 37,48 µm/s. The occasional emergence of weaker-than-dominant oscillations was explained through the coexistence and interaction of the large-scale circulation with, presumably, a gene-expression-related cyclic process (with a characteristic period of ,25,50 min). Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Visualization of the distant dipolar field: A numerical study

CONCEPTS IN MAGNETIC RESONANCE, Issue 6 2009
Stefan Kirsch
Abstract The magnetization of liquid water in an external field generates an intrinsic magnetic field in the sample called the distant dipolar field (DDF). To visualize the spatial distribution of the DDF a numerical study was performed for the case of liquid,state 1H NMR at 7 T. 2D maps of the frequency offset caused by the DDF in pure water were calculated for homogenously magnetized spherical and cylindrical samples as well as for the case of a spatially modulated magnetization distribution occurring e.g., in CRAZED (Cosy Revamped by Asymmetric Z-Gradient Echo Detection) experiments. The calculation yielded DDF induced frequency offsets in the range of 0.58 Hz to 10.24 Hz inside the homogeneously magnetized cylinders, while DDF-induced frequency offsets ,10,5 Hz were obtained inside the sphere. The calculated frequency offsets were in good agreement with analytical results available for a sphere and an infinitely long cylinder. In the case of a spatially modulated magnetization distribution, DDF-induced frequency offsets with maximum values of +0.83 Hz were obtained inside the sphere. The presented 2D maps of the DDF-induced frequency offset have tutorial character and may help to visualize this phenomenon in a direct manner. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Concepts Magn Reson Part A 34A:357,364, 2009. [source]


A mesoscopic model for the behaviour of concrete under high confinement

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL AND ANALYTICAL METHODS IN GEOMECHANICS, Issue 11 2009
F. Dupray
Abstract When impact loaded, concrete is submitted to high triaxial stresses. The experimental response of concrete under quasi-static triaxial compression is studied using a triaxial press capable of applying a mean pressure greater than 1,GPa on cylindrical samples measuring 7,cm in diameter and 14,cm high. A numerical analysis of these previous experiments is performed herein at a mesoscopic scale. Concrete is modelled as a biphasic material consisting of a mortar (cement paste and fine aggregates) and roughly spherical aggregates (with a diameter exceeding 2,mm) whose characteristics are applied on a regular cubic finite element mesh. A damage-plasticity model is then used to model the behaviour of mortar. An identification of model parameters on mortar samples and the subsequent comparison between numerical and experimental tests will be presented for hydrostatic and triaxial compression. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


COMPARISON OF MECHANICAL TESTS FOR EVALUATING TEXTURAL CHANGES IN POTATOES DURING THERMAL SOFTENING

JOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES, Issue 6 2002
W. K. SOLOMON
ABSTRACT The changes in the texture of cylindrical samples of potato tissues immersed in water at 60, 70, 80 and 90C for up to 80 min were monitored at each temperature in terms of tangent modulus of elasticity in axial and radial compression tests, and elasticity and viscosity parameters in creep and stress relaxation tests. The magnitude of all mechanical test parameters decreased with an increase in heating time and temperature. The creep and stress relaxation responses of individual potato samples were adequately represented by respective mechanical models (R2= 0.94 to 0.99). The mechanical test parameters followed apparent first-order degradation kinetics due to the effect of thermal softening, and the rate constant was used as an index of the sensitivity of a mechanical test. The radial compression test was relatively more sensitive than the axial test. Based on an overall comparison, the parameters from creep and stress relaxation tests were found to be the most sensitive in describing the textural changes during thermal softening of potatoes. [source]


Remote Plasma Device for Surface Modification at Atmospheric Pressure

PLASMA PROCESSES AND POLYMERS, Issue S1 2009
Patrick Reichen
Abstract Here, a novel atmospheric plasma device is presented, which applies the (remote) afterglow of micro-barrier discharges. The study evaluates its applicability to surface modification of temperature-sensitive particulates. As such, cylindrical samples have been placed in the remote treatment zone of the device, and the effects of treatment time and variable gas mixtures on the surface wettability are investigated. Furthermore, the influence of the excess voltage in He discharge with admixtures of O2, CO2 and N2 and the effect thereof on the water contact angle is described. [source]


Water sorption into poly[(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate)- co -(1-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone)]at 310 K

POLYMER INTERNATIONAL, Issue 11 2003
Mark Malak
Abstract Poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) and copolymers of 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA) and 1-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone (VP) in the form of cylindrical samples (,8 mm × 20 mm) have been prepared and the sorption of water into these cylinders has been studied by the mass-uptake methods and by magnetic-resonance imaging. The equilibrium water contents for the cylinders were found to vary systematically with the copolymer composition. Diffusion of water into the cylinders was found to follow Fickian behaviour for cylinders with high HEMA contents, with the diffusion coefficients obtained from mass-uptake studies dependent on the copolymer composition, varying from 1.7 × 10,11 m2 s,1 for poly(HEMA) to 2.0 × 10,11 m2 s,1 for poly(HEMA- co -VP) with a composition of 1:1. However, NMR-imaging studies showed that, while the profiles of the water diffusion fronts for cylinders with high HEMA contents were Fickian, that for the 1:1 copolymer was not and indicated that the mechanism was Case III. The polymers which were rich in VP were characterized by a water-sorption process which follows Case-III behaviour. Copyright © 2003 Society of Chemical Industry [source]