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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Theory of diffusion under stress

Nazarov, Andrei V., Mikheev, Alexandr A. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
32

Li diffusion in LiAlO 2 single crystals studied with NMR spectroscopy

Indris, Sylvio, Uecker, Reinhard, Heitjans, Paul January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
33

Self-diffusion slowdown in liquid indium and gallium under confinement

Charnaya, Elena V., Tien, Cheng, Michel, Dieter, Lee, Ming Kwang, Wang, Wei January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
34

Moments method applied to the In-Situ characterisation of normal butane mass transfer in MFI zeolite membranes: Moments method applied to the In-Situ characterisation of normalbutane mass transfer in MFI zeolite membranes

Courthial, Lucile, Baudot, Arnaud, Jolimaitre, Elsa, Tayakout, Melaz, Jallut, Christian January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
35

Gas diffusion in polycrystalline MFI-type zeolite membranes

Takaba, Hiromitsu, Yamamoto, Atsushi, Hayamizu, Kikuko, Nakao, Shin-ichi January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
36

Rock-typing of laminated sandstones by nuclear magnetic resonance in the presence of diffusion coupling: Rock-typing of laminated sandstones by nuclear magnetic resonance in the presence of diffusion coupling

Alhwety, Nader H., Sayedakram, Nawaf I., Shikhov, Igor, Arns, Christoph H. January 2014 (has links)
In this work, the aim is to assess the relative import ance of the impact of diffusional coupling on NMR measurements of saturated laminated sandstone numerically at the layer scale to assess the feasibility of NMR rock-typing approaches. We use two 3D model structures based on a Boolean particle process, providing a range of structural to diffusion length ratios to explore the relationships between pore geometry, surface magnetic properties, and NMR transverse relaxation time. The influence of surface relaxivity and bulk susceptibility contrast on T2 relaxation responses is tested for layered structures to improve the rock-typing methodology. An escalation in pore coupling is observed with decreasing bed thickness as well as decreasing bulk susceptibility contrast and surface relaxivity the latter ones reducing the time available for pore coupling by reducing the effective relaxation rate. When pore coupling is strong, the T2 distribution clearly misrepresents the underlying bimodal distribution of the different morphologies. Consequently, the bimodal relaxation time becomes merged and the relative amplitude of the peaks fails to reflect the true morphologies of the models. Furthermore, we observed that in low noise conditions of numerical simulation the effect of diffusional coupling on transverse relaxation may be misinterpreted for the regularization effect on ILT solution. In such cases, careful selection of Laplace inversion method is essential for effective rock-typing by NMR.
37

Magnetic resonance relaxation measurements using open-geometry sensors to assess the clog state of constructed wetlands

Hughes-Riley, Theodore, Webber, John Beau, Newton, Michael Ian, Morris, Robert H. January 2014 (has links)
Monitoring the T1 relaxation of wetland clog matter has previously been identified as a gauge of its clogged state [1]. Magnetic resonance (MR) sensors explored in other work have typically been of a bore-whole configuration, which may not be ideal in a wetland environment where the sensitive volume of the sensor may become physically clogged and therefore inoperable. This work investigates two open-geometry sensor designs and a short study is presented to determine the suitability of the sensors for monitoring the clog state of wetlands. It was shown that a bar magnet geometry has a higher stray field than that of the four magnet surface sensor also presented, leading to a prohibitively short T2 eff. This means that the T1 values collected are notably shorter and not useful for distinguishing between clog state for the single magnet sensor. By contrast the four magnet surface sensor has a longer T2 eff, making it more suitable for T1 measurements; where T1= 915 ± 212 ms for a very thinly clogged sample, and T1= 127 ± 27 ms for a heavily clogged sample. This offers a clearly resolvable difference in the T1 values allowing the clogging state to be easily determined and making this sensor the desirable choice for long-term embedding.
38

Changes in specific surface as observed by NMR, caused by saturation of chalk with porewater bearing divalent ions: Changes in specific surface as observed by NMR, caused by saturation of chalk with porewater bearing divalent ions

Katika, Konstantina, Adassi, Mouadh, Alam, Mohammad Monzurul, Fabricius, Ida Lykke January 2014 (has links)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectrometry has proved to be a good technique for determining the petrophysical properties of reservoir rocks; such as porosity and pore size distribution. We investigated how pore water rich in divalent ions affect the NMR signal from chalk with two different depositional textures. We compared two cases. The first experiments on outcrop chalk with high salinity brines showed that saturation with divalent ions (Mg2+, Ca2+ and SO4 2-) cause major shifts in the T2 distribution curve, probably due to precipitation in the pore space. In a second set of experiments, fluid samples where precipitation takes place were found to show shifts in the T2 relaxation curve due to the creation of crystals. We were able to identify how differences in the rock texture and precipitants within the pore space may affect the transverse relaxation time by altering the surface-to-volume ratio of the pore space. The results of this work could benefit the ongoing study on the optimization of the water composition for Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) methods and shed light on how it can affect the mechanical and physical properties of the rock.
39

Diffusion fundamentals: for the basic principles of diffusion theory, experiment and application

Universität Leipzig January 2005 (has links)
Diffusion Fundamentals is a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary open-access online journal published as a part of the website Diffusion-Fundamentals.org. It publishes original research articles in the field of diffusion and transport. Main research areas include theory, experiments applications, methods and diffusion-like phenomena. The readers of Diffusion Fundamentals are academic or industrial scientists in all research disciplines. The journal aims at providing a broad forum for their communication.
40

New instrumental platform for the exploitation of the field-dependence of T 1 in rock core analysis and petroleum fluids: application to T 1-T 2 correlation maps

Korb, Jean-Pierre, Ferrante, Gianni, Bubici, Salvatore, Mallett, Mike January 2014 (has links)
We propose using the latest wide bore fast field cycling NMR relaxometers for measuring the nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion (NMRD) profiles of the logarithmic average proton-water <1/T1> in carbonate rock cores samples of 1 inch diameter and in different crude oil/brine mixings. The observed bilogarithmic frequency behaviours of the NMRD have been interpreted with a proposed theoretical model yielding a measurement of the water local wettability at the pore surface. We have also proposed a NMR platform that uses a variable wide-bore cryogen-free superconducting magnet to acquire 2D T1-T2 correlation spectrum of a mixing of bulk water and crude oil pools. Such a T1-T2 plot allows quantitative separation of mixed bulk water and crude oil. The 2D plot does not reveal any exchange between the different and independent pools.

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