Spelling suggestions: "subject:"isothermal."" "subject:"isothermally.""
1 |
Nonisothermal Crystallization and Thermal Degradation Behaviors of Poly(butylene succinate) and its Copolyesters with Minor Amounts of Propylene SuccinateLu, Shih-fu 15 August 2010 (has links)
Poly(butylene succinate) (PBSu) and two poly(butylene succinate-co-propylene succinate)s (PBPSu 95/5 and PBPSu 90/10) were synthesized via the direct polycondensation reaction. The copolyesters were characterized as having 7.0 and 11.5 mol% propylene succinate (PS) units, respectively, by 1H NMR. Copolyesters were characterized as random, based on 13C NMR spectra. They were fully investigated during nonisothermal crystallization and thermal degradation through various approaches in this study. A differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and a polarized light microscope (PLM) adopted to study the nonisothermal crystallization of these polyesters at a cooling rate of 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 10 ºC/min. Morphologies and the isothermal growth rates of spherulites under PLM experiments were monitored and obtained by curve-fitting, respectively. These continuous rate data were analyzed with the Lauritzen-Hoffman equation. A transition of regime II ¡÷ III was found at 95.6, 84.4, and 77.3 ºC for PBSu, PBPSu 95/5, and PBPSu 90/10, respectively.
DSC exothermic curves show that all of the nonisothermal crystallization occurred in regime III. DSC data were analyzed using modified Avrami, Ozawa, Mo, Friedman and Vyazovkin equations. Ozawa equation does not accurately describe the nonisothermal crystallization kinetics of this polyester because part of the crystallization is secondary crystallization. All the results of PLM and DSC measurements indicate that incorporation of minor PS units into PBSu markedly inhibits the crystallization of the resulting polymer. The melting behavior of nonisothermally crystallized samples presents a continuous melting¡Vrecrystallization¡Vremelting process. Additionally, three absorption bands during the nonisothermal crystallization were identified for PBSu and two PBPSu copolyesters, namely, 916, 955, 1045 cm-1 in the attenuated total reflectance FTIR spectra.
Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA)-FTIR was heated at 5 ºC/min under N2 to monitor the degradation products of these three polyesters. FTIR spectra revealed that the major products were anhydrides, which were obtained following two cyclic intramolecular degradation mechanisms by breaking the weak O-CH2 bonds around a succinate group. Thermal stability at heating rates of 1, 3, 5, and 10 ºC/min under N2 was investigated using TGA. The model-free methods of Friedman and Ozawa equations are useful for studying the activation energy of degradation in each period of mass loss. The results reveal that the random incorporation of minor PS units into PBSu did not markedly affect their thermal resistance. Two model-fitting mechanisms were used to determine the loss mass function f(£\), the activation energy and the associated mechanism. The mechanism of autocatalysis nth-order, with f(£\)=£\m(1-£\)n, fitted the experimental data much more closely than did the nth-order mechanism given by f(£\)=(1-£\)n. The obtained activation energy was used to estimate the failure temperature (Tf). The values of Tf for a mass loss of 5% and an endurance time of 60,000 hr are 160.7, 155.5, and 159.3 ºC for PBSu and two the copolyesters, respectively.
|
2 |
Nonisothermal Crystallization and Thermal Degradation Behaviors of Poly(butylene succinate) and its Copolyesters with Minor Amounts of 2-methyl-1,3-Propylene SuccinateLu, Jin-Shan 11 August 2012 (has links)
Poly(butylene succinate) (PBSu), poly(2-methyl-1,3-propylene succinate) (PMPSu), and their two novel poly(butylene succinate-co-2-methyl-1,3-propylene succinate)s (PBMPSu 95/05 and PBMPSu 90/10) were synthesized by a two-stage esterification reaction. PBMPSu 95/05 and PBMPSu 90/10 were characterized as having 6.5 and 10.8 mol% 2-methyl-1,3-propylene succinate (MPS) units, respectively, by 1H NMR. These copolymers were characterized to be random from the 13C NMR spectra. In this study, the nonisothermal crystallization and thermal degradation behaviors of the polyesters were investigated via different approaches. A differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and a polarized light microscope (PLM) were employed to investigate the nonisothermal crystallization of these copolyesters and neat PBSu. Morphology and the isothermal growth rates of spherulites under PLM experiments at three cooling rates of 1, 2.5 and 5 ¢XC/min were monitored and obtained by curve-fitting. These continuous rate data were analyzed with the Lauritzen-Hoffman equation. A transition of regime II ¡÷ III was found at 96.2, 83.5, and 77.9 ¢XC for PBSu, PBMPSu 95/05, and PBMPSu 90/10, respectively. DSC exothermic curves at five cooling rates of 1, 2.5, 5, 10 and 20 ¢XC/min show that almost all of the nonisothermal crystallization occurred in regime III. DSC data were analyzed using modified Avrami, Tobin, Ozawa, Mo, Friedman and Vyazovkin equations. All the results of PLM and DSC measurements reveal that incorporation of minor MPS units into PBSu markedly inhibits the crystallization of the resulting polymer. The nonisothermal crystallization behavior of these polyesters was also investigated using a Fourier-transform infrared spectrometer (FTIR) with an attenuated total reflection (ATR). The absorbance peaks of crystals for the £\ form (918, 955, and 1045 cm-1) of PBSu and PBMPSu copolyesters were observed by ATR-FTIR under nonisothermal crystallization. When these semicrystalline polyesters started to be solidified from the melt state, these characteristic absorption bands for PBSu and its copolyesters crystals have been detected.
In this study, the thermal degradation mechanisms of PBSu, PMPSu, PBMPSu 95/05, and PBMPSu 90/10 were investigated using a thermogravimetric analyzer combined Fourier-transform infrared spectrometer (TGA-FTIR) and a pyrolysis-gas chromatography¡Vmass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS). The volatile products evolved from the thermal degradation of these two copolyesters were identified to be anhydride, ether, ester, alcohol, alkene, aldehyde, and CO2. FTIR spectra displayed that the main degradation products for these four polymers were anhydrides. Moreover, PBSu-rich PBMPSu copolymers exhibited the same thermal degradation mechanism as that of PBSu at lower thermal degradation temperatures (< 403 ºC) and as that of PMPSu at higher thermal degradation temperatures (> 403 ºC) by the TGA-FTIR analysis. The results of the TGA-FTIR analysis clearly demonstrates that the influence of MPS units on the thermal degradation process is gradually increased as the temperature increases for PBMPSu copolymers. The degradation mechanism of PBMPSu at lower thermal degradation temperatures and PBSu mainly follows the £]-hydrogen bond scission mechanism and the back-biting process from the polymer chains. Moreover, the degradation mechanism of PBMPSu at higher thermal degradation temperatures and PMPSu occurred mainly through the £]-hydrogen bond scission and secondarily through £\-hydrogen bond scission.
Finally, the thermal stability and degradation kinetics of these polyesters were investigated using a TGA at heating rates of 1, 3, 5, and 10 ºC/min under dynamic nitrogen. The activation energies of thermal degradation in elective conversions were estimated using the Friedman and Ozawa methods. The results clearly demonstrated that the thermal stabilities of these PBMPSu copolyesters were slightly reduced with the incorporation of minor MPS units into PBSu. Two model-fitting methods of nth-order and autocatalysis nth-order reaction mechanisms were adopted to determine the mass loss function f(£\), the activation energy and the associated degradation parameters. The results revealed that the mechanism of autocatalysis nth-order fitted the experimental data much more closely than did the nth-order mechanism for PBSu, PMPSu and PBMPSu copolymers.
|
3 |
Model development of a polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell to predict steady and unsteady behaviorMishra, Bikash 13 December 2008 (has links)
Fuel cells are promising technology to meet the energy need of the future. This alternative energy source is clean and efficient, and with the continuous decrease in fossil fuel resources, one of the best bets towards sustaining our power needs. Fuel cells are being used in automobiles as well as to fulfill portable power needs. In this work a computational model has been developed for fuel cells which can be used to simulate traditional as well as passive proton exchange membrane fuel cell behavior. The model is unsteady, two phase, nonisothermal in nature, and also capable of handling natural convection or buoyancy driven flows. The model also takes into account electrochemical reactions at catalyst sites. The model has been implemented and validated against experiments. It is used to carry out unsteady simulations to study start-up characteristic of proton exchange membrane fuel cells and to follow the behavior of liquid water as well as heat transfer within the cell. The buoyancy model is used to simulate a natural convection region and a passive fuel cell (used for portable applications). Design of passive fuel cells is driven by high temperature regimes and that issue has been further explored.
|
4 |
Electrolyte- and Transport-Enhanced Thermogalvanic Energy ConversionJanuary 2015 (has links)
abstract: Waste heat energy conversion remains an inviting subject for research, given the renewed emphasis on energy efficiency and carbon emissions reduction. Solid-state thermoelectric devices have been widely investigated, but their practical application remains challenging because of cost and the inability to fabricate them in geometries that are easily compatible with heat sources. An intriguing alternative to solid-state thermoelectric devices is thermogalvanic cells, which include a generally liquid electrolyte that permits the transport of ions. Thermogalvanic cells have long been known in the electrochemistry community, but have not received much attention from the thermal transport community. This is surprising given that their performance is highly dependent on controlling both thermal and mass (ionic) transport. This research will focus on a research project, which is an interdisciplinary collaboration between mechanical engineering (i.e. thermal transport) and chemistry, and is a largely experimental effort aimed at improving fundamental understanding of thermogalvanic systems. The first part will discuss how a simple utilization of natural convection within the cell doubles the maximum power output of the cell. In the second part of the research, some of the results from the previous part will be applied in a feasibility study of incorporating thermogalvanic waste heat recovery systems into automobiles. Finally, a new approach to enhance Seebeck coefficient by tuning the configurational entropy of a mixed-ligand complex formation of copper sulfate aqueous electrolytes will be presented. Ultimately, a summary of these results as well as possible future work that can be formed from these efforts is discussed. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Mechanical Engineering 2015
|
5 |
Thermo-Hydro-Mechanical Effects of Climate Change on Geotechnical InfrastructureRobinson, Joe Dylan 12 August 2016 (has links)
The main goal of this research is to quantitatively assess the resilience and vulnerability of geotechnical infrastructure to extreme events under a changing climate. In the first part, pertinent facts and statistics regarding California’s extreme drought and current status of its levees are presented. Weakening processes such as soil strength reduction, soil desiccation cracking, land subsidence and surface erosion, and oxidation of soil organic carbon are comprehensively evaluated to illustrate the devastating impacts that the California drought can have on earthen structures. In the second part, rainfall-triggered slope instabilities are analyzed using extreme precipitation estimates, derived using the historical stationary and a proposed future nonstationary approach. The extremes are integrated into a series of fully coupled 2D finite element simulations. The final part of this study investigates the impact of simultaneous variations in soil moisture and temperature changes in the California region on soil strength through a proposed thermo-hydro-mechanical framework.
|
Page generated in 0.06 seconds