Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148

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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 21
    Citation - Scopus: 24
    Kinetics of Oil Dispersion in the Absence and Presence of Block Copolymers
    (John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1999) Polat, Hürriyet; Polat, Mehmet; Chander, Subhash
    A phenomenological model proposed describes droplet breakup in the turbitlently agitated lean oil-in-water dispersions and provides a correlation between the median droplet size in an agitated vessel of standard geometry and the time of dispersion. It was assumed that the droplet breakup takes place in the dispersion-only region and coalescence is negligible. Vie model described the data from this study and the literature quite satisfactorily under these conditions. The effect of adding triblock PEO/PPO/PEO copofymeric surfactants on the dispersion kinetics of oil was also investigated. Addition of surfactant reduced the median oil droplet size significanfty, and the extent of this reduction was a strong function of surfactant concentration. Application of the model on these data demonstrated that the change in the median droplet size could be divided into two distinct regions. The breakage rate was high initially, most probably due to continuous adsorption of surfactant molecules at the oil/water interface. A lower breakage rate was attained at longer tunes, as the surfactant molecules were depleted from the solution. The time of transition bet\veen the t\vo was affected strongly by the concentration of the surfactant added. Furthermore, the time of addition of the surfactant did not affect the final droplet-size distribution in the system.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 24
    Citation - Scopus: 25
    Processing of Polymers With Supercritical Fluids
    (John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1999) Alsoy Altınkaya, Sacide; Duda, John Larry
    The removal of impurities, such as residual solvents, unreacted monomers, catalysts, and side-reaction products from polymers represents an important step in polymer processing. Conventional devolatilization techniques for the purification of polymers have limited effectiveness. Devolatilization with supercritical fluids, however, can enhance impurity removal by increasing the thermodynamic driving force and molecular diffusivity.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 12
    Citation - Scopus: 12
    Oil Mound Spreading and Migration With Ambient Groundwater Flow in Coarse Porous Media
    (John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1996) Çorapçıoplu, M. Yavuz; Tuncay, Kağan; Ceylan, B. Kağan
    When a light, immiscible oil leaks above an unconfined aquifer, it spreads and forms a floating mound on the table. The oil mound migrates in the direction of ambient ground flow. In this study we present a governing equation for the migrating mound thickness by averaging the oil phase mass balance equation. Analytical and numerical solutions to an advective- dispersive type equation are presented to estimate the temporal and spatial distribution of the migrating oil mound thickness for two problems of practical importance: formation, spreading, and migration of an oil mound on the table and spreading and migration of an established layer of oil with ambient ground flow. The model results compare favorably with test data obtained by laboratory flume experiments. Although the model has some simplifying assumptions such as the absence of capillary pressure gradients, sharp saturation changes across the phase interfaces, and single mobile phase (i.e., oil flow only), it can be useful as a screening or site assessment tool because of its relative simplicity.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 5
    Citation - Scopus: 4
    Prolactin Receptor Expression by Splenocytes From Rats in Various Hormonal States
    (John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1997) Güneş, Hatice; Zawilla, S.; Mastro, Andrea M.
    Prolactin (PRL) is mitogenic for lymphocytes in vitro, but the responsiveness of lymphocytes depends on the in vivo hormonal status of the rats from which the cells were obtained. Lymphocytes from ovariectomized (OVX) rats, but not from rats in oestrus or from male rats, respond to prolactin; administration of oestradiol to OVX rats diminishes the response. In order to determine if a correlation exists between lymphocyte responsiveness to prolactin and levels of cell surface prolactin receptors (PRL-R) expression, the percentage of splenocytes and each splenocyte subpopulation expressing surface PRL-R from rats of various hormonal states (OVX, oestradiol-injected OVX, oestrus and male) was analysed by single-colour and dual-colour flow cytometric analysis. We found that approximately 20% of splenocytes expressed surface PRL-R regardless of hormonal states (n = 16). The majority (85%) of PRL-R positive splenocytes were B lymphocytes whereas 11.1% and 4.8% of splenocytes expressing the PRL-R were CD4 positive T-helper (TH) and CD8 positive T-cytotoxic (TC) lymphocytes, respectively. B lymphocytes also stained more brightly than T lymphocytes. This distribution of PRL-R expression did not show significant alterations on total splenocytes or TH and TC lymphocytes during various hormonal stages. However, the percentage of PRL-R-positive B lymphocytes increased markedly in OVX rats (twofold), compared to rats at oestrus. In summary, no correlation was found between the responsiveness to prolactin as a mitogen and levels of PRL-R expression by lymphocytes from rats at different hormonal states. This result suggests that sex steroid hormones may control prolactin responsiveness of lymphocytes by affecting the signal transduction pathway through PRL-R rather than by altering the level of the cell surface receptor expression.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 15
    Citation - Scopus: 14
    Prolactin Receptor Gene Expression in Rat Splenocytes and Thymocytes During Oestrous Cycle, Pregnancy and Lactation
    (John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1997) Güneş, Hatice; Mastro, Andrea M.
    Much evidence suggests that prolactin (PRL) has an immunoregulatory function. Part of this evidence is that the receptors for PRL are present on lymphocytes. Probably the effects of PRL on cells of the immune system depend on the level and specific forms of PRL-R present on the target cells. Therefore, PRL-R expression at both protein and mRNA levels was examined during oestrous cycle, pregnancy and lactation using Western blotting and PCR analysis. Antibody to the long form of PRL-R detected 84 and 42 kDa protein bands in the spleen but only 84 kDa band in the thymus. The expression pattern of these two protein bands was different in the spleen, suggesting that these two isoforms of PRL-R long form are differentially regulated by the hormones of oestrous cycle. In addition, depending on the tissue, the level of mRNA for the short and long forms of PRL-R showed a significant change at different stages of oestrous cycle. Moreover, 42 and 84 kDa PRL-R bands were detected in both spleen and thymus throughout the pregnancy and lactation; however, the expression pattern of 84 kDa protein band was different between tissues. This finding suggests that each tissue exhibits differential response to hormones which affect PRL-R content.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 75
    Citation - Scopus: 82
    Body Waves in Poroelastic Media Saturated by Two Immiscible Fluids
    (John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1996) Tuncay, Kağan; Çorapçıoğlu, M. Yavuz
    A study of body waves in elastic porous media saturated by two immiscible Newtonian fluids is presented. We analytically show the existence of three compressional waves and one rotational wave in an infinite porous medium. The first and second compressional waves are analogous to the fast and slow compressional waves in Biot's theory. The third compressional wave is associated with the pressure difference between the fluid phases and dependent on the slope of capillary pressure-saturation relation. Effect of a second fluid phase on the fast and slow waves is numerically investigated for Massillon sandstone saturated by air and water phases. A peak in the attenuation of the first and second compressional waves is observed at high water saturations. Both the first and second compressional waves exhibit a drop in the phase velocity in the presence of air. The results are compared with the experimental data available in the literature. Although the phase velocity of the first compressional and rotational waves are well predicted by the theory, there is a discrepancy between the experimental and theoretical values of attenuation coefficients. The causes of discrepancy are explained based on experimental observations of other researchers.