Chemical Engineering / Kimya Mühendisliği
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/14
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Article Citation - WoS: 15Citation - Scopus: 18Modeling of Diffusion in Closed Cell Polymeric Foams(SAGE Publications Inc., 1999) Alsoy Altınkaya, SacideClosed-cell foams made of polymers have the lowest thermal conductivity of any currently available insulation material other than vacuum insulation systems. The increase of foam conductivity with age occurs as air diffuses into the foam while the blowing agent diffuses out, thus modifying the cell gas composition. Also, the change in cell gas composition influences the dimensional stability of the foams. To predict the long term aging behavior and dimensional stability of these foams, the diffusion characteristics of the different components need to be known. Several models exist in the literature which describe diffusion in foams. The most popular of these models are reviewed, and effective diffusivities predicted from one model are compared with experimental data. An unsteady state model is then proposed and solved numerically using a finite difference scheme. The numerical solution algorithm is developed to efficiently solve the large number of coupled equations resulting from this model. The uptake curves predicted from both the unsteady-state model and a discrete model (Bart and Du Cauze De Nazelle, 1993) are compared with available experimental data for the polystyrene-nitrogen system. From the analysis of uptake curves generated for different numbers of cells, the effective diffusivity of the PS/N2 system is predicted. Also, the effect of initial cell gas composition and cell size on both the long term aging profile and dimensional stability of polyurethane foam is considered. The proposed model can easily be extended to include the influence of blowing agent concentration on diffusivity in the polymer phase and the isotherm describing the distribution of blowing agent between the gas and polymer phases.Article Citation - WoS: 24Citation - Scopus: 25Processing of Polymers With Supercritical Fluids(John Wiley and Sons Inc., 1999) Alsoy Altınkaya, Sacide; Duda, John LarryThe 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: 13Citation - Scopus: 15A Study of Adsorption of Water Vapour on Wool Under Static and Dynamic Conditions(Springer Verlag, 1998) Ülkü, Semra; Balköse, Devrim; Çağa, Tayfun; Özkan, Fehime; Ulutan, SevgiAdsorption of water vapour on wool provides not only textile comfort, but also convenience in transportation due to increase in its bulk density. The adsorption and desorption isotherms of water vapour for wool were determined by both volumetric technique using a Coulter Omnisorp 100CX instrument and gravimetric method employing a Cahn 2000 electronic microbalance. Adsorption isotherm fitting to B.E.T. model and hysteresis on desorption was observed. The average effective diffusion coefficient of water in wool was found to be 8.4 × 10-14 m2 s-1 at 25°C from gravimetric data. The effects of packing height and air velocity on the breakthrough curves were also investigated in the wool packed columns. For pseudo first order model, k values changing between 0.33 × 10-6 -69 × 10-6 s-1 was obtained for 2.2-6.4 cm s-1 air velocity and 0.05-0.20 m packing height ranges.Article Citation - WoS: 20Dry Deposition Fluxes and Atmospheric Size Distributions of Mass, Al, and Mg Measured in Southern Lake Michigan During Aeolos(Taylor and Francis Ltd., 1998) Sofuoğlu, Sait Cemil; Paode, Rajendra D.; Sivadechathep, Jakkris; Noll, Kenneth E.; Holsen, Thomas M.; Keeler, Gerald J.In this study, which was a part of the Atmospheric Exchange Over Lakes and Oceans Study (AEOLOS) investigation, the dry deposition fluxes and atmospheric size distributions (ASDs) of mass and crustal metals (aluminum and magnesium) were measured over the southern basin of Lake Michigan (in Chicago, over Lake Michigan, and in South Haven, Michigan). Airborne crustal metals arise primarily from fugitive dust emissions and are associated with the coarse fraction of atmospheric aerosol. Consequently, they can serve as fingerprints for the atmospheric behavior of fugitive dust. The flux of these metals were substantially higher in Chicago than in either South Haven or over Lake Michigan. The measured average mass, aluminum, and magnesium fluxes were 138, 2.23, and 5.32 mg/m2-day in Chicago, 47.8, 0.24, and 0.28 mg/m2-day over Lake Michigan, and 37.4, 0.17, and 0.12 mg/m2-day in South Haven, respectively. The ASDs of crustal metals measured in Chicago had higher concentrations of coarse particles than ASDs measured over Lake Michigan and in South Haven. The calculated flux of metals using a multistep model and dry deposition velocities obtained from the Sehmel-Hodgson model were in general agreement with measured fluxes of crustal metals. Particles >10 μm were found to be responsible for the majority of the flux.
