Copy of EXPERIMENTS TO DETERMINE REACTION KINETICS FOR POLYURETHANE STRUCTURAL AND ENCAPSULATION FOAM
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Biotechnology and Bioengineering
The effects of algae concentration, ferric chloride dose, and pH on the flocculation efficiency of the freshwater algae Chlorella zofingiensis can be understood by considering the nature of the electrostatic charges on the algae and precipitate surfaces. Two critical conditions are identified which, when met, result in flocculation efficiencies in excess of 90% for freshwater algae. First, a minimum concentration of ferric chloride is required to overcome the electrostatic stabilization of the algae and promote bridging of algae cells by hydroxide precipitates. At low algae concentrations, the minimum amount of ferric chloride required increases linearly with algae concentration, characteristic of flocculation primarily through electrostatic bridging by hydroxide precipitates. At higher algae concentrations, the minimum required concentration of ferric chloride for flocculation is independent of algae concentration, suggesting a change in the primary flocculation mechanism from bridging to sweep flocculation. Second, the algae must have a negative surface charge. Experiments and surface complexation modeling show that the surface charge of C. zofingiensis is negative above a pH of 4.0±0.3 which agrees well with the minimum pH required for effective flocculation. These critical flocculation criteria can be extended to other freshwater algae to design effective flocculation systems. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Analytical Chemistry
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Materials Engineering and Sciences Division - Core Programming Topic at the 2011 AIChE Annual Meeting
We examine several methods to create a sheet of magnesium oxide (MgO) macroporous ceramic material via tape casting. These methods include the approach pioneered by Akartuna et al.1 in which an oil/water emulsion is stabilized by surface-modified metal oxide particles at the droplet interfaces. Upon drying, a scaffold of the self-assembled particles is strong enough to be removed from the substrate material and sintered. We find that this method can be used with MgO particles surface modified by short amphiphilic molecules. This approach is compared with two more traditional methods to induce structure into a green ceramic: 1) creation of an MgO ceramic slip with added pore formers, and 2) sponge impregnation of a reticulated foam with the MgO slip. Green and sintered samples made using each method are hardness tested and results compared for several densities of the final ceramics. Optical and SEM images of the materials are shown.
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