13 resultados para mass-transport deposits
em Martin Luther Universitat Halle Wittenberg, Germany
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Direct methanol fuel cell, DMFC, model, mass transport, Maxwell-Stefan, Flory-Huggins, crossover, polymer electrolyte membrane, Nafion
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Article is devoted to design of optimum electromagnets for magnetic levitation of transport systems. The method of electromagnets design based on the inverse problem solution of electrical equipment is offered. The method differs from known by introducing a stage of minimization the target functions providing the stated levitation force and magnetic induction in a gap, and also the mass of an electromagnet. Initial values of parameters are received, using approximate formulas of the theory of electric devices and electrical equipment. The example of realization of a method is given. The received results show its high efficiency at design. It is practical to use the offered method and the computer program realizing it as a part of system of the automated design of electric equipment for transport with a magnetic levitation.
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Electrokinetic transport, electrochromatography, electroosmotic flow, electrophoresis, concentration polarization, fixed beds, monoliths, dynamic NMR microscopy, quantitative confocal laser scanning microscopy, mathematical modelling, numerical analysis
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Membrane reactor, reactive membrane separation, arrheotrope, azeotrope, dusty gas model, esterification, residue curve map, distillation, kinetics, singular point, bifurcation
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Inorganic membranes, permeation, diffusion, heat transfer, mass transfer, axial dispersion
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Analyte retention, analyte transport, axial dispersion, adsorption, charge-selectivity, concentration polarization, confocal laser scanning microscopy, donnan-exclusion, electrical double layer; electrochromatography; electrohydrodynamics, electrokinetic instability, electroosmosis; electroosmotic flow; electroosmotic mobility, electroosmotic perfusion, electrophoresis, hierarchical porous media, hydrodynamic flow, induced-charge electroosmosis, ion-permselectivity, ion-permselective transport, monolith, nonequilibrium electrical double layer, nonequilibrium electrokinetic effects, nonlinear electroosmosis, plate height, plate number, porous media, pore-scale dispersion, refractive index matching, space charge effects, sphere packing, quantitative imaging, wall effect, zeta-potential
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Magdeburg, Univ., Fak. für Naturwiss., Diss., 2008
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Magdeburg, Univ., Fak. für Naturwiss., Diss., 2008
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This work is dedicated to comparison of open source as well as proprietary transport protocols for highspeed data transmission via IP networks. The contemporary common TCP needs significant improvement since it was developed as general-purpose transport protocol and firstly introduced four decades ago. In nowadays networks, TCP fits not all communication needs that society has. Caused of it another transport protocols have been developed and successfully used for e.g. Big Data movement. In scope of this research the following protocols have been investigated for its efficiency on 10Gbps links: UDT, RBUDP, MTP and RWTP. The protocols were tested under different impairments such as Round Trip Time up to 400 ms and packet losses up to 2%. Investigated parameters are the data rate under different conditions of the network, the CPU load by sender andreceiver during the experiments, size of feedback data, CPU usage per Gbps and the amount of feedback data per GiByte of effectively transmitted data. The best performance and fair resources consumption was observed by RWTP. From the opensource projects, the best behavior is showed by RBUDP.
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Magdeburg, Univ., Med. Fak., Diss., 2014
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Magdeburg, Univ., Fak. für Verfahrens- und Systemtechnik, Diss., 2015
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Since the specific heat transfer coefficient (UA) and the volumetric mass transfer coefficient (kLa) play an important role for the design of biotechnological processes, different techniques were developed in the past for the determination of these parameters. However, these approaches often use imprecise dynamic methods for the description of stationary processes and are limited towards scale and geometry of the bioreactor. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to develop a new method, which overcomes these restrictions. This new approach is based on a permanent production of heat and oxygen by the constant decomposition of hydrogen peroxide in continuous mode. Since the degradation of H2O2 at standard conditions only takes place by the support of a catalyst, different candidates were investigated for their potential (regarding safety issues and reaction kinetic). Manganese-(IV)-oxide was found to be suitable. To compensate the inactivation of MnO2, a continuous process with repeated feeds of fresh MnO2 was established. Subsequently, a scale-up was successfully carried out from 100 mL to a 5 litre glass bioreactor (UniVessel®)To show the applicability of this new method for the characterisation of bioreactors, it was compared with common approaches. With the newly established technique as well as with a conventional procedure, which is based on an electrical heat source, specific heat transfer coefficients were measured in the range of 17.1 – 24.8 W/K for power inputs of about 50 – 70 W/L. However, a first proof of concept regarding the mass transfer showed no constant kLa for different dilution rates up to 0.04 h-1.Based on this, consecutive studies concerning the mass transfer should be made with higher volume flows, due to more even inflow rates. In addition, further experiments are advisable, to analyse the heat transfer in single-use bioreactors and in larger common systems.
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Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg, Fakultät für Naturwissenschaften, Univ., Dissertation, 2016