6 resultados para sorption kinetics

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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This work presents the results of theoretical and experimental characterization of thermodynamic, mechanical and transport properties in polymer solvent systems. The polymer solvent pairs considered ranged to those in which the polymer is rubbery, to those in which the initially glassy polymeric matrix is plasticized by the action of the low molecular weight species. Advanced Equation of State models have been adopted for thermodynamic modeling,along with a rigorous procedure that enables to extend their applicability to the non equilibrium, glassy region. Mass sorption kinetics had been modeled with phenomenological models and with advanced kinetic models.

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We investigated at the molecular level protein/solvent interactions and their relevance in protein function through the use of amorphous matrices at room temperature. As a model protein, we used the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center (RC) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, a pigment protein complex which catalyzes the light-induced charge separation initiating the conversion of solar into chemical energy. The thermal fluctuations of the RC and its dielectric conformational relaxation following photoexcitation have been probed by analyzing the recombination kinetics of the primary charge-separated (P+QA-) state, using time resolved optical and EPR spectroscopies. We have shown that the RC dynamics coupled to this electron transfer process can be progressively inhibited at room temperature by decreasing the water content of RC films or of RC-trehalose glassy matrices. Extensive dehydration of the amorphous matrices inhibits RC relaxation and interconversion among conformational substates to an extent comparable to that attained at cryogenic temperatures in water-glycerol samples. An isopiestic method has been developed to finely tune the hydration level of the system. We have combined FTIR spectral analysis of the combination and association bands of residual water with differential light-minus-dark FTIR and high-field EPR spectroscopy to gain information on thermodynamics of water sorption, and on structure/dynamics of the residual water molecules, of protein residues and of RC cofactors. The following main conclusions were reached: (i) the RC dynamics is slaved to that of the hydration shell; (ii) in dehydrated trehalose glasses inhibition of protein dynamics is most likely mediated by residual water molecules simultaneously bound to protein residues and sugar molecules at the protein-matrix interface; (iii) the local environment of cofactors is not involved in the conformational dynamics which stabilizes the P+QA-; (iv) this conformational relaxation appears to be rather delocalized over several aminoacidic residues as well as water molecules weakly hydrogen-bonded to the RC.

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The innovation in several industrial sectors has been recently characterized by the need for reducing the operative temperature either for economic or environmental related aspects. Promising technological solutions require the acquisition of fundamental-based knowledge to produce safe and robust systems. In this sense, reactive systems often represent the bottleneck. For these reasons, this work was focused on the integration of chemical (i.e., detailed kinetic mechanism) and physical (i.e., computational fluid dynamics) models. A theoretical-based kinetic mechanism mimicking the behaviour of oxygenated fuels and their intermediates under oxidative conditions in a wide range of temperature and pressure was developed. Its validity was tested against experimental data collected in this work by using the heat flux burner, as well as measurements retrieved from the current literature. Besides, estimations deriving from existing models considered as the benchmark in the combustion field were compared with the newly generated mechanism. The latter was found to be the most accurate for the investigated conditions and fuels. Most influential species and reactions on the combustion of butyl acetate were identified. The corresponding thermodynamic parameter and rate coefficients were quantified through ab initio calculations. A reduced detailed kinetic mechanism was produced and implemented in an open-source computational fluid dynamics model to characterize pool fires caused by the accidental release of aviation fuel and liquefied natural gas, at first. Eventually, partial oxidation processes involving light alkenes were optimized following the quick, fair, and smoot (QFS) paradigm. The proposed procedure represents a comprehensive and multidisciplinary approach for the construction and validation of accurate models, allowing for the characterization of developing industrial sectors and techniques.

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The work carried out is focused on the exploration of processes occurring in cement materials during sorption cycles by using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) relaxometry. Long (months) and short (days-weeks) sorption cycles of cement materials were explored. The long cycle consists of around 6 months of drying and re-wetting cement samples of different sizes and water-to-cement (w/c) ratios in a homemade relative humidity (RH) chamber. Short cycles were performed by drying samples of different sizes and w/c ratios in the oven at 60 ˚C and re-wetting underwater. Different NMR techniques, such as one- and two-dimensional relaxometry and solid-signal analyses, were used to study the samples. Firstly, by the interpretation of quasi-continuous distributions of T2 relaxation time, we demonstrated that some reversible and irreversible changes concerning smaller porosity happened during the first sorption cycle. Secondly, using 2D NMR and a new 2D NMR inversion algorithm we showed preliminary results on the cement T1-T2 maps. Data obtained during sorption processes indicated possible water exchange between different pore populations inside the cement samples. Thirdly, the solid structure of cement samples was qualitatively investigated with T1 measurements and, as far as we know, for the first time interpreted with the Pake-Doublet theory. Changes in the solid structure were observed. Precisely variations of the amount of Ettringite during drying/wetting were proposed to take place. Finally, a work on NMR single-sided equipment design for in situ cement investigation was shown. The multi-cubic-blocks magnet structure design was performed using different specific CAD software, and the magnetic fields generated by RF coils of different geometries were investigated using a customized Matlab script. The single-sided NMR instrument equipped with the designed single-sided magnet and coil was built by the ERICA partner company MR Solutions (Abingdon, UK), and the preliminary results resultsated the correctness of the developed design.

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This thesis aims to investigate the fundamental processes governing the performance of different types of photoelectrodes used in photoelectrochemical (PEC) applications, such as unbiased water splitting for hydrogen production. Unraveling the transport and recombination phenomena in nanostructured and surface-modified heterojunctions at a semiconductor/electrolyte interface is not trivial. To approach this task, the work presented here first focus on a hydrogen-terminated p-silicon photocathode in acetonitrile, considered as a standard reference for PEC studies. Steady-state and time-resolved excitation at long wavelength provided clear evidence of the formation of an inversion layer and revealed that the most optimal photovoltage and the longest electron-hole pair lifetime occurs when the reduction potential for the species in solution lies within the unfilled conduction band states. Understanding more complex systems is not as straight-forward and a complete characterization that combine time- and frequency-resolved techniques is needed. Intensity modulated photocurrent spectroscopy and transient absorption spectroscopy are used here on WO3/BiVO4 heterojunctions. By selectively probing the two layers of the heterojunction, the occurrence of interfacial recombination was identified. Then, the addition of Co-Fe based overlayers resulted in passivation of surface states and charge storage at the overlayer active sites, providing higher charge separation efficiency and suppression of recombination in time scales that go from picoseconds to seconds. Finally, the charge carrier kinetics of several different Cu(In,Ga)Se2 (CIGS)-based architectures used for water reduction was investigated. The efficiency of a CIGS photocathode is severely limited by charge transfer at the electrode/electrolyte interface compared to the same absorber layer used as a photovoltaic cell. A NiMo binary alloy deposited on the photocathode surface showed a remarkable enhancement in the transfer rate of electrons in solution. An external CIGS photovoltaic module assisting a NiMo dark cathode displayed optimal absorption and charge separation properties and a highly performing interface with the solution.