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    New approaches in lowering the gas-phase synthesis temperature of TiO2 nanoparticles by H2O-assisted atmospheric pressure CVS process

    , Article Journal of Materials Research and Technology ; Volume 8, Issue 3 , 2019 , Pages 3024-3035 ; 22387854 (ISSN) Rahiminezhad Soltani, M ; Saberyan, K ; Simchi, A ; Gammer, C ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier Editora Ltda  2019
    Abstract
    H2O-assisted atmospheric pressure chemical vapor synthesis is a modern economical process for the gas-phase synthesis of TiO2 nanoparticles. In the present work, the influence of synthesis temperatures (100-800 °C) on the phase structure, nanoparticle size, morphology, and agglomeration is investigated by transmission electron microscopy, selected area electron diffraction, X-ray diffraction, thermogravimetry, and differential thermal analysis. Down to 400 °C, crystalline TiO2 nanoparticles are synthesized and at 200 °C amorphous nanoparticles are formed. Therefore, a decrease in minimum synthesis temperature by more than 500 °C is achieved. In addition, the paper investigates the hypothesis... 

    A model based on the equality of chemical potentials for describing the liquid-liquid interfaces of water-hydrocarbons up to high pressures

    , Article Journal of Molecular Liquids ; Volume 317 , November , 2020 Khosharay, S ; Feyzi, P ; Tourang, S ; Tajfar, F ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B. V  2020
    Abstract
    A reliable model was used to describe the interfacial tension, composition, and density of the liquid-liquid interfaces of water-hydrocarbons. The parachor model was combined with the equality of the chemical potential of components at the interface and the bulk liquid. The fugacity coefficient was used for computing chemical potentials. To compute the fugacity coefficients of the components, various types of equations of state (The Valderrama Patel-Teja, cubic plus association, and the simplified Perturbed-Chain Statistical Association Fluid Theory) were utilized. These models were applied to the temperature and the pressure range of (285.65–423) K and (1–3000) bar, respectively. The... 

    A comprehensive review on recent advances in superhydrophobic surfaces and their applications for drag reduction

    , Article Progress in Organic Coatings ; Volume 140 , March , 2020 Liravi, M ; Pakzad, H ; Moosavi, A ; Nouri Borujerdi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B. V  2020
    Abstract
    Nowadays, superhydrophobic surfaces have attracted a lot of interest because of the wide range of applications in industries. These surfaces can significantly reduce the drag force due to the formation of air gaps between the substrate and liquid interface. The present review mainly focuses on the very recent progresses in the drag reduction studies using superhydrophobic surfaces. Also, a brief discussion about the mathematical modeling and the theories of superhydrophobic surfaces, natural water repellent surfaces, various fabrication techniques with advantages and disadvantages of each method and different properties of the fabricated surfaces in industrial applications is presented.... 

    The effects of pH, acidity, asphaltene and resin fraction on crude oil/water interfacial tension

    , Article Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering ; Volume 162 , 2018 , Pages 341-347 ; 09204105 (ISSN) Lashkarbolooki, M ; Ayatollahi, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B.V  2018
    Abstract
    A basic understanding of the activities of indigenous surfactants of crude oil at the water/oil interface as a function of aqueous phase pH can give us a better insight into the alkaline enhanced oil recovery processes. The present study aimed to elucidate the effect of salinity and crude oil type, specifically the influence of resin and asphaltene molecules during alkaline flooding through interfacial tension (IFT) measurements via pendant drop and spinning techniques. Several model oils containing asphaltene and resin fractions were prepared and their IFTs were compared with those of the original crude oils. Moreover, the elemental analyses of asphaltene and resin fractions were performed,... 

    CFD-DEM modeling of cuttings transport in underbalanced drilling considering aerated mud effects and downhole conditions

    , Article Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering ; Volume 160 , 2018 , Pages 229-246 ; 09204105 (ISSN) Akhshik, S ; Rajabi, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B.V  2018
    Abstract
    This paper presents a developed CFD (Computational fluid dynamics)-DEM (Discrete elements method) model to study the cuttings transportation in aerated mud drilling process for inclined annuli at downhole conditions. The model is conducted to determine the effects of liquid flow rate, air injection rate, annulus inclination angle, elevated temperature and pressure on the cuttings transport efficiency. The motion of the fluid is computed using CFD based approach with gas–liquid interface capturing provided by the volume-of-fluid (VOF) method. The dynamics of cutting phase is studied by DEM using soft sphere approach in order to take into account the particle collision phenomenon. The... 

    A note on the synergistic effect of surfactants and nanoparticles on rising bubble hydrodynamics

    , Article Chemical Engineering and Processing - Process Intensification ; Volume 155 , 2020 Fayzi, P ; Bastani, D ; Lotfi, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B.V  2020
    Abstract
    Various mixtures of surfactants and nanosilica particles were investigated to assess their influence on rising bubble hydrodynamics. For this purpose, local velocities of rising bubbles were measured experimentally. Also, the effects of concentration of three types of surface-modified silica nanoparticles on density, viscosity, and surface tension of surfactant solutions were determined. Experimental results revealed that the simultaneous presence of nanoparticles and surfactant molecules led to the decrease of local velocities of rising bubbles. The presence of nanoparticles in surfactant solutions leads to a more reduction of bubble local velocity. This could be caused by the formation of... 

    Theoretical and experimental study of foam stability mechanism by nanoparticles: Interfacial, bulk, and porous media behavior

    , Article Journal of Molecular Liquids ; Volume 304 , 2020 Suleymani, M ; Ghotbi, C ; Ashoori, S ; Moghadasi, J ; Kharrat, R ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B.V  2020
    Abstract
    Foam flooding has been applied as a promising method in enhanced oil recovery to obviate the challenges of gas flooding such as fingering, channeling and overriding. However, long-term foam stability is crucial for mobility control. In this work, the effective mechanisms on foam stability in the presence of CaCO3 nanoparticles were assessed both theoretically and experimentally. The static and dynamic behaviors of cationic surfactant (HTAB) foam in the presence of CaCO3 nanoparticles with different hydrophobicity were evaluated. The CaCO3 nanoparticles were treated with a series of long-chain fatty acids to generate a range of wettability. Afterward, the underlying mechanisms were revealed... 

    The effect of brine salinity and oil components on dynamic IFT behavior of oil-brine during low salinity water flooding: Diffusion coefficient, EDL establishment time, and IFT reduction rate

    , Article Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering ; Volume 196 , 2021 ; 09204105 (ISSN) Farhadi, H ; Ayatollahi, S ; Fatemi, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B.V  2021
    Abstract
    Dynamic behavior of fluid-fluid interactions can potentially affect the performance of any enhanced oil recovery (EOR) process including low salinity water flooding. In this work, dynamic interfacial tension (IFT) of crude-oil/brine system is measured in a wide range of salinity of sea water (SW), from 50-time diluted sea water (SW50D) to 2-time concentrated sea water (SW2C). Contrary to the most of published IFT trends in the literature, for the system under investigation here, as the brine salinity increases the crude-oil/brine IFT reduces, which cannot be explained using the existing theories. The lack of a physical model to explain the observed phenomena was the motivation to develop a... 

    Interfacial instability of growing drop: experimental study and conceptual analysis

    , Article Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects ; Volume 347, Issue 1-3 , 2009 , Pages 167-174 ; 09277757 (ISSN) Javadi, A ; Bastani, D ; Kragel, J ; Miller, R ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier  2009
    Abstract
    Capillary pressure experiments were performed at the water/hexane interface including adsorption and mass exchange of hexanol under different conditions. The results from growing drop experiments show that instabilities due to Marangoni convection not only depend on the same parameters as have been reported for quasi-static interfaces, such as direction of mass transfer, distribution coefficient and ratio of diffusion coefficients, but also on the experimental conditions such as dispersed phase flow rate, capillary tip size, size of growing drop and its lifetime. Based on a new flow expansion model for mass transfer, a new approach is presented for data analysis, which includes the various... 

    Examination of a solar desalination system equipped with an air bubble column humidifier, evacuated tube collectors and thermosyphon heat pipes

    , Article Desalination ; Volume 397 , 2016 , Pages 30-37 ; 00119164 (ISSN) Behnam, P ; Behshad Shafii, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier 
    Abstract
    In this paper, the performance of a novel HDH solar desalination system equipped with a combination of heat pipe (HP), evacuated tube collector (ETC) and air bubble column humidifier is experimentally investigated. This novel HDH system uses advantages of ETC-HP as a highly efficient thermal absorption and conductor device, and at the same time employs the advantages of an air bubble column humidifier, i.e. high interface area and effective mixing in order to heat the water and humidify the air, respectively. The effects of various parameters including incoming air flow rate into the humidifier, initial depth of water in the humidifier, and adding fluids such as oil and water in the space... 

    Effect of rare earth elements addition on thermal fatigue behaviors of AZ91 magnesium alloy

    , Article Journal of Rare Earths ; Volume 27, Issue 2 , 2009 , Pages 255-258 ; 10020721 (ISSN) Bayani, H ; Saebnoori, E ; Sharif University of Technology
    Chinese Society of Rare Earths  2009
    Abstract
    Influences of rare earth (RE) elements addition on thermal fatigue behaviors of AZ91 alloy were studied. Repeated heating and cooling cycles were applied on the samples at 170 and 210 °C to develop thermal fatigue cracks. Crack growth mechanisms and microstructural influences were investigated by optical and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) as well as energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS). Thermal fatigue behaviors were observed to improve successively by addition of the RE up to 2wt.%. This improvement was attributed to the consummation of aluminum in melt by precipitation of the needle shaped Al11RE3 phases. This process was attributed to the reduction of Mg17Al12 phase volume... 

    Structural and dynamical fingerprints of the anomalous dielectric properties of water under confinement

    , Article Physical Review Materials ; Volume 5, Issue 2 , 2021 ; 24759953 (ISSN) Ahmadabadi, I ; Esfandiar, A ; Hassanali, A ; Ejtehadi, M. R ; Sharif University of Technology
    American Physical Society  2021
    Abstract
    There is a long-standing question about the molecular configuration of interfacial water molecules in the proximity of solid surfaces, particularly carbon atoms, which plays a crucial role in electrochemistry and biology. In this study, the dielectric, structural, and dynamical properties of confined water placed between two parallel graphene walls at different interdistances from the angstrom scale to a few tens of nanometer have been investigated using molecular dynamics. For the dielectric properties of water, we show that the dielectric constant of the perpendicular component of water drastically decreases under sub-2-nm spatial confinement. The dielectric constant data obtained through... 

    Structural and dynamical fingerprints of the anomalous dielectric properties of water under confinement

    , Article Physical Review Materials ; Volume 5, Issue 2 , 2021 ; 24759953 (ISSN) Ahmadabadi, I ; Esfandiar, A ; Hassanali, A ; Ejtehadi, M. R ; Sharif University of Technology
    American Physical Society  2021
    Abstract
    There is a long-standing question about the molecular configuration of interfacial water molecules in the proximity of solid surfaces, particularly carbon atoms, which plays a crucial role in electrochemistry and biology. In this study, the dielectric, structural, and dynamical properties of confined water placed between two parallel graphene walls at different interdistances from the angstrom scale to a few tens of nanometer have been investigated using molecular dynamics. For the dielectric properties of water, we show that the dielectric constant of the perpendicular component of water drastically decreases under sub-2-nm spatial confinement. The dielectric constant data obtained through... 

    Numerical study of the mixing dynamics of trans- And supercritical coaxial jets

    , Article Physics of Fluids ; Volume 32, Issue 12 , 2020 Poormahmood, A ; Farshchi, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    American Institute of Physics Inc  2020
    Abstract
    Characterization of the transcritical coaxial injectors, accounting for the geometrical features and thermodynamics nonlinearities, is of both practical and fundamental importance. In the present study, the interactions and effects of turbulent mixing and pseudo-boiling phenomena are investigated. To do this, the mixing dynamics of bi-shear jets injected under trans- and supercritical conditions has been investigated numerically using the large-eddy simulation technique. The numerical framework provides real-gas thermodynamics and transport properties, using the Peng-Robinson equation-of-state and Chung's models, respectively. The obtained flow quantities are in good agreement with the... 

    Numerical simulation of laminar and turbulent two-phase flow in pressure-swirl atomizers

    , Article AIAA Journal ; Volume 50, Issue 10 , 2012 , Pages 2091-2101 ; 00011452 (ISSN) Nouri Borujerdi, A ; Kebriaee, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    AIAA  2012
    Abstract
    This paper has developed an axisymmetric laminar and turbulent two-phase flow solver to simulate pressure-swirl atomizers. Equations include the explicit algebraic Reynolds stress model, the Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes, and the level set equation. Applying a high-order compact upwind finite difference scheme with the level set equation being culminated to capture the interface between air-liquid two-phase flow and decreasing the mass conservation error in the level set equation. The results show that some recirculation zones are observed close to the wall in the swirl chamber and to the axis. This model can predict converting the Rankin vortex in the swirl chamber to the forced vortex in... 

    Cosintering of powder injection molding parts made from ultrafine WC-Co and 316L stainless steel powders for fabrication of novel composite structures

    , Article Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A: Physical Metallurgy and Materials Science ; Volume 41, Issue 1, January 2010, Pages 233-241 Simchi, A. (Abdolreza) ; Petzoldt, F ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Abstract Sintering response and phase formation during sintering of WC-Co/316L stainless steel composites produced by assembling of powder injection molding (PIM) parts were studied. It is shown that during cosintering a significant mismatch strain (> 4 pct) is developed in the temperature range of 1080° C to 1350° C. This mismatch strain induces biaxial stresses at the interface, leading to interface delamination. Experimental results revealed that sintering at a heating rate of 20 K/min could be used to decrease the  

    The gas-oil interfacial behavior during gas injection into an asphaltenic oil reservoir

    , Article Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data ; Volume 58, Issue 9 , 2013 , Pages 2513-2526 ; 00219568 (ISSN) Escrochi, M ; Mehranbod, N ; Ayatollahi, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    Oil displacement and recovery efficiency during gas injection depends on the competition between driving forces and capillary resistance that is governed by gas-oil interfacial behavior. Detailed study of the interfacial forces during gas injection is the main objective of this research work. The effects of injecting gas composition and the possibility of asphaltene precipitation in a wide pressure range were determined through comprehensive experimental study. This was performed by measurement of interfacial tension of a highly asphaltenic Iranian crude oil in three surrounding gas mediums. The results showed that as pressure increases, the rate to reach miscibility reduces in the vicinity... 

    Mixed protein-surfactant adsorption layers formed in a sequential and simultaneous way at water-air and water-oil interfaces

    , Article Soft Matter ; Volume 8, Issue 22 , 2012 , Pages 6057-6065 ; 1744683X (ISSN) Dan, A ; Kotsmar, C ; Ferri, J. K ; Javadi, A ; Karbaschi, M ; Krägel, J ; Wüstneck, R ; Miller, R ; Sharif University of Technology
    2012
    Abstract
    Mixed protein-surfactant adsorption layers can be built up in two different ways. The classical way is when all components adsorb simultaneously from a mixed solution. Alternatively, the components adsorb one after another, i.e. in a sequential way. In the present work, the formation of such surface layers has been studied with the random coil protein β-casein in the presence of added anionic surfactant SDS and compared for two different interfaces: the water-air (W-A) and water-hexane (W-H) interfaces. The used experimental technique is a drop profile analysis tensiometer PAT-1 specially equipped with a coaxial double capillary for drop volume exchange during the experiments. The results... 

    Evaluation of ceramic/ceramic joint interface prepared via brazing

    , Article Materials Forum, 18 October 2011 through 20 October 2011 ; Volume 35 , October , 2011 , Pages 20-30 ; 08832900 (ISSN) ; 9781876855369 (ISBN) Ghazi Daryani, A ; Nemati, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Recent investigations show that ceramic/ceramic joints have high potential for applications in industry. Cost and difficulty in manufacturing complex components, either in one step or by joining of ceramic-metal and ceramic-ceramic, have inhibited more widespread use. It is important to know how to join components without problems and to understand the role of the interface as the main factor controlling the properties in these joints. The purpose of this paper was to investigate the joining of two ceramics with metal fillers (SiC to SiC and Al2O3 to Al2O3) and to investigate the interface of SiC/SiC and Al2O3/Al 2O3 with the same metal interlayer (Ag-Cu-Ti) and the effects on the... 

    Two phase modal analysis of nonlinear sloshing in a rectangular container

    , Article Ocean Engineering ; Volume 38, Issue 11-12 , August , 2011 , Pages 1277-1282 ; 00298018 (ISSN) Ansari, M. R ; Firouz Abadi, R. D ; Ghasemi, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2011
    Abstract
    Sloshing, or liquid free surface oscillation, in containers has many important applications in a variety of engineering fields. The modal method can be used to solve linear sloshing problems and is the most efficient reduced order method that has been used during the previous decade. In the present article, the modal method is used to solve a nonlinear sloshing problem. The method is based on a potential flow solution that implements a two-phase analysis on sloshing in a rectangular container. According to this method, the solution to the mass conservation equation, with a nonpenetration condition at the tank walls, results in velocity potential expansion; this is similar to the mode shapes...