RESUMO
This paper describes the European Space Agency (ESA) experiments devoted to study thermodiffusion of fluid mixtures in microgravity environment, where sedimentation and convection do not affect the mass flow induced by the Soret effect. First, the experiments performed on binary mixtures in the IVIDIL and GRADFLEX experiments are described. Then, further experiments on ternary mixtures and complex fluids performed in DCMIX and planned to be performed in the context of the NEUF-DIX project are presented. Finally, multi-component mixtures studied in the SCCO project are detailed.
RESUMO
The porosity of membranes formed from acrylonitrile-sodium methallylsulfonate copolymer was characterized from the analysis of the depression of the melting point of absorbed water. Membranes were obtained either as a foam or as a hollow fiber; the foam consisted of interconnected macrocavities (mean diameter about equal to 1 mm) while the hollow fiber was a symmetric membrane used for blood ultrafiltration. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) of water revealed both the Gaussian distribution of pore sizes and correspondingly, their mean size: 5.2 nm for the pores through the walls separating macrocavities in the foam and 5.6 and 10.6 nm associated with two distributions representing nearly equal amounts of absorbed water, for the hollow fiber. In addition to DSC, the water magnetic relaxation showed that the isothermal dehydration of the foam was due to the deswelling of macrocavities while the increasing amount of absorbed water in pores reflects its strong interaction with the polymer.