RESUMO
The surface tension of a freshly extruded pendant drop of a nanoemulsion, 4-cyano-4'-hexylbiphenyl or 6CB (a liquid crystal) in water, exhibits an unusual surface nucleation phenomenon. Initially the surface tension is that of pure water; however, after a surface nucleation time, the surface tension decreases suddenly in magnitude. This nucleation time, of hundreds to thousands of seconds, depends strongly upon (i) the 6CB concentration in water, (ii) the 6CB nanodroplet size, and (iii) the temperature. Similar behavior is observed in both the isotropic and nematic phases of 6CB; thus, this surface nucleation phenomenon is unrelated to this system's liquid crystalline properties. The observed surface nucleation behavior can be explained via considerations of the nanoemulsion's bulk entropy together with the number of 6CB nanodroplets in the vicinity of the surface.
RESUMO
Particles kicked by external forces to produce mobility distinct from thermal diffusion are an iconic feature of the active matter problem. Here, we map this onto a minimal model for experiment and theory covering the wide time and length scales of usual active matter systems. A particle diffusing in a harmonic potential generated by an optical trap is kicked by programmed forces with time correlation at random intervals following the Poisson process. The model's generic simplicity allows us to find conditions for which displacements are Gaussian (or not), how diffusion is perturbed (or not) by kicks, and quantifying heat dissipation to maintain the non-equilibrium steady state in an active bath. The model reproduces experimental results of tracer mobility in an active bath of swimming algal cells. It can be used as a stochastic dynamic simulator for Brownian objects in various active baths without mechanistic understanding, owing to the generic framework of the protocol.
RESUMO
Living cells are known to generate non-Gaussian active fluctuations significantly larger than thermal fluctuations owing to various active processes. Understanding the effect of these active fluctuations on various physicochemical processes, such as the transport of molecular motors, is a fundamental problem in nonequilibrium physics. Therefore, we experimentally and numerically studied an active Brownian ratchet comprising a colloidal particle in an optically generated asymmetric periodic potential driven by non-Gaussian noise having finite-amplitude active bursts, each arriving at random and decaying exponentially. We find that the particle velocity is maximum for relatively sparse bursts with finite correlation time and non-Gaussian distribution. These occasional kicks, which produce Brownian yet non-Gaussian diffusion, are more efficient for transport and diffusion enhancement of the particle than the incessant kicks of active Ornstein-Uhlenbeck noise.
RESUMO
A study on selective separation of Zn from a leaching solution by disposal batteries including various type batteries was carried out to understand the recovery behaviour of Zn in leaching solution. Selective recovery of Zn in leaching solution including Mn, Cd, Cu ion was difficult due to its similar physicochemical behaviour. Experiment results by present leaching solution with 279â µm undersize indicated that the best condition for leaching is 1 M H2SO4, 250â rpm, 5 vol.% H2O2 and 353â K and the leaching efficient of Zn, Co and Mn is approximately 97%, respectively. The exclusive extraction behaviour of Zn by using D2EHPA is indicated that the best conditions for solvent extraction are to be 0.6 M D2EHPA diluted with kerosene, 30% saponification, 298â K, 5-min contact time and three-stage countercurrent extraction, and the O/A ratio 1, respectively. Recovery of Zn was with approximately 99.7% selectively from Mn, Co, Ni, Cd and Li. After scrubbing 5 times by pH 2 modified solution and single stripping experiment by 1.5 M H2SO4, the solution including Zn of 9.0â g/L can be produced.