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SUGGESTIONS FOR ACCUMULATE GAS

时间:[2019-04-17]  来源:Oxford Creativity(编著)

SUGGESTIONS FOR ACCUMULATE GAS

Absorption (physical)

A physical or chemical phenomenon or a process in which atoms, molecules, or ions enter some bulk phase - gas, liquid or solid material. This is a different from Adsorption, since the molecules are taken up by the volume, not by surface.

Boundary Layer

A boundary layer is that layer of fluid in the immediate vicinity of a bounding surface. The boundary layer effect occurs at the field region in which all changes occur in the flow pattern. The boundary layer distorts surrounding nonviscous flow.

Bubble

A globule of one substance in another, usually gas in a liquid. Due to the Marangoni effect, bubbles may remain intact when they reach the surface of the immersive substance.

Cohesion

The action or property of like molecules sticking together, being mutually attractive. This is an intrinsic property of a substance that is caused by the shape and structure of its molecules which makes the distribution of orbiting electrons irregular when molecules get close to one another, creating electrical attraction that can maintain a macroscopic structure such as a water drop.

Condensation

The change of the physical state of aggregation (or simply state) of matter from gaseous phase into liquid phase.

Deposition (physical)

A process in which gas transforms into solid (also known as desublimation). The reverse of deposition is sublimation. One example of deposition is the process by which, in sub-freezing air, water vapour changes directly to ice without first becoming a liquid. This is how snow forms in clouds, as well as frost and hoar frost on the ground.

Electret

An Electret is a dielectric material that has a quasi-permanent electric charge or dipole polarisation. An electret generates internal and external electric fields, and is the electrostatic equivalent of a permanent magnet.

Gas ions can be attracted by the charge of an electret.

Electro-Osmosis

(also called electroendosmosis) The motion of polar liquid through a membrane or other porous structure (generally, along charged surfaces of any shape and also through non-macroporous materials which have ionic sites and allow for water uptake, the latter sometimes referred to as 'chemical porosity' ) under the influence of an applied electric field.

Electrostatics

The phenomena arising from stationary or slowly moving electric charges

Entrainment

The movement of one fluid due to the motion of another.

Fermentation

In an industrial context, fermentation refers to the breakdown of organic substances and re-assembly into other substances. Somewhat paradoxically, fermenter culture in industrial capacity often refers to highly oxygenated and aerobic growth conditions, whereas fermentation in the biochemical context is a strictly anaerobic process.

Ferromagnetism

The mechanism by which certain materials (such as iron) form permanent magnets and/or exhibit strong interactions with magnets. Responsible for commonly observed magnetism phenomena, e.g. 'fridge magnets. A material is 'ferromagnetic' only if all its magnetic ions add a positive contribution to the net magnetisation. If some of them subtract from the net magnetisation (i.e. are partially anti-aligned), then the material is 'ferrimagnetic'.

In the case of ionised gas.

Freezing

A phase change in which a liquid turns into a solid when its temperature is lowered below its freezing point. Colloquially it is applied to water, but technically it applies to any liquid. All known liquids, except liquid helium, freeze when the temperature is lowered enough.

Ionisation

The physical process of converting an atom or molecule into an ion by adding or removing charged particles such as electrons or other ions.

London Dispersion Force

A weak intermolecular force acting between atoms and molecules arising from quantum induced instantaneous polarisation multipoles in molecules. Can therefore act between molecules without permanent multipole moments.

Magnetism

One of the phenomena by which materials exert attractive or repulsive forces on other materials. Some well-known materials that exhibit easily detectable magnetic properties (called magnets) are nickel, iron, cobalt, and their alloys; however, all materials are influenced to greater or lesser degree by the presence of a magnetic field.

Metastability

A general scientific concept which describes states of delicate equilibrium. A system is in a metastable state when it is in equilibrium (not changing with time) but is susceptible to fall into lower-energy states with only slight interaction. It is analogous to being at the bottom of a small valley when there is a deeper valley close by

Nucleation

The extremely localised budding of a distinct thermodynamic phase. Some examples of phases that may form via nucleation in liquids are gaseous bubbles, crystals or glassy regions. Creation of liquid droplets in saturated vapor is also characterized by nucleation. Most nucleation processes are physical, rather than chemical, but a few exceptions do exist (e.g. electrochemical nucleation).

Physisorption

(or physical adsorption) A type of adsorption in which the adsorbate adheres to the surface only through Van der Waals (weak intermolecular) interactions, which are also responsible for the non-ideal behaviour of real gases.

Porosity

The quality of being porous - i.e. having voids or spaces within a solid substance within or through which fluids can be present.

Potential Well

The region surrounding a local minimum of potential energy. Energy held in a potential well is unable to convert to another type of energy (kinetic energy in the case of a gravitational potential well) because it is captured in the local minimum of a potential well and so may not proceed to the global minimum of potential energy, as it would naturally tend to due to entropy.

Pressure Gradient

A fluid (gas or liquid) subject to a pressure gradient results in a net force that is directed from high to low pressure (the 'pressure gradient force').

Pressure Increase

Pressure is an effect which occurs when a force is applied on a surface. Pressure is transmitted to solid boundaries or across arbitrary sections of fluid normal to these boundaries or sections at every point.

Solvation

(commonly called dissolution) The process of attraction and association of molecules of a solvent with molecules or ions of a solute. As ions dissolve in a solvent they spread out and become surrounded by solvent molecules. The bigger the ion, the more solvent molecules are able to surround it and the more it becomes solvated.

Suction

The flow of a fluid into a partial vacuum, or region of low pressure. The pressure gradient between this region and the ambient pressure will propel matter toward the low pressure area.

Supercritical Fluid

Any substance at a temperature and pressure above its critical point. It can diffuse through solids like a gas, and dissolve materials like a liquid. Additionally, close to the critical point, small changes in pressure or temperature result in large changes in density, allowing many properties to be 'tuned'.

Supersaturation

A solution that contains more of the dissolved material than could be dissolved by the solvent under normal circumstances. It can also refer to a vapour of a compound that has a higher (partial) pressure than the vapour pressure of that compound.

Van der Waals Force

The sum of the attractive or repulsive forces between molecules (or between parts of the same molecule) other than those due to covalent bonds or to the electrostatic interaction of ions with one another or with neutral molecules. Includes Keesom Force, Debye Force and London dispersion force.

Vortex Ring

A torus shaped vortex in a fluid i.e. a region where the fluid mostly spins around an imaginary axis line that forms a closed loop. The dominant flow in a vortex ring is said to be toroidal, more precisely poloidal. Within a stationary body of fluid, a vortex ring can travel for relatively long distance, carrying the spinning fluid with it.

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