| Title: |
Transient Interfacial Phenomena in Miscible Polymer Systems (TIPMPS) |
| Authors: |
Pojman, John A.; Bessonov, Nicholas; Volpert, Vitaly; Wilke, Hermann |
| Source: |
CASI |
| Publication Year: |
2003 |
| Collection: |
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) |
| Subject Terms: |
Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics |
| Subject Geographic: |
Unclassified; Unlimited; Publicly available |
| Description: |
Almost one hundred years ago Korteweg published a theory of how stresses could be induced in miscible fluids by concentration gradients, causing phenomena that would appear to be the same as with immiscible fluids. Miscible fluids could manifest a transient or effective interfacial tension (EIT). To this day, there has been no definitive experiment to confirm Korteweg's model but numerous fascinating and suggestive experiments have been reported. The goal of TIPMPS is to answer the question: Can concentration and temperature gradients in miscible materials induce stresses that cause convection? Many polymer processes involving miscible monomer and polymer systems could be affected by fluid flow and so this work could help understand miscible polymer processing, not only in microgravity, but also on earth. Demonstrating the existence of this phenomenon in miscible fluids will open up a new area of study for materials science. The science objectives of TIPMPS are: (1) Determine if convection can be induced by variation of the width of a miscible interface; (2) Determine if convection can be induced by variation of temperature along a miscible interface; (3) Determine if convection can be induced by variation of conversion along a miscible interface An interface between two miscible fluids can best be created via a spatially-selective photopolymerization of dodecyl acrylate with a photoinitiator, which allows the creation of precise and accurate concentration gradients between polymer and monomer. Optical techniques will be used to measure the refractive index variation caused by the resultant temperature and concentration fields. The viscosity of the polymer will be measured from the increase in the fluorescence of pyrene. Because the large concentration and temperature gradients cause buoyancy-driven convection that prevents the observation of the predicted flows, the experiment must be done in microgravity. In this report, we will consider our efforts to estimate the square gradient parameter, k, and our use of ... |
| Document Type: |
other/unknown material |
| File Description: |
application/pdf |
| Language: |
unknown |
| Relation: |
Document ID: 20030060563; http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20030060563 |
| Availability: |
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20030060563 |
| Rights: |
No Copyright |
| Accession Number: |
edsbas.650D9771 |
| Database: |
BASE |