Improving insulation materials, down to wetting crossed fibers
Scientists model the manner in which a liquid wets fibers, gaining useful insights for improving glass wool properties
2015-07-01
(Press-News.org) Sandcastles are a prime example of how adding a small amount of liquid to a granular material changes its characteristics. But understanding the effect of a liquid wetting randomly oriented fibres in a fibrous medium remains a mystery. Relevant to the building industry, which uses glass wool, for instance, this phenomenon can be better understood by studying the behaviour of a liquid trapped between two parallel fibres. It can either remain in the shape of a drop or spread between the fibres into a long and thin column of liquid. Now, scientists have demonstrated that the spreading of the liquid is controlled by three key parameters: the amount of liquid on the fibres, the fibres' orientation and the minimum distance between them. These findings, based on experimental and modelling work, were recently published in EPJ E. The authors are Alban Sauret, a scientist working at a laboratory jointly operated by the CNRS and Saint-Gobain, a building materials manufacturer in France, and international colleagues based at Princeton University and the NYU School of Engineering, USA.
Instead of using glass wool or fabric fibres, the authors decided to study a scaled-up version, relying on nylon fishing wire. They applied a small volume of liquid to observe how it spreads alongside the wire, crossing at various controlled angles. By taking pictures, they were able to discriminate between the different morphologies of the liquid. They then proceeded to model their observations, including various morphologies of the liquid forming either a drop, a column or a drop coexisting with a liquid column, allowing them to identify key parameters of the system.
Understanding how liquid wets glass wool could help produce cheaper materials with better properties. Indeed, optimising the number and the shape of bonds between fibres would improve the integrity of the material, and yield higher building insulation efficiency. But this could also have implications in health care products that involve other fibrous materials such as hair.
INFORMATION:
Reference: Wetting morphologies on randomly oriented fibers. A. Sauret, F. Boulogne, B. Soh, E. Dressaire, and H. A. Stone (2015), Eur. Phys. J. E 38: 62, DOI 10.1140/epje/i2015-15062-y
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-07-01
Failing to find a mating partner is a dent to the reproductive prospects of any animal, but in the flatworm species Macrostomum hystrix it might involve a real headache. Zoologists from the Universities of Basel and Bielefeld have discovered the extraordinary lengths to which this animal is willing to go in order to reproduce - including apparently injecting sperm directly into their own heads. The academic journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B has published their findings.
The absence of a mate usually spells disaster for sexually reproducing animals. However, some ...
2015-07-01
Atoms absorb and emit light of various wavelengths. Physicists have long known that there are some tiny changes, or shifts, in the light that gets absorbed or emitted, due to the properties of the atomic nucleus. Now, a team of scientists has elucidated the so-called hyperfine structure of cadmium atoms. Relying on a method called laser spectroscopy, they have measured variations in the energy transition within cadmium atom - Cd in the periodic table. They studied a chain of isotopes with an odd number of neutrons ranging from 59 in 107Cd to 75 in 123Cd. From these high-precision ...
2015-07-01
A good night's sleep has long been recommended to those who have experienced a traumatic event. But an Oxford University-led study provides preliminary experimental work suggesting it could actually be the wrong thing to do.
The research, conducted in Oxford's Wellcome Trust-funded Sleep and Circadian Neuroscience Institute (SCNi) and published in the journal Sleep, showed that sleep deprivation might prevent people from consolidating memories of experimental trauma (emotional film clips in the study), reducing their tendency to experience flashbacks.
Dr Kate Porcheret, ...
2015-07-01
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) -- Soldiers injured during the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan have the highest survival rates in history, thanks to the availability of surgeons skilled in combat care. But combat-ready surgical skills are hard to sustain off the battlefield.
"A lot of knowledge builds up in the military medical enterprise during times of war," said Joseph Galante, who chairs the UC Davis Division of Trauma, Emergency and Critical Care Surgery and is a commander in the U.S. Navy Reserves. "When peacetime comes, that knowledge can slide. We need to identify ways ...
2015-07-01
The global supply of seafood is set to change substantially and many people will not be able to enjoy the same quantity and dishes in the future due to climate change and ocean acidification, according to UBC scientists.
These findings were released today in Japan by the Nereus program, an international research team led by UBC scientists and supported by the Nippon Foundation. The Nereus program was formed to study the future of the world's oceans and seafood resources. Today it released a summary of the first phase of its research in a report titled 'Predicting Future ...
2015-07-01
ASCO Perspective: Gary Schwartz, MD, ASCO Expert "This study adds to the growing discussion around food and cancer risk. While the findings are intriguing, it's far too soon to recommend any broad changes to grapefruit or orange consumption. Until conclusive data are available, we should continue to be cautious about protecting our skin from sun exposure."
A new analysis of dietary patterns among more than 100,000 Americans suggests that frequent consumption of citrus -- namely whole grapefruit and orange juice -- may be associated with an increased risk of melanoma. ...
2015-07-01
July 1 -- Researchers in the United Kingdom and Denmark have studied the "see-through" larvae of zebrafish to reveal how wound healing leads to skin cancer. Live imaging shows neutrophils, the protective inflammatory cells of the body's immune system, diverted from an induced wound to any nearby precancerous skin cells. The newly arrived neutrophils cause rapid division of these skin cells, which may cause them to progress to melanoma. The results are published in The EMBO Journal.
"Our results provide direct visual evidence of a physical link between wound-associated ...
2015-07-01
Scientists from the University of Leeds and The Institute of Cancer Research, London, have discovered a new protein which triggers the growth of blood vessels in breast cancer tumours which have spread to the brain, a common location which breast cancer can spread to.
Dr Georgia Mavria's team in the School of Medicine at Leeds found that by withholding the DOCK4 protein in mouse models, a particular part of the blood vessel did not form as quickly, meaning tumours grew at a slower rate.
Dr Mavria said: "We want to understand how these tumours form and grow, but we still ...
2015-07-01
Storing solar energy as hydrogen is a promising way for developing comprehensive renewable energy systems. To accomplish this, traditional solar panels can be used to generate an electrical current that splits water molecules into oxygen and hydrogen, the latter being considered a form of solar fuel. However, the cost of producing efficient solar panels makes water-splitting technologies too expensive to commercialize. EPFL scientists have now developed a simple, unconventional method to fabricate high-quality, efficient solar panels for direct solar hydrogen production ...
2015-07-01
Nine times more job offers after training
Eases anxiety and boosts rapport with interviewer
High unemployment for vets with PTSD and mentally ill
CHICAGO --- Finding a job is difficult for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and individuals with severe mental illness, who have high unemployment rates even though many want to work.
The job interview -- especially hard for those with mental illness -- can be a major hurdle.
A virtual human -- based on software originally used to train FBI agents -- helped vets with PTSD and individuals with severe ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Improving insulation materials, down to wetting crossed fibers
Scientists model the manner in which a liquid wets fibers, gaining useful insights for improving glass wool properties