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Search Results (460)

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Keywords = fluid layer thickness

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20 pages, 2893 KB  
Article
Two-Phase Pockmark Modeling and Gas Saturation Estimation Beneath Hydrate-Bearing Sediments: Insights from the Storegga Slide
by Zheng Su, Yifan Wu, Chao Yang and Nengyou Wu
Geosciences 2026, 16(3), 128; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences16030128 - 20 Mar 2026
Viewed by 192
Abstract
Fluid seepages and seabed pockmarks are widely observed on continental margins worldwide in hydrate- and non-hydrate-bearing sediment. Subsurface gas chimneys connecting seafloor pockmarks to underlying gas reservoirs are commonly revealed by seismic reflection data, indicating pathways of past and present fluid migration. Fluid [...] Read more.
Fluid seepages and seabed pockmarks are widely observed on continental margins worldwide in hydrate- and non-hydrate-bearing sediment. Subsurface gas chimneys connecting seafloor pockmarks to underlying gas reservoirs are commonly revealed by seismic reflection data, indicating pathways of past and present fluid migration. Fluid seepage occurs when the seal of a gas reservoir is breached, allowing fluids to migrate upward and vent at the seafloor, forming pockmarks. In hydrate-bearing settings, gas reservoirs beneath hydrate layers typically consist of coexisting water and gas phases. However, quantitative constraints on gas saturation in free-gas zones beneath hydrates inferred from pockmark morphology remain limited. In this study, a two-phase pockmark model was developed to investigate gas-chimney growth and pockmark formation, and to estimate gas saturation in free-gas zones below hydrates using pockmark depth and gas-zone thickness as key parameters. The model was applied to the Storegga Slide region off Norway, where hydrates, pockmarks, and chimney-like seismic anomalies have been documented. Here, the application is intended to represent localized near-threshold (pre-seepage) conditions leading to pockmark initiation, rather than the present-day post-venting state. Model results for the initiation (near-threshold, pre-venting) stage indicate that the effective gas saturation in the free-gas reservoir beneath the hydrates was approximately 1.36–1.58% for gas-zone thicknesses of 50–100 m, and that the corresponding chimney-propagation timescale during initiation was on the order of ~200 years. These estimates represent threshold conditions required for seal breach and pockmark formation rather than present-day seepage states. During venting, methane gas may form hydrates within the chimney inside the hydrate stability zone, while authigenic carbonates precipitate in pockmarks and shallow sediments. These secondary hydrates and carbonates eventually seal the chimney, leaving behind a residual gas chimney in the subsurface sediment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Geophysics)
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20 pages, 4030 KB  
Article
Zwitterionic Polymer Gel Fracturing Fluid with Molecular Interface Regulation for Pretreatment-Free Flowback Recycling
by Qingguo Wang, Cuilong Kong, Zhixuan Zhu, Guang Shi, Xuesong Lin, Shengnan Shi, Silong Gai and Jianxun Meng
Gels 2026, 12(2), 178; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels12020178 - 19 Feb 2026
Viewed by 464
Abstract
High salinity and hardness in flowback fluids from tight reservoirs severely degrade the performance of conventional fracturing fluids, leading to formation damage and imposing major constraints on water recycling. An innovative in situ molecular interface regulation strategy that bypasses the need for costly [...] Read more.
High salinity and hardness in flowback fluids from tight reservoirs severely degrade the performance of conventional fracturing fluids, leading to formation damage and imposing major constraints on water recycling. An innovative in situ molecular interface regulation strategy that bypasses the need for costly pretreatment was proposed. A novel zwitterionic polymer was synthesized by grafting trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) onto hydrolyzed polyacrylamide. This hydrolyzed polyacrylamide grafted with trimethylamine N-oxide polymer (HPAMT) leverages zwitterionic TMAO groups to form a robust hydration layer approximately 0.25 nm thick on the polymer chains. Each TMAO group can immobilize up to 22.2 water molecules, effectively shielding the polymer from the detrimental effects of ions like Ca2+ and Na+, thereby preventing chain curling and preserving cross-linking sites. Experimental results demonstrate that HPAMT fracturing fluid prepared with untreated flowback fluids retains over 70% of its initial viscosity. The HPAMT fracturing fluid exhibits superior thermal and shear stability, maintaining more than 90% viscosity after exposure to 90 °C and the shear rate of 170 s−1 for 60 min. Furthermore, HPAMT provides excellent proppant suspension, exceeding 60 min of static settling time. The broken gel viscosity remains below 5 mPa·s, enabling the direct reuse of flowback water. This technology overcomes the critical compatibility issue between traditional polymers and challenging brine chemistry, significantly reducing freshwater consumption and operational costs, thus presenting a viable and innovative solution for enhancing the environmental sustainability of unconventional resource development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gel Applications)
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17 pages, 1645 KB  
Article
Ultra-High-Temperature Oil-Based Drilling and Completion Fluids: Design and Application Under Harsh Conditions
by Qian Wang, Dianbin Dong, Jian Zhang, Tengjiao Liu, Xianbin Zhang, Hanyi Zhong, Li Wang and Yuan Wan
Processes 2026, 14(4), 655; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14040655 - 13 Feb 2026
Viewed by 460
Abstract
The western region of the Tarim Basin is a typical deep and ultra-deep oil and gas reservoir with complex geological conditions in China. This area includes a thick salt–gypsum layer, high-pressure brine layers, and other formations with high pressures and a complex pressure [...] Read more.
The western region of the Tarim Basin is a typical deep and ultra-deep oil and gas reservoir with complex geological conditions in China. This area includes a thick salt–gypsum layer, high-pressure brine layers, and other formations with high pressures and a complex pressure system. These geological features present challenges such as a high risk of drilling fluid contamination by formation fluids, the deep burial of subsalt reservoirs, high temperatures, and difficulty in designing drilling fluids. In this paper, by systematically screening and optimizing key additives, a diesel oil-based drilling and completion fluid system resistant to 220 °C ultra-high temperatures with a density of 2.60 g/cm3 was developed. The overall performance was evaluated. Utilizing an independently developed high-temperature emulsifier (BZ-PSE), an organically modified lithium silicate viscosity modifier (BZ-CHT), and compounded fluid loss reducers (BZ-OLG/BZ-OSL), the system maintained excellent rheological stability (yield point > 4.3 Pa) and filtration control capacity (HTHP fluid loss < 4.8 mL) even after aging at 220 °C. The system demonstrated a resistance to contamination by 30–50% composite brines, 15% salt–gypsum cuttings, and 10% cement, proving its capability to effectively handle extremely thick mud shale, salt–gypsum layers, and high-pressure brine. Field tests were conducted in wells GL 3C, DB X, Boz 13X, and Boz 3X. The results indicated that the high-temperature, high-density diesel oil-based drilling fluids and completion fluids can effectively address the technical challenges posed by wellbore instability in thick salt–gypsum layers, high-pressure brine invasion, and performance degradation under ultra-high temperature conditions, providing reliable technical support for the safe and efficient drilling of similar complex formations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Chemical Processes and Systems)
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15 pages, 4130 KB  
Article
Elastic Recovery and Thickness Effect in Vacuum Infusion Molding Process
by Jinshui Yang, Shan Liu, Changping Yin and Suli Xing
J. Compos. Sci. 2026, 10(2), 83; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs10020083 - 5 Feb 2026
Viewed by 429
Abstract
Vacuum infusion experiments were conducted to characterize the elastic recovery and thickness effect in the vacuum infusion molding process (VIMP). The results indicate that both the local fluid pressure and the part thickness increment increase with flow propagation until filling completion, and subsequently [...] Read more.
Vacuum infusion experiments were conducted to characterize the elastic recovery and thickness effect in the vacuum infusion molding process (VIMP). The results indicate that both the local fluid pressure and the part thickness increment increase with flow propagation until filling completion, and subsequently decrease during the post-filling stage. The maximum thickness increment increases with the number of reinforcement layers, while the thickness-increment rate decreases due to the enhanced compliance of the reinforcement. Specifically, for reinforcements with 10, 20, and 30 layers under in-plane 1D (One-Dimensional) flow, the thickness-increment rates are 4.97%, 4.74%, and 3.86%, respectively. In out-plane 1D flow, a distinct progressive three-stage thickness growth is observed, with corresponding increment rates of 43.7%, 23.0%, and 15.8% for 10, 20, and 30 layers, highlighting a significantly more pronounced effect. In contrast, for both coupled seepage-flow configurations (A and B), the thickness-increment rate shows no significant variation with layer number and remains consistently around 6%. This suggests that the thickness effect is offset by the coupled seepage-flow interaction of in-plane, out-plane, and distribution medium (DM) flows. It can be concluded that elastic recovery decreases with increasing part thickness. The thickness effect exerts a positive influence on the vacuum infusion molding of large-scale (thick-section) composite structures. Both elastic recovery and thickness effect are closely related to the injection mode (process strategy), with the effect in out-plane 1D flow being significantly greater than that in in-plane flow and coupled seepage flow. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Composites Modelling and Characterization)
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18 pages, 5789 KB  
Article
The Application of a Non-Newtonian Fluid as a Protective Layer for a CFRP Material Subjected to Low-Energy Impact Loads
by Piotr Arkuszyński, Marek Rośkowicz and Angelika Arkuszyńska
Materials 2026, 19(3), 606; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19030606 - 4 Feb 2026
Viewed by 658
Abstract
One of the key challenges in using CFRP (Carbon Fiber Reinforced Polymer) structures is their susceptibility to low-energy impact damage, often indicated as barely visible impact damage (BVID). Such defects are difficult to detect and can compromise structural integrity. This study investigates the [...] Read more.
One of the key challenges in using CFRP (Carbon Fiber Reinforced Polymer) structures is their susceptibility to low-energy impact damage, often indicated as barely visible impact damage (BVID). Such defects are difficult to detect and can compromise structural integrity. This study investigates the use of immobilized non-Newtonian fluids (NNF) as protective layers for CFRP composites subjected to low-energy impacts. Experimental tests were carried out with an Instron 9440 drop-weight impact tower (impact energy range 5–40 J) and high-speed imaging, comparing NNF coatings with rubber-based, caoutchouc-based, and spray-based protective layers. Non-destructive evaluation using computed tomography confirmed that NNF coatings dissipate impact energy through shear-thickening behavior, reducing delamination while preserving clear visual indicators of the impact site. Furthermore, the study assessed post-impact fatigue bending performance, revealing that the inclusion of NNF—either as an outer layer or as part of a sandwich structure—significantly enhanced the residual fatigue strength of the composites. Moreover, NNFs inherently preserve visible traces of penetration, thereby improving the detectability of impact locations through both unaided visual inspection and advanced imaging modalities such as computed tomography. In addition to external coatings, NNF was applied as a core in sandwich structures, demonstrating improved impact resistance compared to monolithic CFRP laminates and conventional CFRP–foam sandwiches. The protective performance was found to depend on fluid thickness and threshold shear rates required for viscosity transition, indicating that thicker layers do not always provide superior protection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Carbon Materials)
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22 pages, 13212 KB  
Article
Multi-Layered Porous Helmholtz Resonators for Low-Frequency and Broadband Sound Absorption
by Xuewei Liu, Tianyu Gu, Ling Li and Dan Wang
Materials 2026, 19(3), 600; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19030600 - 4 Feb 2026
Viewed by 450
Abstract
Unlike classical multi-layered micro-perforated panels (MPPs), which rely on sub-millimeter orifices for sound dissipation, we propose a multi-layered porous Helmholtz resonators absorber. It consists of alternately layered perforated porous material panels and perforated rigid panels with millimeter- to centimeter-scale orifices, primarily relying on [...] Read more.
Unlike classical multi-layered micro-perforated panels (MPPs), which rely on sub-millimeter orifices for sound dissipation, we propose a multi-layered porous Helmholtz resonators absorber. It consists of alternately layered perforated porous material panels and perforated rigid panels with millimeter- to centimeter-scale orifices, primarily relying on porous materials for sound energy dissipation. Theoretically, perforated porous material panels are modeled as homogeneous fluid layers using double porosity theory, and the total surface impedance is derived through bottom-to-top impedance translation. A double-layered prototype was tested to validate the theoretical and numerical models, achieving near-perfect absorption peaks at 262 Hz and 774 Hz, with a subwavelength total thickness of 11 cm and a broadband absorption above an absorption coefficient of 0.7 from 202 Hz to 1076 Hz. Simulations of sound pressure, particle velocity, power dissipation, and sound intensity flow confirm that Helmholtz resonances in each layer enhance sound entry into resistive porous materials, causing absorption peaks. Parameter studies show this absorber maintains high absorption peaks across wide ranges of orifice diameters and panel thicknesses. Finally, an optimized triple-layer porous Helmholtz resonators absorber achieves an ultra-broadband absorption above a coefficient of 0.95 from 280 Hz to 1349 Hz with only 16.5 mm thickness. Compared with conventional MPPs, this design features significantly larger orifices that are easier to fabricate and less susceptible to blockage in harsh environments, offering an alternative solution for low-frequency and broadband sound absorption. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mechanics of Materials)
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19 pages, 9544 KB  
Article
Synergistic Tribofilm Growth in Ethylene Glycol: A Dual-Additive Approach for Superior Lubrication
by Xiangli Wen, Peng Gong, Ningyi Yuan, Yu Tian, Lvzhou Li and Jianning Ding
Materials 2026, 19(3), 493; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19030493 - 26 Jan 2026
Viewed by 286
Abstract
This study provides an original insight into the synergistic mechanism through which TM-104 and Vanlube 672 facilitate the in situ formation of a nanoscale bilayer tribofilm in ethylene glycol-based hydraulic fluid. By optimizing the additive formulation to 0.5 wt.% TM-104 and 2.0 wt.% [...] Read more.
This study provides an original insight into the synergistic mechanism through which TM-104 and Vanlube 672 facilitate the in situ formation of a nanoscale bilayer tribofilm in ethylene glycol-based hydraulic fluid. By optimizing the additive formulation to 0.5 wt.% TM-104 and 2.0 wt.% Vanlube 672, a structurally graded tribofilm was autonomously assembled at the friction interface, comprising a 6 nm-thick PxOy-rich inner layer and a 140 nm-thick amorphous carbon outer layer. This engineered interlayer delivers exceptional tribological enhancements, with a 31% improvement in lubricity, a 71% increase in wear resistance, and a remarkable 577% enhancement in extreme-pressure load capacity. The first discovery was that there were differences in the mechanisms between these two layers: the inner PxOy layer establishes strong chemisorption bonds with the substrate, while the outer carbon layer facilitates energy dissipation through shear-induced graphitization. These findings establish a new paradigm for designing multi-functional lubricant additives and provide a scientific basis for developing high-performance fire-resistant hydraulic fluids operable under extreme conditions. Full article
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30 pages, 47854 KB  
Article
Genesis and Reservoir Implications of Multi-Stage Siliceous Rocks in the Middle–Lower Ordovician, Northwestern Tarim Basin
by Jinyu Luo, Tingshan Zhang, Pingzhou Shi, Zhou Xie, Jianli Zeng, Lubiao Gao, Zhiheng Ma and Xi Zhang
Minerals 2026, 16(1), 107; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16010107 - 21 Jan 2026
Viewed by 329
Abstract
Siliceous rocks of various colors and types are extensively developed within the Middle–Lower Ordovician carbonate along the Northwest Tarim Basin. Their genesis provides important insights into the evolution of basinal fluids and the associated diagenetic alterations of the carbonates. Based on petrographic, geochemical, [...] Read more.
Siliceous rocks of various colors and types are extensively developed within the Middle–Lower Ordovician carbonate along the Northwest Tarim Basin. Their genesis provides important insights into the evolution of basinal fluids and the associated diagenetic alterations of the carbonates. Based on petrographic, geochemical, fluid inclusion, and petrophysical analyses, this study investigates the origin of siliceous rocks within the Middle–Lower Ordovician carbonate formations (Penglaiba, Yingshan, and Dawangou formations) in the Kalpin area, Tarim Basin, and investigates the impact on hydrothermal reservoirs. The results reveal two distinct episodes of siliceous diagenetic fluids: The first during the Late Ordovician involved mixed hydrothermal fluids derived from deep magmatic–metamorphic sources, formation brines, and seawater. Characterized by high temperature and moderate salinity, it generated black chert dominated by cryptocrystalline to microcrystalline quartz through replacement processes. The second episode developed in the Middle–Late Devonian as a mixture of silicon-rich fluids from deep heat sources and basinal brines. In conditions of low temperature and high salinity, it generated gray-white siliceous rocks composed of micro- to fine crystalline quartz, spherulitic-fibrous chalcedony, and quartz cements via a combination of hydrothermal replacement and precipitation. A reservoir analysis reveals that the multi-layered black siliceous rocks possess significant reservoir potential amplified by the syndiagenetic tectonic fracturing. In contrast, the white siliceous rocks, despite superior petrophysical properties, are limited in scale as they predominantly infill late-stage fractures and vugs, mainly enhancing local flow conduits. Hydrothermal alteration in black siliceous rocks is more intense in dolostone host rocks than in limestone. Thus, thick (10–20 m), continuous black siliceous layers in dolostone and the surrounding medium-crystalline dolostone alteration zones, are promising exploration targets. This study elucidates the origins of Ordovician siliceous rocks and their implications for carbonate reservoir properties. The findings may offer valuable clues for deciphering the evolution and predicting the distribution of hydrothermal reservoirs, both within the basin and in other analogous regions worldwide. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Element Enrichment and Gas Accumulation in Black Rock Series)
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15 pages, 12198 KB  
Article
Automated Local Measurement of Wall Shear Stress with AI-Assisted Oil Film Interferometry
by Mohammad Mehdizadeh Youshanlouei, Lorenzo Lazzarini, Alessandro Talamelli, Gabriele Bellani and Massimiliano Rossi
Sensors 2026, 26(2), 701; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26020701 - 21 Jan 2026
Viewed by 502
Abstract
Accurate measurement of wall shear stress (WSS) is essential for both fundamental and applied fluid dynamics, where it governs boundary-layer behavior, drag generation, and the performance of flow-control systems. Yet, existing WSS sensing methods remain limited by low spatial resolution, complex instrumentation, or [...] Read more.
Accurate measurement of wall shear stress (WSS) is essential for both fundamental and applied fluid dynamics, where it governs boundary-layer behavior, drag generation, and the performance of flow-control systems. Yet, existing WSS sensing methods remain limited by low spatial resolution, complex instrumentation, or the need for user-dependent calibration. This work introduces a method based on artificial intelligence (AI) and Oil-Film Interferometry, referred to as AI-OFI, that transforms a classical optical technique into an automated and sensor-like platform for local WSS detection. The method combines the non-intrusive precision of Oil-Film Interferometry with modern deep-learning tools to achieve fast and fully autonomous data interpretation. Interference patterns generated by a thinning oil film are first segmented in real time using a YOLO-based object detection network and subsequently analyzed through a modified VGG16 regression model to estimate the local film thickness and the corresponding WSS. A smart interrogation-window selection algorithm, based on 2D Fourier analysis, ensures robust fringe detection under varying illumination and oil distribution conditions. The AI-OFI system was validated in the high-Reynolds-number Long Pipe Facility at the Centre for International Cooperation in Long Pipe Experiments (CICLoPE), showing excellent agreement with reference pressure-drop measurements and conventional OFI, with an average deviation below 5%. The proposed framework enables reliable, real-time, and operator-independent wall shear stress sensing, representing a significant step toward next-generation optical sensors for aerodynamic and industrial flow applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sensors)
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14 pages, 1711 KB  
Article
Viscoelastic Properties of Organosilicon Fluid Interlayer at Low-Frequency Shear Deformations
by Tuyana Dembelova, Badma Badmaev, Aleksandr Mashanov, Dari Dembelova, Michael I. Ojovan and Migmar Darmaev
Fluids 2026, 11(1), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids11010025 - 19 Jan 2026
Viewed by 409
Abstract
The present work explores the viscoelastic properties of a homologous series of organosilicon fluids (polymethylsiloxane fluids) using the acoustic resonant method at a frequency of shear vibrations of approximately 100 kHz. The resonant method is based on investigating the influence of additional binding [...] Read more.
The present work explores the viscoelastic properties of a homologous series of organosilicon fluids (polymethylsiloxane fluids) using the acoustic resonant method at a frequency of shear vibrations of approximately 100 kHz. The resonant method is based on investigating the influence of additional binding forces on the resonant characteristics of the oscillatory system. The fluid under study was placed between a piezoelectric quartz crystal that performs tangential oscillations and a solid cover plate. Standing shear waves were established in the fluid. The thickness of the liquid layer was much smaller than the length of the shear wavelength, and low-amplitude deformations allowed for the determination of the complex shear modulus G* in the linear region, where the shear modulus has a constant value. The studies demonstrated the presence of a viscoelastic relaxation process at the experimental frequency, which is several orders of magnitude lower than the known high-frequency relaxation in liquids. In this work, the relaxation frequency of the viscoelastic process in the studied fluids and the effective viscosity were calculated, and the lengths of the shear wave and the attenuation coefficients were determined. Full article
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14 pages, 2867 KB  
Article
Efficacy of Modified Talc Powder in Experimental Rat Model of Pleurodesis
by Murat Kilic, Onural Ozhan, Azibe Yildiz, Süleyman Koytepe, Mustafa Akyuz, Yusuf Turkoz, Nurcan Gokturk, Merve Biyikli, Rumeysa Sonmez, Idil Karaca Acari and Hakan Parlakpinar
Biomolecules 2026, 16(1), 104; https://doi.org/10.3390/biom16010104 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 610
Abstract
Background: Pleurodesis is a treatment method that aims to create permanent adhesion between the pleural layers to prevent recurrent fluid or air accumulation in the pleural cavity. Talc, one of the most commonly preferred agents in this procedure, is widely used in clinical [...] Read more.
Background: Pleurodesis is a treatment method that aims to create permanent adhesion between the pleural layers to prevent recurrent fluid or air accumulation in the pleural cavity. Talc, one of the most commonly preferred agents in this procedure, is widely used in clinical practice. In this study, a new talc formulation with a modified surface to impart antibacterial and analgesic properties was experimentally evaluated for the first time. The main objective of the study was to comparatively assess the inflammatory and fibrotic responses following standard talc and modified talc applications. Methods: Thirty-six 12-week-old female Wistar albino rats were simply randomly divided into three different groups: control (n = 12), standard talc (n = 12), and modified talc (n = 12). Under anesthesia, 1 mL of physiological saline containing 17 mg of talc was injected intrapleurally into the right hemithorax. The presence of pneumothorax after the procedure was assessed by chest radiography. After a 12-day follow-up period, the animals were euthanized. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid samples, blood samples, and lung and pleural tissue samples were collected for biochemical, histopathological, and immunohistochemical analyses. Results: Modified talc application resulted in a significant increase in both visceral and parietal pleural thickness (p < 0.05). Granulation tissue formation and collagen deposition were significantly higher in the modified talc group. In addition, TGF-β expression and CD68-positive macrophage count increased significantly in the modified talc group (p < 0.05). Inflammatory changes in the lung parenchyma were limited and not statistically significant. Conclusions: The modified talc formulation enriched with lidocaine and antibacterial agents produced a stronger inflammatory and fibrotic response compared to standard talc. These findings indicate that modified talc may increase the effectiveness of pleurodesis. Furthermore, the absence of significant lung parenchymal damage suggests that this treatment is locally effective and feasible. However, further long-term and advanced studies are needed to translate these results into clinical use. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Bio-Engineered Materials)
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14 pages, 1969 KB  
Article
Study on Microscopic Seepage Simulation of Tight Sandstone Reservoir Based on Digital Core Technology
by Hui Chen, Xiaopeng Cao and Lin Du
Eng 2026, 7(1), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/eng7010025 - 4 Jan 2026
Viewed by 358
Abstract
Understanding the flow characteristics of tight sandstone reservoirs is crucial for improving resource recovery efficiency. During fluid flow in porous media, surfactant components in the fluid can adsorb onto solid surfaces, forming a boundary layer. This boundary layer has a pronounced impact on [...] Read more.
Understanding the flow characteristics of tight sandstone reservoirs is crucial for improving resource recovery efficiency. During fluid flow in porous media, surfactant components in the fluid can adsorb onto solid surfaces, forming a boundary layer. This boundary layer has a pronounced impact on fluid movement within tight sandstone formations. In this study, digital core analysis is employed to investigate how the boundary layer influences non-Darcy flow behavior. A computational model is first developed to quantify the thickness and viscosity of the boundary layer, followed by the construction of a mathematical flow model based on the Navier–Stokes equations that incorporates boundary layer effects. Using CT scan data from actual core samples, a pore network model is then built to represent the reservoir’s complex pore structure. The impact of boundary layer development on microscale flow is subsequently analyzed under varying pore conditions. The results indicate that both boundary layer thickness and viscosity significantly influence fluid transport in microscopic pores. When the relative boundary layer thickness is 0.5, and the relative viscosity reaches 10, the actual outlet flow rate drops to only 12.89% of the value obtained without considering boundary layer effects. Furthermore, in tight reservoirs with smaller pore throat sizes, the boundary layer introduces considerable flow resistance. When boundary layer effects are incorporated into the pore network model, permeability initially increases with pressure gradient and then stabilizes. Full article
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12 pages, 391 KB  
Article
A Phenomenological Boundary Layer Approach to Interpret the Structure of the Heat Transfer Correlations for Laminar Forced Convection over Isothermal Flat Plates
by Massimo Corcione, Giovanni Di Bono and Alessandro Quintino
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(1), 407; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16010407 - 30 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 553
Abstract
Forced convection heat transfer is commonly described by a correlation of the type Nu=AReγPrλ, where λ<γ for moderate-to-high-Pr fluids, whereas λ=γ for low-Pr fluids. Yet, the phenomenological basis of [...] Read more.
Forced convection heat transfer is commonly described by a correlation of the type Nu=AReγPrλ, where λ<γ for moderate-to-high-Pr fluids, whereas λ=γ for low-Pr fluids. Yet, the phenomenological basis of this structure is seldom examined. This work shows that such a correlation can be interpreted from purely physical intuition, without employing scaling arguments or solving the governing equations. Focusing on laminar flow over an isothermal flat plate, we introduce a new phenomenological boundary layer approach in which, by assessing how each independent variable qualitatively affects the thickness of the boundary layer, we construct the proportionality of Nu on Re and Pr. The approach provides a physical interpretation of why the exponents of established forced convection correlations fall within certain ranges. This perspective may help both educators seeking intuition-based explanations and researchers exploring alternative formulations of forced convection heat transfer. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Applied Thermal Engineering)
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17 pages, 817 KB  
Article
Influence of Rheological, Ionic–Electrostatic, and Van Der Waals Forces on the Flow Structure of Water–Coal Fuel in Pipeline
by Eugene Semenenko, Oleksandr Krut’ and Artur Zaporozhets
Liquids 2026, 6(1), 3; https://doi.org/10.3390/liquids6010003 - 24 Dec 2025
Viewed by 382
Abstract
It has been shown for the first time that in the case of a pressure flow of a Newtonian fluid in a circular pipeline, the influence of forces of rheological origin, ion electrostatic and Van der Waals nature on the radius of the [...] Read more.
It has been shown for the first time that in the case of a pressure flow of a Newtonian fluid in a circular pipeline, the influence of forces of rheological origin, ion electrostatic and Van der Waals nature on the radius of the undeformed flow core is described by a third-degree polynomial with respect to the thickness of the layer, where the suspension structure is destroyed and its shear flow occurs. In this polynomial, the contributions of rheological forces and the influence of the hydraulic size of the solid-phase particles in the suspension enter as linear terms; ionic electrostatic and Van der Waals forces enter as quadratic and constant terms, respectively. For conditions typical of water–coal fuel, we demonstrate that the hydraulic (size) term is several orders of magnitude smaller than the leading terms and may be neglected, and that the quadratic term is negligible compared with the constant (free) term, so that the limiting value of the undeformed core radius is obtained as the real root of a cubic equation containing cubic, linear and constant terms. At DLVO equilibrium, the constant term vanishes, and the limiting relative core radius reduces to the rheological–hydraulic expression; away from equilibrium, the constant term becomes positive or negative, thereby altering the admissible interval of the relative core radius. Using Cardan’s method, we show analytically that (i) when the cubic discriminant is positive, a single real root exists and physically admissible solutions occur only for a negative constant term; (ii) when the discriminant is negative, three real roots exist and the maximum relative radius at which the suspension structure is preserved shifts above or below the rheological-only radius depending on the sign of the constant term. Numerical evaluation of the proposed lyophobicity model for proportionality coefficients k1 in the range 1–10 yields a lyophobicity function varying approximately from 0.67 to 1.06, confirming the modest but non-negligible role of interparticle interaction energy in modifying the undeformed core size under water–coal fuel conditions. These results quantify the competing roles of rheology and interparticle forces in determining the stability and extent of the undeformed core in pipeline transport of structured suspensions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physics of Liquids)
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20 pages, 2412 KB  
Article
Synergistic Temperature–Pressure Optimization in PEM Water Electrolysis: A 3D CFD Analysis for Efficient Green Ammonia Production
by Dexue Yang, Xiaomeng Zhang, Jianpeng Li, Fengwei Rong, Jiang Zhu, Guidong Li, Xu Ji and Ge He
Energies 2026, 19(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19010002 - 19 Dec 2025
Viewed by 723
Abstract
To address the fluctuation and instability of renewable power generation and the steady-state demands of chemical processes, a single-channel, non-isothermal computational fluid dynamics 3D model was developed. This model explicitly incorporates the coupling effects of electrochemical reactions, two-phase flow, and heat transfer. Subsequently, [...] Read more.
To address the fluctuation and instability of renewable power generation and the steady-state demands of chemical processes, a single-channel, non-isothermal computational fluid dynamics 3D model was developed. This model explicitly incorporates the coupling effects of electrochemical reactions, two-phase flow, and heat transfer. Subsequently, the influence of key operating parameters on proton exchange membrane water electrolyzer (PEMWE) system performance was investigated. The model accurately predicts the current–voltage polarization curve and has been validated against experimental data. Furthermore, the CFD model was employed to investigate the coupled effects of several key parameters—including operating temperature, cathode pressure, membrane thickness, porosity of the porous transport layer, and water inlet rate—on the overall electrolysis performance. Based on the numerical simulation results, the evolution of the ohmic polarization curve under temperature gradient, the block effect of bubble transport under high pressure, and the influence mechanism of the microstructure of the multi-space transport layer on gas–liquid, two-phase flow distribution are mainly discussed. Operational strategy analysis indicates that the high-efficiency mode (4.3–4.5 kWh/Nm3) is suitable for renewable energy consumption scenarios, while the economy mode (4.7 kWh/Nm3) reduces compression energy consumption by 23% through pressure–temperature synergistic optimization, achieving energy consumption alignment with green ammonia synthesis processes. This provides theoretical support for the optimization design and dynamic regulation of proton exchange membrane water electrolyzers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Green Hydrogen Production Technologies)
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