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Keywords = spherical pore assumption

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41 pages, 8474 KiB  
Article
GITT Limitations and EIS Insights into Kinetics of NMC622
by Intizar Abbas, Huyen Tran Tran, Tran Thi Ngoc Tran, Thuy Linh Pham, Eui-Chol Shin, Chan-Woo Park, Sung-Bong Yu, Oh Jeong Lee, An-Giang Nguyen, Daeho Jeong, Bok Hyun Ka, Hoon-Hwe Cho, Jongwoo Lim, Namsoo Shin, Miran Gaberšček, Su-Mi Hur, Chan-Jin Park, Jaekook Kim and Jong-Sook Lee
Batteries 2025, 11(6), 234; https://doi.org/10.3390/batteries11060234 - 19 Jun 2025
Viewed by 574
Abstract
Conventional applications of the Galvanostatic Intermittent Titration Technique (GITT) and EIS for estimating chemical diffusivity in battery electrodes face issues such as insufficient relaxation time to reach equilibrium, excessively long pulse durations that violate the short-time diffusion assumption, and the assumption of sequential [...] Read more.
Conventional applications of the Galvanostatic Intermittent Titration Technique (GITT) and EIS for estimating chemical diffusivity in battery electrodes face issues such as insufficient relaxation time to reach equilibrium, excessively long pulse durations that violate the short-time diffusion assumption, and the assumption of sequential electrode reaction and diffusion processes. In this work, a quasi-equilibrium criterion of 0.1 mV h−1 was applied to NMC622 electrodes, yielding 8–9 h relaxations below 3.8 V, but above 3.8 V, voltage decayed linearly and indefinitely, even upon discharging titration, showing unusual nonmonotonic relaxation behavior. The initial 36-s transients of a 10-min galvanostatic pulse and diffusion impedance in series with the electrode reaction yielded consistent diffusivity values. However, solid-state diffusion in spherical active particles within porous electrodes, where ambipolar diffusion occurs in the pore electrolyte with t+=0.3, requires a physics-based three-rail transmission line model (TLM). The corrected diffusivity may be three to four times higher. An analytic two-rail TLM approximating the three-rail numerical model was applied to temperature- and frequency-dependent EIS data. This approach mitigates parameter ambiguity and unphysical correlations in EIS. Physics-based EIS enables the identification of multistep energetics and the diagnosis of performance and degradation mechanisms. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Battery Modelling, Simulation, Management and Application)
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19 pages, 7045 KiB  
Article
The Phase Change Heat of Water in the Pore Space of Rocks Based on DSC Studies
by Piotr Stępień, Edyta Spychał and Edyta Nartowska
Materials 2024, 17(16), 4049; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17164049 - 14 Aug 2024
Viewed by 1375
Abstract
This research investigates the phase change behavior of water within the pore space of Devonian carbonate rock samples using Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) across a temperature range of −80 to 0 °C. This study focuses on dolomite and limestone samples, all with porosities [...] Read more.
This research investigates the phase change behavior of water within the pore space of Devonian carbonate rock samples using Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) across a temperature range of −80 to 0 °C. This study focuses on dolomite and limestone samples, all with porosities below 3%, an area not extensively covered in previous literature. Significant endothermic effects were observed at temperatures below −2 °C, challenging conventional understanding. The study reveals that the latent heat of phase change in these systems can exceed 334.2 J/g, the known value for bulk water, indicating unique thermodynamic properties of water in confined spaces. For the dolomite rock sample, observed endothermic heat effects below −2 °C were 23.5% and 26.7% of total phase change energy. The cumulative pore volume calculated using the thermoporometry method was found to be higher than expected from water occupancy alone, independent of assumptions about the thickness of the adsorbed unfreezable water layer or pore shape (spherical or cylindrical). This research provides novel insights into unfrozen water content calculations, significantly enhancing frost durability assessments and the geoengineering industry. Full article
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18 pages, 3507 KiB  
Article
Macropore Regulation of Hydroxyapatite Osteoinduction via Microfluidic Pathway
by Feng Shi, Xin Fang, Teng Zhou, Xu Huang, Ke Duan, Jianxin Wang, Shuxin Qu, Wei Zhi and Jie Weng
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23(19), 11459; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms231911459 - 28 Sep 2022
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 2334
Abstract
Macroporous characteristics have been shown to play a key role in the osteoinductivity of hydroxyapatite ceramics, but the physics underlying the new bone formation and distribution in such scaffolds still remain elusive. The work here has emphasized the osteoinductive capacity of porous hydroxyapatite [...] Read more.
Macroporous characteristics have been shown to play a key role in the osteoinductivity of hydroxyapatite ceramics, but the physics underlying the new bone formation and distribution in such scaffolds still remain elusive. The work here has emphasized the osteoinductive capacity of porous hydroxyapatite scaffolds containing different macroporous sizes (200–400 μm, 1200–1500 μm) and geometries (star shape, spherical shape). The assumption is that both the size and shape of a macropore structure may affect the microfluidic pathways in the scaffolds, which results in the different bone formations and distribution. Herein, a mathematical model and an animal experiment were proposed to support this hypothesis. The results showed that the porous scaffolds with the spherical macropores and large pore sizes (1200–1500 μm) had higher new bone production and more uniform new bone distribution than others. A finite element analysis suggested that the macropore shape affected the distribution of the medium–high velocity flow field, while the macropore size effected microfluid speed and the value of the shear stress in the scaffolds. Additionally, the result of scaffolds implanted into the dorsal muscle having a higher new bone mass than the abdominal cavity suggested that the mechanical load of the host tissue could play a key role in the microfluidic pathway mechanism. All these findings suggested that the osteoinduction of these scaffolds depends on both the microfluid velocity and shear stress generated by the macropore size and shape. This study, therefore, provides new insights into the inherent osteoinductive mechanisms of bioceramics, and may offer clues toward a rational design of bioceramic scaffolds with improved osteoinductivity. Full article
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19 pages, 7939 KiB  
Article
Elastic Modulus Prediction Model of Foamed Concrete Based on the Walsh Formula
by Zhong Zhou, Jiangfeng Hu, Fan Li, Junjie Zhang and Mingfeng Lei
Appl. Sci. 2022, 12(10), 5142; https://doi.org/10.3390/app12105142 - 19 May 2022
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3187
Abstract
Foamed concrete consists of cement matrix and air-foam and has more complicated structure characteristics than normal concrete. However, current research on the elastic modulus of foamed concrete is still limited to empirical equations. In this work, a new theoretical prediction model was proposed [...] Read more.
Foamed concrete consists of cement matrix and air-foam and has more complicated structure characteristics than normal concrete. However, current research on the elastic modulus of foamed concrete is still limited to empirical equations. In this work, a new theoretical prediction model was proposed for calculating the elastic modulus of foamed concrete. The elastic modulus calculation model for the spherical shell element of foamed concrete is constructed based on the Walsh formula and the assumption of spherical pores. Moreover, the theoretical prediction model is established by introducing the two-layer embedded model for the elastic modulus of foamed concrete. Then, the compressive test is employed to verify the accuracy of the model. The results show that the elastic modulus of foamed concrete decreases with the increase in porosity and matrix Poisson’s ratio, and increases with the increase in the matrix elastic modulus. The research results can improve the mechanical theories of foamed concrete materials and have good engineering application values. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Underground Space Technology)
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29 pages, 2081 KiB  
Article
Travelling-Wave Dipolophoresis: Levitation and Electrorotation of Janus Nanoparticles
by Touvia Miloh and Jacob Nagler
Micromachines 2021, 12(2), 114; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi12020114 - 22 Jan 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2330
Abstract
We present a theoretical study of the hydrodynamic and electrokinetic response of both metallic spherical polarized colloids as well as metallodielectic Janus particles, which are subjected to an arbitrary non-uniform ambient electric field (DC or AC forcing). The analysis is based on employing [...] Read more.
We present a theoretical study of the hydrodynamic and electrokinetic response of both metallic spherical polarized colloids as well as metallodielectic Janus particles, which are subjected to an arbitrary non-uniform ambient electric field (DC or AC forcing). The analysis is based on employing the linearized ‘standard’ model (Poisson–Nernst–Planck formulation) and on the assumptions of a ‘weak’ field and small Debye scale. In particular, we consider cases of linear and helical time-harmonic travelling-wave excitations and provide explicit expressions for the resulting dielectrophoretic and induced-charge electrophoretic forces and moments, exerted on freely suspended particles. The new analytic expressions thus derived for the linear and angular velocities of the initially uncharged polarizable particle are compared against some available solutions. We also analyze the levitation problem (including stability) of metallic and Janus particles placed in a cylindrical (insulating or conducting) pore near a powered electrode. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Micromachines for Dielectrophoresis, Volume II)
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