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Keywords = water vapor mixing

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21 pages, 3566 KiB  
Article
Dendrometer-Based Analysis of Intra-Annual Growth and Water Status in Two Pine Species in a Mediterranean Forest Stand Under a Semi-Arid Climate
by Mehmet S. Özçelik
Forests 2025, 16(8), 1229; https://doi.org/10.3390/f16081229 - 26 Jul 2025
Viewed by 336
Abstract
Stem radius growth (GRO), tree water deficit (TWD), and maximum daily shrinkage (MDS) were monitored throughout 2023 in a semi-arid Mediterranean forest stand in Burdur, Türkiye, where Pinus nigra subsp. pallasiana (Lamb.) Holmboe and Pinus brutia Ten. naturally co-occur. These indicators, derived from [...] Read more.
Stem radius growth (GRO), tree water deficit (TWD), and maximum daily shrinkage (MDS) were monitored throughout 2023 in a semi-arid Mediterranean forest stand in Burdur, Türkiye, where Pinus nigra subsp. pallasiana (Lamb.) Holmboe and Pinus brutia Ten. naturally co-occur. These indicators, derived from electronic band dendrometers, were analyzed in relation to key climatic variables. Results indicated that P. brutia had a longer growth period, while P. nigra exhibited a higher average daily increment under the environmental conditions of 2023 at the study site. Annual stem growth was nearly equal for both species. Based on dendrometer observations, P. brutia exhibited lower normalized TWD and higher normalized MDS values under varying vapor pressure deficit (VPD) and soil water potential (SWP) conditions. A linear mixed-effects model further confirmed that P. brutia consistently maintained lower TWD than P. nigra across a wide climatic range, suggesting a comparatively lower degree of drought-induced water stress. GRO was most influenced by air temperature and VPD, and negatively by SWP. TWD was strongly affected by both VPD and SWP, while MDS was primarily linked to minimum air temperature and VPD. Moreover, MDS in P. brutia appeared more sensitive to climate variability compared to P. nigra. Although drought limited stem growth in both species during the study year, the lower TWD and higher MDS observed in P. brutia may indicate distinct physiological strategies for coping with drought. These findings offer preliminary insights into interspecific differences in water regulation under the particular climatic conditions observed during the study year in this semi-arid Mediterranean ecosystem. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Ecophysiology and Biology)
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21 pages, 12628 KiB  
Article
Convection Parameters from Remote Sensing Observations over the Southern Great Plains
by Kylie Hoffman and Belay Demoz
Sensors 2025, 25(13), 4163; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25134163 - 4 Jul 2025
Viewed by 323
Abstract
Convective Available Potential Energy (CAPE) and Convective Inhibition (CIN), commonly used measures of the instability and inhibition within a vertical column of the atmosphere, serve as a proxy for estimating convection potential and updraft strength for an air parcel. In operational forecasting, CAPE [...] Read more.
Convective Available Potential Energy (CAPE) and Convective Inhibition (CIN), commonly used measures of the instability and inhibition within a vertical column of the atmosphere, serve as a proxy for estimating convection potential and updraft strength for an air parcel. In operational forecasting, CAPE and CIN are typically derived from radiosonde thermodynamic profiles, launched only twice daily, and supplemented by model-simulated equivalent values. This study uses remote sensing observations to derive CAPE and CIN from continuous data, expanding upon previous research by evaluating the performance of both passive and active profiling systems’ CAPE/CIN against in situ radiosonde CAPE/CIN. CAPE and CIN values are calculated from Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer (AERI), Microwave Radiometer (MWR), Raman LiDAR, and Differential Absorption LiDAR (DIAL) systems. Among passive sensors, results show significantly greater accuracy in CAPE and CIN from AERI than MWR. Incorporating water vapor profiles from active LiDAR systems further improves CAPE values when compared to radiosonde data, although the impact on CIN is less significant. Beyond the direct capability of calculating CAPE, this approach enables evaluation of the various relationships between the water vapor mixing ratio, CAPE, cloud development, and moisture transport. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Remote Sensing in Atmospheric Measurements)
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19 pages, 1240 KiB  
Article
Extending the Recovery Ratio of Brackish Water Desalination to Zero Liquid Discharge (>95%) Through Combination of Nanofiltration, 2-Stage Reverse-Osmosis, Silica Precipitation, and Mechanical Vapor Recompression
by Paz Nativ, Raz Ben-Asher, Yaron Aviezer and Ori Lahav
ChemEngineering 2025, 9(4), 70; https://doi.org/10.3390/chemengineering9040070 - 3 Jul 2025
Viewed by 459
Abstract
Extending the recovery ratio (RR) of brackish water reverse osmosis (RO) plants to zero liquid discharge (ZLD, i.e., ≥95%) is vital, particularly inland, where the cost of safe retentate disposal is substantial. Various suggestions appear in the literature; however, many of these are [...] Read more.
Extending the recovery ratio (RR) of brackish water reverse osmosis (RO) plants to zero liquid discharge (ZLD, i.e., ≥95%) is vital, particularly inland, where the cost of safe retentate disposal is substantial. Various suggestions appear in the literature; however, many of these are impractical in the real world. Often, the limiting parameter that determines the maximal recovery is the SiO2 concentration that develops in the RO retentate and the need to further desalinate the high osmotic pressure retentates produced in the process. This work combines well-proven treatment schemes to attain RR ≥ 95% at a realistic cost. The raw brackish water undergoes first a 94% recovery nanofiltration (NF) step, whose permeate undergoes a further 88-RR RO step. To increase the overall RR, the retentate of the 1st RO step undergoes SiO2 removal performed via iron electro-dissolution and then a 2nd, 43% recovery, RO pass. The retentate of this step is combined with the NF retentate, and the mix is treated with mechanical vapor recompression (MVR) (RR = 62.7%). The results show that >95% recovery can be attained by the suggested process at an overall cost of ~USD 0.70/m3. This is ~60% higher than the USD 0.44/m3 calculated for the baseline operation (RR = 82.7%), making the concept feasible when either the increase in the plant’s capacity is regulatorily requested, or when the available retentate discharge method is very costly. The cost assessment accuracy was approximated at >80%. Full article
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22 pages, 10230 KiB  
Article
Near-Surface Water Vapor Content Based on SPICAV IR/VEx Observations in the 1.1 and 1.18 μm Transparency Windows of Venus
by Daria Evdokimova, Anna Fedorova, Nikolay Ignatiev, Oleg Korablev, Franck Montmessin and Jean-Loup Bertaux
Atmosphere 2025, 16(6), 726; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16060726 - 15 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 426
Abstract
The SPICAV IR spectrometer aboard the Venus Express orbiter measured spectra of the 1.1 and 1.18 μm atmospheric transparency windows at the Venus night side in 2006–2014. The long-term measurements encompassed the major part of the Venus globe, including polar latitudes. For the [...] Read more.
The SPICAV IR spectrometer aboard the Venus Express orbiter measured spectra of the 1.1 and 1.18 μm atmospheric transparency windows at the Venus night side in 2006–2014. The long-term measurements encompassed the major part of the Venus globe, including polar latitudes. For the first time, the H2O volume mixing ratio in the deep Venus atmosphere at about 10–16 km has been retrieved for the entire SPICAV IR dataset using a radiative transfer model with multiple scattering. The retrieved H2O volume mixing ratio is found to be sensitive to different approximations of the H2O and CO2 absorption lines’ far wings and assumed surface emissivity. The global average of the H2O abundance retrieved for different parameters ranges from 23.6 ± 1.0 ppmv to 27.7 ± 1.2 ppmv. The obtained values are consistent with recent studies of water vapor below the cloud layer, showing the H2O mixing ratio below 30 ppmv. Within the considered dataset, the zonal mean of the H2O mixing ratio does not vary significantly from 60° S to 75° N, except for a 2 ppmv decrease noted at high latitudes. The H2O local time distribution is also uniform. The 8-year observation period revealed no significant long-term trends or periodicities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Planetary Atmospheres)
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18 pages, 6070 KiB  
Article
A Non-Vacuum Coating Process That Fully Achieves Technical Goals of Bipolar Plates via Synergistic Control of Multiple Layer-by-Layer Strategy
by Qiaoling Liu, Xiaole Chen, Menghan Wu, Weihao Wang, Yinru Lin, Zilong Chen, Shuhan Yang, Yuhui Zheng and Qianming Wang
Molecules 2025, 30(12), 2543; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules30122543 - 11 Jun 2025
Viewed by 450
Abstract
The primary challenge associated with stainless steel in fuel cell operation is its susceptibility to corrosion, which leads to increased contact resistance and subsequent degradation of electrochemical performance. In general, the protective layers have been loaded onto the metal surface by widely used [...] Read more.
The primary challenge associated with stainless steel in fuel cell operation is its susceptibility to corrosion, which leads to increased contact resistance and subsequent degradation of electrochemical performance. In general, the protective layers have been loaded onto the metal surface by widely used traditional techniques such as physical vapor deposition (PVD), or cathode arc ion plating. However, the above sputtering and evaporation ways require a high-vacuum condition, complicated experimental setups, higher costs, and an elevated temperature. Therefore, herein the achievement for uniform coatings over a large surface area has been realized by using a cost-effective strategy through a complete wet chemical process. The synergistic regulation of two conductive components and a plastic additive has been employed together with the entrapment of a surfactant to optimize the microstructure of the coating surface. The assembly of layered graphite and a polystyrene sphere could maintain both the high corrosion resistance feature and excellent electrical conductivity. In particular, the intrinsic vacant space in the above physical barriers has been filled with fine powders of indium tin oxide (ITO) due to its small size, and the interconnected conductive network with vertical/horizontal directions would be formed. All the key technical targets based on the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) have been achieved under the simulated operating environments of a proton exchange membrane fuel cell. The corrosion current density has been measured as low as 0.52 μA/cm2 (for the sample of graphite/mixed layer) over the applied potentials from −0.6 V to 1.2 V and its protective efficiency is evaluated to be 99.8%. The interfacial contact resistance between the sample and the carbon paper is much less than 10 mΩ·cm2 (3.4 mΩ·cm2) under a contact pressure of 165 N/cm2. The wettability has been investigated and its contact angle has been evolved from 48° (uncoated sample) to even 110°, providing superior hydrophobicity to prevent water penetration. Such an innovative approach opens up new possibilities for improving the durability and reducing the costs of carbon-based coatings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Inorganic Chemistry in Asia)
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25 pages, 10720 KiB  
Article
Responses of Water Use Strategies to Seasonal Drought Stress Differed Among Eucalyptus urophylla S.T.Blake × E. grandis Plantations Along with Stand Ages
by Zhichao Wang, Yuxing Xu, Wankuan Zhu, Runxia Huang, Apeng Du, Haoyang Cao and Wenhua Xiang
Forests 2025, 16(6), 962; https://doi.org/10.3390/f16060962 - 6 Jun 2025
Viewed by 395
Abstract
Water use strategies reflect the ability of plants to adapt to drought caused by climate change. However, how these strategies change with stand development and seasonal drought is not fully understood. This study used stable isotope techniques (δD, δ18O, and δ [...] Read more.
Water use strategies reflect the ability of plants to adapt to drought caused by climate change. However, how these strategies change with stand development and seasonal drought is not fully understood. This study used stable isotope techniques (δD, δ18O, and δ13C) combined with the MixSIAR model to quantify the seasonal changes in water use sources and water use efficiency (WUE) of Eucalyptus urophylla S.T.Blake × E. grandis (E. urophylla × E. grandis) at four stand ages (2-, 4-, 9- and 14-year-old) and to identify their influencing factors. Our results showed that the young (2-year-old) and middle-aged (4-year-old) stands primarily relied on shallow soil water throughout the growing season due to the limitations of a shallow root system. In contrast, the mature (9-year-old) and overmature (14-year-old) stands, influenced by the synergistic effects of larger and deeper root systems and relative extractable water (REW), exhibited more flexibility in water use, mainly relying on shallow soil water in wet months, but shifting to using middle and deep soil layer water in dry months, and quickly returning to mainly using shallow soil water in the episodic wet month of the dry season. The WUE of E. urophylla × E. grandis was affected by the combined effect of air temperature (T), vapor pressure deficit (VPD), and REW. WUE was consistent across the stand ages in the wet season but decreased significantly with stand age in the dry season. This suggests that mature and overmature stands depend more on shifting their water source, while young and middle-aged stands rely more on enhanced WUE to cope with seasonal drought stress, resulting in young and middle-aged stands being more vulnerable to drought stress. These findings offer valuable insights for managing water resources in eucalyptus plantations, particularly as drought frequency and intensity continue to rise. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Forest Carbon, Water Use and Growth Under Climate Change)
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18 pages, 6561 KiB  
Article
The Ecological Quality Variation of Vegetation on the Tibetan Plateau from 2001 to 2020 and Its Relationship with Westerly Monsoon Synergy
by Jingjing Lin, Ting Miao, Guangsheng Zhou, Qiang Zhang, Junbao An, Feng Fang, Xiaomin Lv and Huihui Dang
Agronomy 2025, 15(6), 1317; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15061317 - 28 May 2025
Viewed by 358
Abstract
This study evaluates the spatio-temporal variations in vegetation ecological quality (EQI) on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) from 2001 to 2020 by integrating net primary productivity (NPP) and fractional vegetation cover (FVC). The results show that annual EQI increased at 0.8 decade−1, [...] Read more.
This study evaluates the spatio-temporal variations in vegetation ecological quality (EQI) on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) from 2001 to 2020 by integrating net primary productivity (NPP) and fractional vegetation cover (FVC). The results show that annual EQI increased at 0.8 decade−1, with 65.6% of areas exhibiting improvement, particularly in sparse grasslands and mixed forests. NPP and FVC rose by 5.4 g C m−2 decade−1 and 0.008 decade−1, respectively, displaying southeast–northwest spatial gradients. Climate warming (0.18 °C decade−1) and wetting (27.5 mm decade−1) drove EQI trends, with temperature positively correlating with EQI in eastern forests (29% mixed forests) but negatively in southern grasslands. Atmospheric circulation further modulated EQI: enhanced zonal water vapor flux and monsoon indices (IVarea, EMI) significantly impacted 10–25% of areas. Despite persistent improvement trends (13.9% of TP), 5.9% of regions face sustained degradation risks, emphasizing the need for climate-adaptive vegetation management. This synthesis of ecological-climate coupling provides actionable insights for conservation on the warming TP. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agroecology Innovation: Achieving System Resilience)
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20 pages, 4646 KiB  
Article
The Production of High-Permeable and Macrovoid-Free Polysulfone Hollow Fiber Membranes and Their Utilization in CO2 Capture Applications via the Membrane-Assisted Gas Absorption Technique
by Pavel Țiuleanu, Artem A. Atlaskin, Kirill A. Smorodin, Sergey S. Kryuchkov, Maria E. Atlaskina, Anton N. Petukhov, Andrey V. Vorotyntsev, Nikita S. Tsivkovskiy, Alexander A. Sysoev and Ilya V. Vorotyntsev
Polymers 2025, 17(10), 1407; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17101407 - 20 May 2025
Viewed by 549
Abstract
This present study covers a complex approach to study a hybrid separation technique: membrane-assisted gas absorption for CO2 capture from flue gases. It includes not only the engineering aspects of the process, particularly the cell design, flow organization, and process conditions, but [...] Read more.
This present study covers a complex approach to study a hybrid separation technique: membrane-assisted gas absorption for CO2 capture from flue gases. It includes not only the engineering aspects of the process, particularly the cell design, flow organization, and process conditions, but also a complex study of the materials. It covers the spinning of hollow fibers with specific properties that provide sufficient mass transfer for their implementation in the hybrid membrane-assisted gas absorption technique and the design of an absorbent with a new ionic liquid—bis(2-hydroxyethyl) dimethylammonium glycinate, which allows the selective capture of carbon dioxide. In addition, the obtained hollow fibers are characterized not only by single gas permeation but with regard to mixed gases, including the transfer of water vapors. A quasi-real flue gas, which consists of nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water vapors, is used to evaluate the separation efficiency of the proposed membrane-assisted gas absorption technique and to determine its ultimate performance in terms of the CO2 content in the product flow and recovery rate. As a result of this study, it is found that highly permeable fibers in combination with the obtained absorbent provide sufficient separation and their implementation is preferable compared to a selective but much less permeable membrane. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Innovative Polymers and Technology for Membrane Fabrication)
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16 pages, 11328 KiB  
Article
Balsam-Pear-Skin-Like-Structure Polyvinylidene Fluoride/Ethylene–Vinyl Alcohol Fibrous Membrane for Highly Efficient Oil/Water Separation Through One-Step Electrospinning
by Qijiao Jiang, Jinpeng Mo, Shaobo Han, Xi Liu, Baoliu Qu, Juan Xie, Xianfeng Wang and Jing Zhao
Polymers 2025, 17(10), 1389; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17101389 - 18 May 2025
Viewed by 449
Abstract
The rapid growth of industrial activities has significantly increased oil demand, leading to wastewater contamination with oil and causing severe environmental pollution. Traditional oil–water separation techniques, such as gravity separation, filtration, and chemical treatments, are hindered by low efficiency, high energy consumption, and [...] Read more.
The rapid growth of industrial activities has significantly increased oil demand, leading to wastewater contamination with oil and causing severe environmental pollution. Traditional oil–water separation techniques, such as gravity separation, filtration, and chemical treatments, are hindered by low efficiency, high energy consumption, and secondary pollution. Membrane separation technology has emerged as a promising solution due to its simplicity, low energy consumption, and high efficiency. In this study, we report the fabrication of a novel polyvinylidene fluoride/ethylene–vinyl alcohol (PVDF/EVOH) nanofibrous membrane (NFM) with a unique balsam-pear-skin-like structure using a one-step electrospinning process. The membrane’s superhydrophobicity and superoleophilicity were achieved via water vapor-induced phase separation (WVIPS), by optimizing the rheological properties and mixing ratio of EVOH and PVDF precursor solutions. The resulting PVDF/EVOH (PE12-3) NFM exhibits exceptional properties, achieving separation efficiencies of 99.4% for heavy oil and 98.9% for light oil, with a heavy oil flux of 18,020 L m−2 h−1—significantly surpassing previously reported performances. Additionally, the membrane shows excellent recyclability, making it ideal for large-scale oil–water separation in wastewater treatment and environmental remediation. This one-step fabrication strategy offers an efficient and scalable approach for developing high-performance membranes to tackle oil pollution in water. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Polymer Membranes and Films)
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16 pages, 3260 KiB  
Article
Catalytic Combustion of Methane over Pd-Modified La-Ce-Zr-Al Catalyst
by Katerina Tumbalova, Zlatina Zlatanova, Ralitsa Velinova, Maria Shipochka, Pavel Markov, Daniela Kovacheva, Ivanka Spassova, Silviya Todorova, Georgi Ivanov, Diana Nihtianova and Anton Naydenov
Materials 2025, 18(10), 2319; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18102319 - 16 May 2025
Viewed by 519
Abstract
The present study aims to investigate a Pd catalyst on a complex multi-oxide medium-entropy support interlayer La2O3-CeO2-ZrO2-Al2O3 and its possible use as catalysts for methane abatement applications. The low-temperature N2-adsorption, [...] Read more.
The present study aims to investigate a Pd catalyst on a complex multi-oxide medium-entropy support interlayer La2O3-CeO2-ZrO2-Al2O3 and its possible use as catalysts for methane abatement applications. The low-temperature N2-adsorption, XRD, TEM, XPS, TPD, and TPR techniques were used to characterize the catalyst. The palladium deposition on the supports leads to the formation of PdO. After the catalytic tests, the metal-Pd phase was observed. The complete oxidation of methane on Pd/La-Ce-Zr-Al catalyst takes place at temperatures above 250 °C, and in the presence of water vapor, the reaction temperature increases to about 70 °C. The careful choice of constituent oxides provides a balance between structural stability and flexibility. The alumina and lanthanum oxide ensure the high specific surface area, while the simultaneous presence of zirconia and ceria leads to the formation of a mixed-oxide phase able to interact with palladium ions by incorporating and de-incorporating them at different conditions. The mechanism of Mars–van Kerevelen was considered as the most probable for the reaction of complete methane oxidation. The possibility of the practical application of Pd-modified La-Ce-Zr-Al catalyst is evaluated. The use of a mix of multiple rare and abundant oxides makes the proposed catalyst a cost-effective alternative. Full article
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22 pages, 4895 KiB  
Article
Ore Genesis of the Huanggang Iron-Tin-Polymetallic Deposit, Inner Mongolia: Constraints from Fluid Inclusions, H–O–C Isotopes, and U-Pb Dating of Garnet and Zircon
by Hanwen Xue, Keyong Wang, Qingfei Sun, Junchi Chen, Xue Wang and Haoming Li
Minerals 2025, 15(5), 518; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15050518 - 14 May 2025
Viewed by 511
Abstract
The Huanggang iron-tin deposit, located in the southern Greater Khingan Range, is one of the largest Fe-Sn deposits in Northern China (NE China). Iron-tin mineralization occurs mainly in the contact zone between granitoid intrusions and the marble of the Huanggang and Dashizhai formations. [...] Read more.
The Huanggang iron-tin deposit, located in the southern Greater Khingan Range, is one of the largest Fe-Sn deposits in Northern China (NE China). Iron-tin mineralization occurs mainly in the contact zone between granitoid intrusions and the marble of the Huanggang and Dashizhai formations. Six mineralization stages are identified: (I) anhydrous skarn, (II) hydrous skarn, (III) cassiterite-quartz-calcite, (IV) pyrite-arsenopyrite-quartz-fluorite, (V) polymetallic sulfides-quartz, and (VI) carbonate ones. Fluid inclusions (FIs) analysis reveals that Stage I garnet and Stage II–III quartz host liquid-rich (VL-type), vapor-rich two-phase (LV-type), and halite-bearing three-phase (SL-type) inclusions. Stage IV quartz and fluorite, along with Stage V quartz, are dominated by VL- and LV-type inclusions, while Stage VI calcite contains exclusively VL-type inclusions. The FIs in Stages I to VI homogenized at 392–513, 317–429, 272–418, 224–347, 201–281, and 163–213 °C, with corresponding salinities of 3.05–56.44, 2.56–47.77, 2.89–45.85, 1.39–12.42, 0.87–10.62, and 4.48–8.54 wt% NaCl equiv., respectively. The H–O–C isotopes data imply that fluids of the anhydrous skarn stage (δD = −101.2 to −91.4‰, δ18OH2O = 5.0 to 6.0‰) were of magmatic origin, the fluids of hydrous skarn and oxide stages (δD = −106.3 to −104.7‰, δ18OH2O = 4.3 to 4.9‰) were characterized by fluid mixing with minor meteoric water, while the fluids of sulfide stages (δD = −117.4 to −108.6‰, δ18OH2O = −3.4 to 0.3‰, δ13CV-PDB= −12.2 to −10.9‰, and δ18OV-SMOW = −2.2 to −0.7‰) were characterized by mixing of significant amount of meteoric water. The ore-forming fluids evolved from a high-temperature, high-salinity NaCl−H2O boiling system to a low-temperature, low-salinity NaCl−H2O mixing system. The garnet U-Pb dating constrains the formation of skarn to 132.1 ± 4.7 Ma (MSWD = 0.64), which aligns, within analytical uncertainty, with the weighted-mean U−Pb age of zircon grains in ore-related K-feldspar granite (132.6 ± 0.9 Ma; MSWD = 1.5). On the basis of these findings, the Huanggang deposit, formed in the Early Cretaceous, is a typical skarn-type system, in which ore precipitation was principally controlled by fluid boiling and mixing. Full article
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12 pages, 2326 KiB  
Article
Study of Specific Problems Arising in the Blending Processes of Crude Oils (Based on the Examples of Azerbaijan Oils)
by Xiuyu Wang, Gafar Ismayilov, Elman Iskandarov, Elnur Alizade and Fidan Ismayilova
Processes 2025, 13(5), 1500; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13051500 - 13 May 2025
Viewed by 437
Abstract
Experiences in the production, transportation and preparation of crude oil for transportation have shown that specific problems arise related to their mixing, including water contamination. In recent years, interest in studying these problems has significantly increased, mainly due to the development of extraction [...] Read more.
Experiences in the production, transportation and preparation of crude oil for transportation have shown that specific problems arise related to their mixing, including water contamination. In recent years, interest in studying these problems has significantly increased, mainly due to the development of extraction technologies for heavy oil samples and bitumen. Along with various difficulties encountered during the pipeline transportation of complex rheological crude oil blended with each other and with light oil, including condensate (such as sedimentation, etc.), imbalances are also observed during storage, as well as in the processes of delivery and reception. During the dehydration of oil mixtures, a synergistic effect is observed in the consumption of demulsifier. The article investigates, in accordance with international standards and based on laboratory tests, how the physico-chemical properties (density, viscosity, freezing point, saturated vapor pressure, chemical composition) of mixtures formed by blending various grades and compositions of Azerbaijani oil examples with each other and with condensate change and how the efficiency of dehydration of oil mixtures is affected by the mixing ratio of the oil involved. It was found that the quality indicators (physico-chemical parameters) of oil mixtures differ non-additively from the initial parameters of the blended products and in some cases, this difference is even observed with anomalies. Moreover, depending on the mixing ratio of the oil, variations in the consumption of demulsifier were also identified. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Technology in Unconventional Resource Development)
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33 pages, 13813 KiB  
Review
Advances in Thermal Management for Liquid Hydrogen Storage: The Lunar Perspective
by Jing Li, Fulin Fan, Jingkai Xu, Heran Li, Jian Mei, Teng Fei, Chuanyu Sun, Jinhai Jiang, Rui Xue, Wenying Yang and Kai Song
Energies 2025, 18(9), 2220; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18092220 - 27 Apr 2025
Viewed by 852
Abstract
Liquid hydrogen is regarded as a key energy source and propellant for lunar bases due to its high energy density and abundance of polar water ice resources. However, its low boiling point and high latent heat of vaporization pose severe challenges for storage [...] Read more.
Liquid hydrogen is regarded as a key energy source and propellant for lunar bases due to its high energy density and abundance of polar water ice resources. However, its low boiling point and high latent heat of vaporization pose severe challenges for storage and management under the extreme lunar environment characterized by wide temperature variations, low pressure, and low gravity. This paper reviews the strategies for siting and deployment of liquid hydrogen storage systems on the Moon and the technical challenges posed by the lunar environment, with particular attention for thermal management technologies. Passive technologies include advanced insulation materials, thermal shielding, gas-cooled shielding layers, ortho-para hydrogen conversion, and passive venting, which optimize insulation performance and structural design to effectively reduce evaporation losses and maintain storage stability. Active technologies, such as cryogenic fluid mixing, thermodynamic venting, and refrigeration systems, dynamically regulate heat transfer and pressure variations within storage tanks, further enhancing storage efficiency and system reliability. In addition, this paper explores boil-off hydrogen recovery and reutilization strategies for liquid hydrogen, including hydrogen reliquefaction, mechanical, and non-mechanical compression. By recycling vaporized hydrogen, these strategies reduce resource waste and support the sustainable development of energy systems for lunar bases. In conclusion, this paper systematically evaluates passive and active thermal management technologies as well as vapor recovery strategies along with their technical adaptability, and then proposes feasible storage designs for the lunar environment. These efforts provide critical theoretical foundations and technical references for achieving safe and efficient storage of liquid hydrogen and energy self-sufficiency in lunar bases. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section J: Thermal Management)
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15 pages, 4450 KiB  
Article
Numerical Simulation of the Flow Field in a Tubular Thermal Cracking Reactor for Water Vapor and Difluoromonochloromethane
by Limin Yang, Hongxing Dou, Yongwen Cui, Xiaolai Zhang and Li Wang
Processes 2025, 13(4), 1170; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13041170 - 12 Apr 2025
Viewed by 369
Abstract
Tetrafluoroethylene (TFE), as a key basic chemical raw material, has an irreplaceable position in strategic emerging industries involving high-end materials, electronics, chemicals, and pharmaceuticals. Currently, TFE is industrially produced via the vapor cracking of difluoromonochloromethane (R22). However, there is a gap between China [...] Read more.
Tetrafluoroethylene (TFE), as a key basic chemical raw material, has an irreplaceable position in strategic emerging industries involving high-end materials, electronics, chemicals, and pharmaceuticals. Currently, TFE is industrially produced via the vapor cracking of difluoromonochloromethane (R22). However, there is a gap between China and the developed countries in the high-end tetrafluoroethylene monomer, the purity of tetrafluoroethylene monomer is difficult to reach the high purity requirement of 99.999%, and the content of the key impurities that determine the nature of the functional materials is high, which leads to a series of problems of instability in the performance of the high-end and special products and high media loss. To enhance the purity of TFE monomers produced by the pyrolysis reactor of R22 and water vapor, the fluid dynamics simulations of the reactor model were conducted using Ansys Fluent. The reactor model was initially constructed using Space Claim, followed by mesh generation with Fluent Meshing and other relevant configurations. Both cold-state and thermal-state simulations were performed. The cold-state simulation analyzed the effects of temperature, flow velocity, and turbulence models on the turbulent gas flow and mixing processes within the reactor model. The thermal-state simulation examined the impacts of reaction process variations on internal temperature, turbulence, component distribution, and outlet component concentrations during the actual reaction process. Finally, the inlet flow rate and structure of the reactor were optimized. The results indicated that the optimal inlet flow rates for R22 and water vapor were 0.2–0.3 kg/s and 0.4–0.5 kg/s, respectively. In practical production, the internal fluid mixing achieved an optimal value after modifying the inlet structure to a T shape. This study provides new insights into the pyrolysis reaction and lays the foundation for further improving the purity of TFE monomers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fluid Dynamics and Processes of Heat Transfer Enhancement)
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14 pages, 8388 KiB  
Article
Selective Benzene Recognition in Competitive Solvent System (Cyclohexene, Cyclohexane, Tri- and Hexafluorobenzenes) Using Perfluorinated Dinuclear Cu(II) Complex
by Kazuki Shiomoto, Nanako Oimatsu, Satoshi Hirano and Akiko Hori
Crystals 2025, 15(4), 322; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst15040322 - 28 Mar 2025
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Abstract
The selective adsorption and separation of benzene from structurally similar six-membered hydrocarbons and fluorocarbons remain a significant challenge due to their comparable physical properties. In this study, we investigated the molecular recognition and separation properties of a perfluorinated triketonate Cu(II) complex (1 [...] Read more.
The selective adsorption and separation of benzene from structurally similar six-membered hydrocarbons and fluorocarbons remain a significant challenge due to their comparable physical properties. In this study, we investigated the molecular recognition and separation properties of a perfluorinated triketonate Cu(II) complex (1) as a Nonporous Adaptive Crystal (NAC). In addition to the previously reported benzene (2)-encapsulated crystal of 1•(2)3, we report here the crystal structures of guest-free 1 and cyclohexene (3)-encapsulated 1•(O)23, where (O)2 represents two water molecules. Single-crystal analysis demonstrated that 1 selectively encapsulates 2 while excluding other hydrocarbons, including 3, cyclohexane (4), trifluorobenzene (5), and hexafluorobenzene (6). Gas adsorption experiments confirmed this high affinity for 2, as reflected in its preferential adsorption behavior in mixed solvent and vapor environments. The molecular selectivity of 1 was attributed to strong π-hole···π and metal···π interactions, which favor electron-rich aromatic guests. Additionally, crystallization experiments in competitive solvent systems consistently led to the formation of 1•(2)3, reinforcing the high selectivity of 1 for 2. These findings highlight the unique molecular recognition capabilities of NACs, providing valuable insights into the rational design of advanced molecular separation materials for industrial applications involving aromatic hydrocarbons. Hirshfeld surface analysis revealed that the contribution of F···F interactions to crystal packing decreased upon guest recognition (48.8% in 1, 34.2% in 1•(O)23, and 22.2% in 1•(2)3), while the contribution of F···H/H···F interactions increased (8.6% in 1, 22.2% in 1•(O)23, and 35.4% in 1•(2)3). Regarding Cu interactions, the self-assembled columnar structure of 1 results in close contacts at the coordination sites, including Cu···Cu (0.1%), Cu···O (0.7%), and Cu···C (1.3%). However, in the guest-incorporated structures 1•(O)23 and 1•(2)3, the Cu···Cu contribution disappears; instead, 1•(O)23 exhibits a significant increase in Cu···O interactions (1.2%), corresponding to water coordination, while 1•(2)3 shows an increase in Cu···C interactions (1.5%), indicative of the metal···π interactions of benzene. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Crystallisation Advances)
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