Publications by authors named "Dominik Weis"

Article Synopsis
  • This research focuses on understanding the mechanisms behind pellet formation during the extrusion-spheronization process, specifically the transfer of mass between granules of different sizes.
  • Granules of varying diameters were used in a spheronizer and marked with a fluorescent tracer to analyze and quantify how mass transfer occurs during the process.
  • Findings revealed that while smaller granules generally increase their size by gaining mass, larger granules tend to stay the same size or slightly decrease, leading to a narrow size distribution among the final pellets.
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High-grade periodate is relatively expensive, but is required for many sensitive applications such as the synthesis of active pharmaceutical ingredients. These high costs originate from using lead dioxide anodes in contemporary electrochemical methods and from expensive starting materials. A direct and cost-efficient electrochemical synthesis of periodate from iodide, which is less costly and relies on a readily available starting material, is reported.

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Previously described scaling models for the spheronization process of wet extrudates are incomplete, often concluding with an adjustment of the plate speed according to the spheronizer diameter, but neglecting to give guidelines on the adjustment of the load or the process duration. In this work, existing scaling models were extended to include the load and the process time. By analyzing the final particle size and shape distributions as well as the rounding kinetics for various loads and plate speeds in spheronizers with plate diameters of 0.

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The temporal evolution of atmospheric lead deposition and its possible sources were assessed in eastern Canada and in western Scotland, using blanket peat bogs as geochemical archives. Short cores were taken from two remote sites located close to the sea. Significant lead enrichments in the upper layers at both sites reflect the increasing emission of lead into the atmosphere due to anthropogenic activities during the last century.

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