The substantial increase in the presence of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere has led to the development of several sampling techniques to quantify and characterize the sources of high global warming potential gas emissions. In this context, we developed a new method to estimate the time-averaged concentration of atmospheric methane that employs a long hose to collect a sample of gas by diffusion through one of its ends. We performed numerical simulations to illustrate the basis of our method and to determine the numerical factors required to estimate the time-averaged concentration of methane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBy means of the lubrication approximation we obtain the full family of static bidimensional profiles of a liquid resting on a substrate under partial-wetting conditions imposed by a disjoining-conjoining pressure. We show that for a set of quite general disjoining-conjoining pressure potentials, the free surface can adopt only five nontrivial static patterns; in particular, we find solutions when the height goes to zero which describe satisfactorily the complete free surface for a finite amount of fluid deposited on a substrate. To test the extension of the applicability of our solutions, we compare them with those obtained when the lubrication approximations are not employed and under conditions where the lubrication hypothesis are not strictly valid, and also with axisymmetric solutions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
April 2014
We investigate theoretically the possible final stationary configurations that can be reached by a laterally confined uniform liquid film inside a container. The liquid is under the action of gravity, surface tension, and the molecular interaction with the solid substrate. We study the case when the container is in an upright position as well as when it is turned upside down.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
November 2012
Analytical solutions for the shape of both hanging and sitting droplets under the effects of gravity and surface tension are presented. The modeling also includes the action of molecular forces arising between the liquid and the substrate, which are responsible for the formation of a stable nanometric film in the region close to the droplet contact line. The shape of the droplet is completely described by an analytical solution that also accounts for the pancake-shaped droplets as a limiting case.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
May 2012
A numerical method to reduce the computing times of thin-film flows with moving contact lines is presented. The flows of a film and a droplet are calculated in a frame that moves with a nonconstant velocity U(t). The criterion employed to define this velocity is to reduce the maximum height change in the flow's most critical zone.
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