Publications by authors named "V S Nikolayev"

Evaporation or condensation in the vicinity of the immobile (pinned) contact line in an atmosphere of some inert (noncondensable) gas is considered here in a partial wetting configuration. Such a problem is relevant to many situations, in particular to a drop or a liquid film drying in open air. The thermal effects are not important and the mass exchange rate is controlled by the vapor dynamics in the gas.

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In this paper, we describe the optical grid deflection method used to reconstruct the 3D profile of liquid films deposited by a receding liquid meniscus. This technique uses the refractive properties of the film surface and is suitable for liquid thickness from several microns to millimeter. This method works well for strong interface slopes and changing in time film shape; it applies when the substrate and fluid media are transparent.

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In flow-coating processes at low substrate velocity, solvent evaporation occurs during the film withdrawal and the coating process directly yields a dry deposit. In this regime, often referred to as the evaporative regime, several works performed on blade-coating-like configurations have reported a deposit thickness h proportional to the inverse of the substrate velocity V. Such a scaling can be easily derived from simple mass conservation laws, assuming that evaporation occurs on a constant distance, referred to as the evaporation length, noted L in the present paper and of the order of the meniscus size.

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Article Synopsis
  • Neonatal surgery is vital for reducing infant mortality from birth defects, which have long been a leading cause of early death.
  • A study of neonatal deaths from 1995 to 2014 revealed that 77% of these cases were conditionally preventable, highlighting significant issues in healthcare organization.
  • Implementing key strategies like better antenatal diagnosis, efficient transportation of newborns, centralizing care at advanced hospitals, and adopting modern treatment methods led to a 3.5 times decrease in mortality rates during the later study period (2005-2014).
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