• Title/Summary/Keyword: Surface science

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Nondestructive Estimation of Average Wood Moisture Content Using Surface Temperature Rise by Radiation Heating and Moisture Gradient

  • Lee, Hyoung-Woo;Kim, Byung-Nam
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.38-42
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    • 1999
  • Average moisture content of 30mm-thick Korean red pine(Pinus densiflora) was estimated nondestructively and continuously using surface temperature rise by radiation heating and moisture gradient profile in wood. The surface temperature rises increased as surface moisture contents decreased and good relationships were found between surface moisture contents and surface temperature rises at three different feed speeds of 10, 20 and 30 m/min. Average moisture content could be described as a function of surface moisture content and wood thickness.

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Studies on the Surface Properties of PMMA after Accelerated Weathering

  • Kwon, Young Bum;Ha, Jin Uk;Hwang, Ye Jin;Oh, Jeong Seok
    • Elastomers and Composites
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    • v.51 no.4
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    • pp.350-354
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    • 2016
  • The surface properties of poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) were investigated after accelerated weathering. Glossinesses, contact angles, surface free energies, thermal stability, and mechanical properties were investigated. The glossiness of the weathered PMMA was decreased with increasing exposure time. Contact angles and surface free energies were not overtly changed because the amount of oxygen on the surface was remained. PMMA was compounded with anti-block and antistatic agents using a co-rotating twin screw extruder to improve the durability. The PMMA composites showed better glossinesses after accelerated weathering while maintaining the contact angles, surface energy, thermal stability, and mechanical properties without significant changes.

Textural properties of Activated Carbons from Wild Cherry Stones as Determined by Nitrogen and Carbon Dioxide Adsorption

  • Alaya, M.N.;Youssef, A.M.;Karman, M.;Abd El-Aal, H.E
    • Carbon letters
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    • v.7 no.1
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    • pp.9-18
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    • 2006
  • Activated carbons were obtained by activating wild cherry stones with different concentrations of phosphoric acid or zinc chloride at different temperatures. The adsorption of $N_2$ at 77 K and of $CO_2$ at 273 K was followed and the data were analyzes by considering different adsorption models. The activated carbons obtained measured high surface area with the most of the surface in all samples located in micropores. Fair agreement was found between the nitrogen surface areas calculated from the BET-, t-, ${\alpha}$- and DR- methods, although the first three are based on surface coverage whereas the latter is based on micropore filling. The carbon dioxide surface areas calculated by the DA equation were smaller than the comparable nitrogen areas. This was ascribed to domination of surface coverage mechanism, the absence of activated diffusion process. Based on this explanation the $CO_2$-surface areas as calculated by DA equation should be taken with great reservation.

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Al2O3 Coating on Transparent Polycarbonate Substrates for the Hard-coating Application (투명 폴리카보네이트 보호코팅을 위한 산화알루미늄 박막)

  • Kim, Hun;Nam, Kyoung-Hee;Jang, Dong-Su;Lee, Jung-Joong
    • Journal of the Korean institute of surface engineering
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    • v.40 no.4
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    • pp.159-164
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    • 2007
  • Transparent aluminum oxide films were deposited on polycarbonate (PC) substrates by inductively coupled plasma (ICP) assisted reactive sputtering. the oxygen flow rate was regulated by controlling the target voltage with a proportional integrate derivative controller. The PC substrate was treated with plasma prior to the deposition in order to the enhance the adhesive strength of the $Al_2O_3$ film. The characteristics of hardness, structure, density, transmittance, deposition rate, surface roughness and residual stress were investigated to estimate the possibility for the hard coating.

Background Surface Estimation for Reverse Engineering of Reliefs

  • Liu, Shenglan;Martin, Ralph R.;Langbein, Frank C.;Rosin, Paul L.
    • International Journal of CAD/CAM
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    • v.7 no.1
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    • pp.31-40
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    • 2007
  • Reverse engineering of reliefs aims to turn an existing relief superimposed on an underlying surface into a geometric model which may be applied to a different base surface. Steps in this process include segmenting the relief from the background, and describing it as an offset height field relative to the underlying surface. We have previously considered relief segmentation using a geometric snake. Here, we show how to use this initial segmentation to estimate the background surface lying under the relief, which can be used (i) to refine the segmentation and (ii) to express the relief as an offset field. Our approach fits a B-spline surface patch to the measured background data surrounding the relief, while tension terms ensure this background surface smoothly continues underneath the relief where there are no measured background data points to fit. After making an initial estimate of relief offset height everywhere within the patch, we use a support vector machine to refine the segmentation. Tests demonstrate that this approach can accurately model the background surface where it underlies the relief, providing more accurate segmentation, as well as relief height field estimation. In particular, this approach provides significant improvements for relief concavities with narrow mouths and can segment reliefs with small internal holes.

Study on the Improvement of the Electrochemical Characteristics of Surface-modified V-Ti-Cr alloy by Ball-milling

  • Kim, Jin-Ho;Lee, Sang-Min;Lee, Ho;Lee, Paul S.;Lee, Jai-Young
    • Transactions of the Korean hydrogen and new energy society
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.39-50
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    • 2001
  • Vanadium based solid solution alloys have been studied as a potential negative electrode of Ni/MH battery due to their high hydrogen storage capacity. In order to improve the kinetic property of V-Ti alloy in KOH electrolyte, the ball-milling process with Ni, which has a catalytic effect of hydrogen absorption/desorption, was carried out to modify the surface properties of V-Ti-Cr alloys with high hydrogen storage capacity. Moreover, to overcome the problem of poor cycle life, V-Ti alloy substituted by Cr, V0.68 Ti0.20 Cr0.12, has been developed showing a good cycle performance (keeping about 80 % of initial discharge capacity after 200 cycles). The cycle life of surface-modified V0.68 Ti0.20 Cr0.12 alloy was improved by suppressing the formation of TiO2 layer on the alloy surface while decreasing the amount of dissolved vanadium in the KOH electrolyte. In order to promote the effect of Ni coating on the surface property of V0.68 Ti 0.20 Cr 0.12 alloy by ball-milling, filamentary-typed Ni, which has higher surface coverage area than sphere-typed Ni was used as a surface modifier. Consequently, the surface-modified V0.68 Ti0.20 Cr0.12 alloy electrode showed a improved discharge capacity of 460 mAh/g.

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Enhanced Stability of Organic Photovoltaics by Additional ZnO Layers on Rippled ZnO Electron-collecting Layer using Atomic Layer Deposition

  • Kim, Kwang-Dae;Lim, Dong Chan;Jeong, Myung-Geun;Seo, Hyun Ook;Seo, Bo Yeol;Lee, Joo Yul;Song, Youngsup;Cho, Shinuk;Lim, Jae-Hong;Kim, Young Dok
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.353-356
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    • 2014
  • We fabricated organic photovoltaic (OPV) based on ZnO ripple structure on indium tin oxide as electron-collecting layers and PTB7-F20 as donor polymer. In addition, atomic layer deposition (ALD) was used for preparing additional ZnO layers on rippled ZnO. Addition of 2 nm-thick ALD-ZnO resulted in enhanced initial OPV performance and stability. Based on photoluminescence results, we suggest that ALD-ZnO layers reduced number of surface defect sites on ZnO, which can act as electron-hole recombination center of OPV, and increased resistance of ZnO towards surface defect formation.