1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910786508803321

Autore

Sukharev I͡U. I (I͡Uriĭ Ivanovich)

Titolo

Wave oscillations in colloid oxyhydrates / / Yuri I. Sucharev

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Stafa-Zuerich, Switzerland ; ; Enfield, New Hampshire : , : Trans Tech Publications, , [2010]

©2010

ISBN

3-03813-447-3

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (508 p.)

Collana

Materials science foundations, , 1422-3597 ; ; volumes 70-71

Disciplina

549/.53

Soggetti

Colloids

Metallic oxides

Hydroxides

Oscillating chemical reactions

Oscillations

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (pages [491]-497).

Nota di contenuto

Wave Oscillations in Colloid Oxyhydrates; Preface; Table of Contents; Summary; Table of Contents; 1. Periodical Pulsation Ionic Flow Properties of Oxo-Olic Complexes of Zirconium and Silicium; 1.1 Polymerization of the Hydrated Particles of Zirconium Oxyhydrate; 1.2 Emission-Wave Duality of Behavior of the Periodical Processes in the D- and F-Elements' Oxyhydrates. 1.3 Periodicity of the Efficient Diffusion Coefficients; 1.4 Quantization of the Pacemakers' Radiuses in Oxyhydrate Gels; 1.5 Bifurcation of the Pacemakers' Radius Doubling in Gel Oxyhydrate Systems

1.6 Extensional Dilatancy and Dimensions of the Pacemakers1.7 The Periodical State Isotherm; Abstract 1.1; 1.8 other Forms and Types of Oscillatory Motions in Oxyhydrate Systems; Abstract 1.2. Instrumental Support; 2. Behavior of Zirconium Oxyhydrate Gels Affected by the Spontaneous Pulsating Electrical Currents; 2.1 Theory; 2.2 Synchronization of the Periodical Oxyhydrate Systems; 2.3 Mathematical Modeling Problem; 2.4 Connections between Certain Self-Organization Parameters; 2.5 Conclusions

3. Zirconium Oxyhydrate Gels with Specifically Repeated Pulsation



Macromolecules' Organizations: the Experimental Aspect3.1 Some of the TGM's Experimental Results; 3.2 Oxyhydrate Clusters Structuring in Non-Equilibrium Conditions; 3.3 the Way the Ageing Time Affects the Sorption Properties of the Zirconium Oxyhydrate; 3.4 Conclusions; 4. Modeling of the Oxyhydrate Gels' Shaping in an Active Excitable Medium. the Phase Transition Operator in Gels' Oxyhydrates (the Liesegang Operator)

4.1 Modeling of Autowave Shaping Processes in D- and F- Elements' Oxyhydrate Gels. the Simplest Mathematical Model of the Reaction-Diffusion Type4.2 Studies of a Modeled Oxyhydrate System; 4.3 Modeling of the Gel Shaping in an Active Excitable Medium by Means of the Molecular Dynamics Methods and the Monte Carlo Method; 4.4 Coulomb Diffusion Model; 5. Liesegang Operator; 4.5 Conclusions; 5.1 Liesegang Operator as a Reflection of the Gel Polymer Systems' Oscillatory Properties. Introduction of the Liesegang Operator; 5.2 Studying a Highly Nonlinear Diffusion Equation; Abstract 5.1 Theorems

Abstract 5.2 Gel's Formation Stationary Problem5.3 Simplified Notation for the Liesegang Operator; 5.4 Hydrodynamic Approach; 5.5 Liesegang Operator and some Experimental Data; 5.6 Conclusions; 6. Liesegang Operator as a Consequence of the Ionic Molecular Motion inside the Lenard-Jones Potential; 6.1 Single-Particle Problem. Cluster's Motion in the Field of the Lenard-Jones Potential; 6.2 Cluster Motion in the Lenard-Jones Potential; 6.3 Experimental Detection of the Current Surges' Periodical Toroid Conformations in the Gel Oxyhydrate Systems, the Structural Self-Organization Stages

Abstract 6.1 Formative Characteristics of Zirconium Oxyhydrate Conformers

Sommario/riassunto

The importance of coherent chemistry, that is, the chemistry of periodic oscillatory processes, is increasing at a rapid rate in specific chemical disciplines. While being perfectly understood and highly developed in the fields of physical chemistry, chemical physics and biological chemistry, the periodic developmental paradigm of processes and phenomena still remains poorly developed and misunderstood in classical inorganic chemistry and related branches, such as colloid chemistry. The probability is that we miss subtle colloid chemical phenomena that could be of utmost importance if taken in