5,317 research outputs found

    From supported membranes to tethered vesicles: lipid bilayers destabilisation at the main transition

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    We report results concerning the destabilisation of supported phospholipid bilayers in a well-defined geometry. When heating up supported phospholipid membranes deposited on highly hydrophilic glass slides from room temperature (i.e. with lipids in the gel phase), unbinding was observed around the main gel to fluid transition temperature of the lipids. It lead to the formation of relatively monodisperse vesicles, of which most remained tethered to the supported bilayer. We interpret these observations in terms of a sharp decrease of the bending rigidity modulus κ\kappa in the transition region, combined with a weak initial adhesion energy. On the basis of scaling arguments, we show that our experimental findings are consistent with this hypothesis.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure

    Prediction of sanding in subsurface hydrocarbon reservoirs.

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    Sand production in oil and gas wells can occur if the fluid velocity exceeds a certain value. Due to drilling operations, the mechanical stresses can exceed the load bearing capacity of the rock. As the local stresses exceed certain level, a certain amount of rock is fractured into sand. Then, the sand is carried by the fluid through the wellbore depending on the flow rate. The amount of the solids can be less than a few grams per cubic meter of reservoir fluid or an essential amount. In the later case erosion of the rock and removing sufficient quantities of rock can occur. This can produce subsurface cavities which collapse and destroy the well. When sanding is unavoidable it is necessary to estimate the characteristics of the process. Our aim was to generate a simple one-dimensional local model, which predicts the volume of sanding, the radius and the porosity of the yielded zone. Such model will help the company in the development of complex 3D models

    The prolate-to-oblate shape transition of phospholipid vesicles in response to frequency variation of an AC electric field can be explained by the dielectric anisotropy of a phospholipid bilayer

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    The external electric field deforms flaccid phospholipid vesicles into spheroidal bodies, with the rotational axis aligned with its direction. Deformation is frequency dependent: in the low frequency range (~ 1 kHz), the deformation is typically prolate, while increasing the frequency to the 10 kHz range changes the deformation to oblate. We attempt to explain this behaviour with a theoretical model, based on the minimization of the total free energy of the vesicle. The energy terms taken into account include the membrane bending energy and the energy of the electric field. The latter is calculated from the electric field via the Maxwell stress tensor, where the membrane is modelled as anisotropic lossy dielectric. Vesicle deformation in response to varying frequency is calculated numerically. Using a series expansion, we also derive a simplified expression for the deformation, which retains the frequency dependence of the exact expression and may provide a better substitute for the series expansion used by Winterhalter and Helfrich, which was found to be valid only in the limit of low frequencies. The model with the anisotropic membrane permittivity imposes two constraints on the values of material constants: tangential component of dielectric permittivity tensor of the phospholipid membrane must exceed its radial component by approximately a factor of 3; and the membrane conductivity has to be relatively high, approximately one tenth of the conductivity of the external aqueous medium.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures; accepted for publication in J. Phys.: Condens. Matte

    Measurement of the KLK_L nuclear interaction length in the NaI(Tl) calorimeter

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    In the study of the reaction e+eKSKLe^+e^-\to K_{S}K_{L} at the VEPP-2M e+ee^+e^- collider with the SND detector the nuclear interaction length of KLK_{L} meson in NaI(Tl) has been measured. Its value is found to be 30--50 cm in the KLK_{L} momentum range 0.11--0.48 GeV/cc. The results are compared with the values used in the simulation programs GEANT4 and UNIMOD.Comment: accepted in JINS

    Study of the e+eηγe^+e^-\to\eta\gamma process with SND detector at the VEPP-2M e+ee^+e^- collider

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    In experiment with the SND detector at VEPP-2M e+ee^+e^- collider the e+eηγe^+e^-\to\eta\gamma cross section was measured in the energy range EE=0.60--1.38 GeV with the integrated luminosity of 27.8 pb1^{-1}. The measured cross section is well described by the vector meson dominance model with contributions from the ρ(770)\rho(770), ω(783)\omega(783), ϕ(1020)\phi(1020), ρ(1465)\rho^{\prime}(1465) resonances and agrees with results of previous measurements. The decay probabilities \BR(\phi\to\eta\gamma), \BR(\omega\to\eta\gamma) and \BR(\rho\to\eta\gamma) were measured with the accuracies better than or comparable to the world averages.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, 5 table

    Experimental Determination of the Characteristics of a Positron Source Using Channeling

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    Numerical simulations and `proof of principle' experiments showed clearly the interest of using crystals as photon generators dedicated to intense positron sources for linear colliders. An experimental investigation, using a 10 GeV secondary electron beam, of the SPS-CERN, impinging on an axially oriented thick tungsten crystal, has been prepared and operated between May and August 2000. After a short recall on the main features of positron sources using channeling in oriented crystals, the experimental set-up is described. A particular emphasis is put on the positron detector made of a drift chamber, partially immersed in a magnetic field. The enhancement in photon and positron production in the aligned crystal have been observed in the energy range 5 to 40 GeV, for the incident electrons, in crystals of 4 and 8 mm as in an hybrid target. The first results concerning this experiment are presented hereafter.Comment: 3 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Linac200
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