Title of article
Light fiber optic probe for measuring internal breakthrough of rare earth ion-labelled microspheres in porous media under unsaturated conditions
Author/Authors
T. and Klauth، نويسنده , , Peter and Joschko، نويسنده , , Andreas and Ustohal، نويسنده , , Petr and Büddefeld، نويسنده , , Jürgen and Klumpp، نويسنده , , Erwin and Vereecken، نويسنده , , Harry and Lezhnina، نويسنده , , Marina and Kynast، نويسنده , , Ulrich، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
7
From page
173
To page
179
Abstract
Application of minimally invasive probes for measuring fluorescent labelled colloids inside sand columns resulted in internal breakthrough curves at given points, that provided information about mass distributions without disrupting the column. Until now, light fiber optic probes were used in combination with organic fluorophores like fluoresceine or rhodamine, which have inherent disadvantage, such as comparably small Stokeʹs shifts and quenching at high concentrations. These may be overcome using rare earth ion complexes to label colloidal particles like microspheres (MS). Furthermore, these dyes have large fluorescent lifetimes compared to organic fluorophores, which readily allows the elimination of background fluorescence using time-resolved spectroscopy. We demonstrate the novel application of rare earth ion-labelled microspheres as colloidal tracers in column experiments under unsaturated conditions in porous media in coupling with a detection setup based on internal light fiber optic probes. Differences in mass budgets between internal detection and detection at the outlet were confirmed afterwards by invasive refurbishment of the column matrix.
Keywords
Light fiber optic probe , Rare earth ion–chelate complexes , Porous media , microspheres , Internal BTC , Retention profile , Unsaturated conditions
Journal title
Colloids and Surfaces A Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Colloids and Surfaces A Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects
Record number
1941401
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