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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Rheologica acta 34 (1995), S. 147-159 
    ISSN: 1435-1528
    Keywords: Viscoelastic instability ; secondary flow visualization ; Taylor-Couette ; Boger fluids
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Physics
    Notes: Abstract Flow visualization is performed on an elastically-dominated instability in several similar Boger fluids in Taylor-Couette flow. The onset and evolution of secondary flow are observed over a range of shear rates using reflective mica platelet seeding. Sequences of ambiently and sheet-illuminated images were digitally processed. Rotation of the inner cylinder was ramped from rest to its final value over a time on the order of a polymer relaxation time. Dilute solutions of high molecular weight polyisobutylene in oligomeric polybutene manifest a flow transition at a Deborah number, De s = λ s γ ≈ 1.5 with a Taylor number of 0.00022 in a cell with dimensionless gap ratio δ = 0.0963. At this transition, simple azimuthal shearing is replaced by steady, roughly square, axisymmetric counter-rotating vortices grossly similar to the well-known Taylor vortex flow that is observed at De s = 0, Ta = 3612. At De s = 3.75, Ta = 0.0014, an axisymmetric oscillatory secondary flow develops initially but is replaced by the steady vortices. At De s = 7.5, Ta = 0.0054, the oscillatory and vortex flow coexist and possess an irregular cellular cross-section. A wide span of growth rates is observed: the ratio of onset to polymer relaxation time ranges from 170000 at De s = 1.5 to O(10) at De s 〉 5. The role of inertia was explored through changing the solvent viscosity. A transition similar to the one that occurs at De s = 3.75, Ta = 0.0014, from the base azimuthal shearing flow to axisymmetric vortices, was also observed with a much lower viscosity fluid at De s = 3.3, Ta = 74.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Placenta ; Trophectoderm ; Binucleate cells ; Tight junctions ; Cell migration ; Sheep ; Goats
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Binucleate cells in ruminant trophectodermal epithelium are unique in that they form part of the tight junction as they migrate across it, maintaining the ionic barrier seal to the internal milieu of the fetus. Such participation imposes considerable constraints on the cell migration because membrane cannot flow through a tight junction. We report quantitative ultrastructural immunocytochemical evidence for vesicle membrane insertion into the binucleate cell plasmalemma which allows the cells to form a pseudopodium past the tight junction. This pseudopodium increases continuously in area by vesicle insertion and develops a close apposition to the plasmalemma of the fetomaternal syncytium which constitutes the fetomaternal boundary in the placenta of the sheep and goat. Enventually the apposed membranes of the binucleate cell pseudopodium and the syncytium fuse by vesiculation and the cytoplasm and nuclei of the binucleate cell merge into the fetomaternal syncytium. The binucleate cell plasmalemma remaining on the trophectodermal side of the tight junction is blebbed off into, and phagocytosed by, the uninucleate trophectodermal cells between which the binucleate cell passed. This process permits the delivery of the binucleate cell granules to the maternal side of the placenta but none of the fetal molecules expressed on the plasma membrane of the binucleate cells are exposed to potential maternal immunological rejection.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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