Several recent studies have found that measuring the dielectric permittivity of soil can be used to determine the level of environmental pollution. However, there is limited research on the measurement of dielectric properties in soil contaminated with biodiesel-diesel blends from Thailand. This paper presents to monitor the dielectric properties of soil contaminated with biodiesel-diesel blends. Specifically, we use the commercial grade diesel B7 to contaminate a sample of sand soil. We also study the measurement of dielectric properties in contaminated soil with the diesel B7 using a dual electrode plate-based radio frequency (RF) heating system. This allows us to observe the behavior of the contaminated soil before and after RF heating treatment. The experimental result showed that the dielectric properties of uncontaminated and contaminated soil were different. In addition, the RF heating system utilizing the electric field intensities of 450 kV/m resulted in the dielectric properties of the contaminated soil becoming similar to those of uncontaminated soil. These findings suggest that using RF heating on contaminated soil samples improve the air in the pore space compared to unheated contaminated soil. This approach may be effective for the treatment of soil in Thailand using an RF heating system with dual electrode plates.
This paper introduces a current-mode first-order all-pass filter (APF) and its application in quadrature oscillator (QO) based on CCCII. The proposed filter can provide inverting and noninverting all-pass functions with a same circuit topology, it uses two CCCIIs and one grounded capacitor. Moreover, the first-order all-pass filter was applied in current-mode sinusoidal quadrature oscillators with the design based on block diagrams. The introduced oscillators can provide four phase-quadrature signals which independently control the condition of oscillation (CO) and frequency of oscillation (FO). The proposed oscillators consist of three CCCIIs and two grounded capacitors. The proposed APF and QOs have high output impedance which can directly drive load without additional current buffer. In addition, they use only grounded capacitors which are very appropriate to future development into an integrated circuit. The results of PSPICE simulation program correspond to the theoretical analysis.
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