Adsorption
equilibrium isotherms of CO2, CH4, and mixtures
of CO2/CH4 on shale sampled
from Nanchuan, southeastern Sichuan Basin, were measured at 278, 298,
and 318 K by an accurate gravimetric method. The adsorption equilibrium
data of CO2 and CH4 were fitted using both the
virial model and the Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) model,
and the isotherms of CO2/CH4 mixtures were fitted
by an extended BET model. On the basis of adsorption data, the adsorption
selectivity factors for CO2 over CH4 (αCO2/CH4
) and thermodynamic parameters
were estimated. Nanchuan shale was characterized with a high total
organic carbon (TOC), having inorganic minerals and wide pore size
distribution ranges. The adsorption heat, negative Gibbs free energy
change, and negative surface potential of CO2 are larger
than those of CH4, and the entropy loss of CO2 is larger than that of CH4, suggesting that adsorbed
CO2 is in a more highly ordered arrangement than CH4 on shale. αCO2/CH4
values at different temperatures are all larger than 2.5.
Diurnal variations in the formation and development of convective storms over contiguous North China during the warm season were studied using reflectivity from six China Next Generation Weather Radars between 2008 and 2011. Our results, including temporal and spatial analysis of hourly storm frequency through the warm season, and inter‐month comparisons during June, July and August, indicate that most storms initiate over the northwestern mountains in the afternoon as a result of solar heating, with the highest frequency in June, and the lowest in August. Storms propagate from the mountains to the southeastern foothills and plains, with the highest rates occurring in June, and the lowest in August. In the late afternoon, there is a remarkably high storm frequency over the foothills and plains, which indicates a significant topographic control on the southeastward propagation and intensification of storms during the warm season. Storm activity occurs mainly on the plains through the night, with the highest frequency in July and the lowest in June, as a result of a favorable nocturnal convection mechanism. The region‐averaged hourly storm frequencies for the warm season, and also for each month in JJA, are all bimodally distributed, with peak frequencies occurring in late afternoon and during the night, with the highest frequency recorded in the late afternoon during June and July, but at night in August. In general, the mean storm frequency is highest during the day and night in July, and lowest from afternoon to evening in August, but from nighttime to the next morning in June.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.