Paola Fantazzini
University of Bologna
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Featured researches published by Paola Fantazzini.
Journal of Applied Physics | 1996
G.C. Borgia; R.J.S. Brown; Paola Fantazzini
The simplest model for the contribution of pore surfaces to nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation of a pore fluid gives R, the average relaxation rate minus the bulk rate, equal to a constant ρ, the velocity at which nuclear magnetization flows out of the pore fluid at the surfaces, times the pore‐space surface‐to‐volume ratio S/V. Although ρ can vary widely, a great variety of porous media exhibit ρ values of the order of a few μm/s for longitudinal relaxation when S/V is measured by gas adsorption by the Brunauer, Emmett, and Teller (BET) method or high pressure mercury injection. For samples with wide distributions of relaxation rates it is of interest to find what functions of the relaxation data correlate best with S/V measurements and how different relaxation parameters relate to each other. Longitudinal relaxation data were taken for 77 sandstone samples of different origin, which had been cleaned and saturated with brine. After the NMR measurements the samples were dried and surface areas measured by BET. The samples have S/V from 1.5 to 150 (μm)−1, porosity from 3% to 28%, and permeability from less than 0.1 mD to more than 1 D. Longitudinal relaxation data were taken from 400 μs to 6 s and analyzed in many different ways, including stretched‐exponential fits and multiexponential fits up to five components. S/V and ln(S/V) were correlated with various relaxation rates derived from these computed parameters.In principle, the relaxation parameter to use with a ρ value is the average rate, which is initial slope divided by initial amplitude, namely, R(0), where R(t)=(d/dt)ln S(t) at t=0 and S(t) is the relaxing signal. One can extrapolate an n component fit to t=0 to get Rn(0), but very good signal quality is required even to get small short components reliably for t well within the times covered by the data. Over half of the points have ρ’s within a factor of 2 of the minimum value 0.9 μm/s when the average rate of a five‐component fit to the data is used. There are numerous points with ρ up to 7 μm/s, but none of the high‐ρ points are for samples with high S/V. All samples with high S/V have wide distributions of relaxation rates, but not vice versa. The best simple correlation with ln(S/V) was ln(S/V)≊1.81 ln(R33)−5.73, where R33 is the highest rate of a three‐component fit without regard to the corresponding amplitude, and where S/V is in (μm)−1 and rate in s−1. This result was unexpected. This fit does not represent proportionality to a velocity ρ and does not correspond to any obvious physical model, but it can be of practical interest to estimate in a very simple and noninvasive manner S/V at the BET scale in sandstones.The simplest model for the contribution of pore surfaces to nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation of a pore fluid gives R, the average relaxation rate minus the bulk rate, equal to a constant ρ, the velocity at which nuclear magnetization flows out of the pore fluid at the surfaces, times the pore‐space surface‐to‐volume ratio S/V. Although ρ can vary widely, a great variety of porous media exhibit ρ values of the order of a few μm/s for longitudinal relaxation when S/V is measured by gas adsorption by the Brunauer, Emmett, and Teller (BET) method or high pressure mercury injection. For samples with wide distributions of relaxation rates it is of interest to find what functions of the relaxation data correlate best with S/V measurements and how different relaxation parameters relate to each other. Longitudinal relaxation data were taken for 77 sandstone samples of different origin, which had been cleaned and saturated with brine. After the NMR measurements the samples were dried and surface areas me...
Meat Science | 2009
Paola Fantazzini; Mirko Gombia; P. Schembri; N. Simoncini
Protocols were developed to apply Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) to the dry-curing of Italian Parma ham. NMR relaxation analyses were performed on dry-cured hams at different processing stages to evaluate the ranges of variation of (1)H relaxation times T(1) and T(2) in representative ham muscle tissues, due to dehydration and salt uptake. MRI maps of the same ham sections were acquired, allowing T(1) and T(2) average values to be computed in selected Regions of Interest (ROI) inside muscle Semimembranosus, Semitendinosus and Biceps femoris. Chloride and moisture were determined by conventional chemical methods on the same ROIs, and MRI T(1) and T(1)/T(2) ratio were selected in a model (R(2)=0.90, P<0.05) fitting the salt content of the analysed muscle cores. Short Time Inversion Recovery (STIR) sequences were also applied to green and cured hams, but on fresh samples only, a bright image, displaying a clear separation between lean and fat tissue, was obtained.
Journal of Cultural Heritage | 2000
G.C. Borgia; Mara Camaiti; Fanny Cerri; Paola Fantazzini; Franco Piacenti
Abstract The penetration of water in rock materials is the main cause of deterioration of stone surfaces exposed to rainfall. Their protection is generally achieved using water-repellents, in order to reduce the absorption of water. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) provides a new tool to visualize the presence of water inside the stone and, hence, the performance of hydrophobic treatments. This technique can also give indirect information on the distribution of the hydrophobic product inside the rock.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2001
G.C. Borgia; Villiam Bortolotti; Mara Camaiti; Fanny Cerri; Paola Fantazzini; Franco Piacenti
1H-MRI has been applied to the evaluation of the performances of a hydrophobic polymer (Paraloid B72), widely used for the conservation of monumental buildings and other stone artifacts. By this technique it has been possible to visualize the water diffusion in a treated rock material (Pietra di Lecce, a highly porous Italian biocalcarenite) and then indirectly the spatial distribution of the polymer in the rock. The effects of wetting-drying cycles on the hydrophobic efficacy of the acrylic polymer in the inner layers of the rock were also studied. A notable decrease in the water-repellence inside the stone was detected and attributed to a loss of adhesion of the polymer to the substrate, promoted by the action of water.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2001
Paola Fantazzini; Rossella Viola; Sabah M Alnaimi; John H. Strange
MR-Relaxation (MRR) of 1H nuclei and MR-Cryoporometry (MRC) are combined to assess their feasibility and their potential in the study of bone microstructure. In principle, both techniques are able to give information on the structure of the pore space confining the fluids. Cow femur samples were carefully cored and cleaned in order to remove the natural fluids inside. For MRR analysis quasi-continuous distributions of T(1) and T(2) were obtained on samples fully saturated with water. Cyclohexane was used as a saturating fluid for MRC analysis. All T(1) and T(2) quasi-continuous distributions of water confined in bone samples are more than three decades wide, showing sufficient details to differentiate the samples. Pore size distributions obtained by MRC also differentiate the samples showing different characteristics of the pore space structure in the range of the highest sensitivity of the method (typically 3 to 100 nm, mesopore range). In particular, in samples where MRR shows a large fraction of signal with relaxation times below 10(2) ms, MRC indicates a large fraction of pore volume with pore sizes in the mesopore range.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2008
Mirko Gombia; Villiam Bortolotti; R.J.S. Brown; Mara Camaiti; Paola Fantazzini
Fluid imbibition affects almost every activity that directly or indirectly involves porous media, including oil reservoir rocks, soils, building materials, and countless others, including biological materials. In this paper, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been applied to study water imbibition in a porous medium, in which capillary properties are artificially changed. As a model system, samples of Lecce stone, a material of cultural heritage interest, were analyzed before and after treatment with a protective polymer (Silirain-50 or Paraloid PB72). By using MRI, we can visualize the presence of water inside each sample and measure the height z(t) reached by the wetting front as a function of time during experiments of capillary absorption before and after treatment. The sorptivity S, defined as the initial slope of z versus t1/2, has been determined before treatment and through both treated and untreated faces after treatment. Very good fits to the data were obtained with theoretical and empirical m...
Journal of Applied Physics | 1997
G.C. Borgia; R.J.S. Brown; Paola Fantazzini
Fluid-flow properties of porous media, such as permeability k and irreducible water saturation Swi, can be estimated from water 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation data, but there are basic questions regarding data processing and interpretation. We found that Swi and k are better estimated if different forms of “average” relaxation time are used. NMR longitudinal relaxation data for a suite of 106 water-saturated clean sandstones were used. Sandstones represent a specialized class of porous media, where even for small porosity, substantially all pore space is connected. The sandstones exhibit distributions of relaxation times ranging over factors from at least 10 to more than 103. We tried several forms of “average” relaxation time T. One family of Ts is 〈Tp〉1/p, where lim p→0 gives the geometric mean. The best estimator we found for Swi uses a form of average relaxation time only, rather than relaxation time cutoff. The time used can be any of several forms of T, giving more emphasis to short ...
Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2001
L. Appolonia; G.C. Borgia; Villiam Bortolotti; R.J.S. Brown; Paola Fantazzini; G. Rezzaro
The effects of protective hydrophobic products applied to porous media such as stone or mortar vary greatly with the product, the porous medium, and the mode of application. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) measurements on fluids in the pore spaces of both treated and untreated samples can give information on the contact of the fluid with the internal surfaces, which is affected by all the above factors. Continuous distributions of relaxation times T(1) and T(2) of water in the pores of both synthetic and natural porous media were obtained before and after hydrophobic treatment. The synthetic porous media are ceramic filter materials characterized by narrow distributions of pore dimensions and show that the treatment does not produce large changes in the relaxation times of the water. For three travertine samples most of a long relaxation time component, presumably from the largest pores, remains after treatment, while the amplitude of an intermediate component is greatly reduced. For three pudding-stone samples, treatment leads to a substantial loss from the long component and an even greater loss from the intermediate component.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 1996
G.C. Borgia; Villiam Bortolotti; A. Brancolini; R.J.S. Brown; Paola Fantazzini
For a large suite of consolidated sandstone samples low in shale content we have measured the permeability k, irreducible water saturation Swi, porosity phi, electrical-resistivity formation factor F, porosity by NMR, geometric-mean relaxation times T1g, and stretched-exponential relaxation times T1s. We find that T1g (or T1s) is the decisive parameter for the estimation of k or Swi of porous sandstones by other than direct measurements of these quantities. The additional use of phi or F brings appreciable, but not decisive, improvement. We show isovalue maps of the error factor delta, which show substantial regions of near-minimum values of delta and show basic compatibility of our estimators for permeability with different published estimators. The exponents of T1g (or T1s) in our power-law estimators and those of various published estimators for k are not very far from 2.0 if either or both of phi and F are also used in the estimators.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 1994
G.C. Borgia; A. Brancolini; R.J.S. Brown; Paola Fantazzini; G Ragazzini
The results are reported of a systemic T1 and T2 investigation of natural (sandstones) and artificial (microporous porcelain) porous media, after each step of a water desaturation process by centrifugation in air. The analysis of the relaxation curves permitted distinguishing well the different behaviour of the natural samples as compared to the artificial ones, which can be explained by the different pore structures. In both kinds of samples the evolution of the relaxation time distributions yielded a clear picture of the changes of the water distribution in the pore framework following the displacement process, until irreducible water saturation was attained. The results are compatible with the assumption of a fixed amount of surface area contributing to the relaxation of decreasing amounts of fluid as SW is reduced.