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Seyed Ali Nabavi

Researcher at Cranfield University

Publications -  44
Citations -  1370

Seyed Ali Nabavi is an academic researcher from Cranfield University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Adsorption & Polymer. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 33 publications receiving 825 citations. Previous affiliations of Seyed Ali Nabavi include Loughborough University.

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A review of developments in carbon dioxide storage

TL;DR: A review of the state-of-the-art developments in CO2 storage can be found in this paper, where the authors highlight the current status, current challenges and uncertainties associated with further deployment of established approaches and feasibility demonstration of relatively newer storage concepts.
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Double emulsion production in glass capillary microfluidic device: Parametric investigation of droplet generation behaviour

TL;DR: In this article, a three-phase axisymmetric numerical model based on Volume of Fluid-Continuum Surface Force (VOF-CSF) model was developed to perform parametric analysis of compound droplet production in three phase glass capillary devices that combine co-flow and countercurrent flow focusing.
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Microfluidic Production of Multiple Emulsions

TL;DR: A review of microfluidic drop makers is presented in this article, where the productivity of a single drop maker is typically 1 L/h, which requires combining drop makers into 2D and 3D assemblies fed from a single set of inlet ports through a network of distribution and collection channels.
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Mechanisms and control of single-step microfluidic generation of multi-core double emulsion droplets

TL;DR: In this paper, a single-step generation of monodisperse multi-core double emulsion drops in three-phase glass capillary microfluidic device was investigated using a micro-particle image velocimetry (micro-PIV) system.
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Structured Biodegradable Polymeric Microparticles for Drug Delivery Produced Using Flow Focusing Glass Microfluidic Devices

TL;DR: Numerical modeling results using the volume of fluid-continuum surface force model agreed well with experimental behavior and revealed trapping of nanoclay particles in the dispersed phase upstream of the orifice at low dispersed phase flow rates and for 4 wt % nanocLay content, due to vortex formation.