Technicolor continued to offer its proprietary imbibition dye-transfer printing process for projection prints until 1975, and even briefly revived it in 1998.
22.
This means that the capillary pressure for a drainage process is different from the capillary pressure of an imbibition process with the same fluid phases.
23.
Imbibition occurs when a wetting fluid displaces a non-wetting fluid, contrary to drainage where a non-wetting phase displaces the wetting fluid.
24.
Imbibition is also diffusion since water movement is along a concentration gradient; the seeds and other such materials have almost no water hence they absorb water easily.
25.
:: : If one were able to maintain tonicity through constant imbibition, there's be no need for IV's and saline with glucose.
26.
Technicolor's dyes ), and is sometimes referred to by such generic names as " wash-off relief printing " and " dye imbibition " printing.
27.
In applications, relative permeability is often represented as a function of capillary hysteresis one often resorts to a function or curve measured under drainage and another measured under imbibition.
28.
Each dye was absorbed, or imbibed, by the gelatin coating on the receiving strip rather than simply deposited onto its surface, hence the term " dye imbibition ".
29.
The rate of imbibition is dependent on the permeability of the seed coat, amount of water in the environment and the area of contact the seed has to the source of water.
30.
In 1928, Technicolor started making their prints by the imbibition process, which was mechanical rather than photographic and allowed the color components to be combined on the same side of the film.