4,167 research outputs found

    Non-noble catalysts and catalyst supports for phosphoric acid fuel cells

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    Tungsten carbide, which is known to be active for hydrogen oxidation and CO tolerant has a hexagonal structure. Titanium carbide is inactive and has a cubic structure. Four different samples of the cubic alloys Wx-1TixC were prepared and found to be active and CO tolerant. These alloys are of interest as possible phosphoric acid fuel cell catalysts. They also are of interest as opportunities to study the activity of W in a different crystalline environment and to correlate the activities of the surface sites with surface composition

    In vitro propagation of some Cyrtanthus species

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    Shoots and roots were initiated on bulb explants of Cyrtanthus brachyscyphus, C. elatus, C. falcatus, C. guthrieae, and C. mackenii var. mackenii. C. breviflorus produced small amounts of wound callus only. The species differed in their response to the different levels of plant growth regulators used. In general shoot formation was most favourable with high concentrations BA (2 mgl−1) and lower concentrations NAA (1 mgl−1). Best root formation was obtained with low BA and NAA (0–0.5 mgl−1) concentrations. Cyrtanthus brachyscyphus was the most prolific shoot producer, with a 3-fold increase at every sub-culture. C. elatus, C. guthrieae, and C. mackenii var. mackenïi were less vigorous and on average showed a 1.5-fold increase at every sub-culture. C. falcatus produced a low number of shoots from the explants and this did not increase with subsequent sub-cultures. Rooted plantlets were successfully acclimatized in vermiculite in a mist house (100% survival)

    National survey of the prevalence, incidence, primary care burden, and treatment of heart failure in Scotland

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    Objective: To examine the epidemiology, primary care burden, and treatment of heart failure in Scotland, UK. Design: Cross sectional data from primary care practices participating in the Scottish continuous morbidity recording scheme between 1 April 1999 and 31 March 2000. Setting: 53 primary care practices (307 741 patients). Subjects: 2186 adult patients with heart failure. Results: The prevalence of heart failure in Scotland was 7.1 in 1000, increasing with age to 90.1 in 1000 among patients 85 years. The incidence of heart failure was 2.0 in 1000, increasing with age to 22.4 in 1000 among patients 85 years. For older patients, consultation rates for heart failure equalled or exceeded those for angina and hypertension. Respiratory tract infection was the most common co-morbidity leading to consultation. Among men, 23% were prescribed a ß blocker, 11% spironolactone, and 46% an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor. The corresponding figures for women were 20% (p = 0.29 versus men), 7% (p = 0.02), and 34% (p < 0.001). Among patients < 75 years 26% were prescribed a β blocker, 11% spironolactone, and 50% an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor. The corresponding figures for patients 75 years were 19% (p = 0.04 versus patients < 75), 7% (p = 0.04), and 33% (p < 0.001). Conclusions: Heart failure is a common condition, especially with advancing age. In the elderly, the community burden of heart failure is at least as great as that of angina or hypertension. The high rate of concomitant respiratory tract infection emphasises the need for strategies to immunise patients with heart failure against influenza and pneumococcal infection. Drugs proven to improve survival in heart failure are used less frequently for elderly patients and women

    Ordered groupoids and the holomorph of an inverse semigroup

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    We present a construction for the holomorph of an inverse semigroup, derived from the cartesian closed structure of the category of ordered groupoids. We compare the holomorph with the monoid of mappings that preserve the ternary heap operation on an inverse semigroup: for groups these two constructions coincide. We present detailed calculations for semilattices of groups and for the polycyclic monoids.Comment: 16 page

    Structural Properties and Relative Stability of (Meta)Stable Ordered, Partially-ordered and Disordered Al-Li Alloy Phases

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    We resolve issues that have plagued reliable prediction of relative phase stability for solid-solutions and compounds. Due to its commercially important phase diagram, we showcase Al-Li system because historically density-functional theory (DFT) results show large scatter and limited success in predicting the structural properties and stability of solid-solutions relative to ordered compounds. Using recent advances in an optimal basis-set representation of the topology of electronic charge density (and, hence, atomic size), we present DFT results that agree reasonably well with all known experimental data for the structural properties and formation energies of ordered, off-stoichiometric partially-ordered and disordered alloys, opening the way for reliable study in complex alloys.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 2 Table

    The R Aquarii System at Optical and Radio Wavelengths

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    Observations of the symbiotic binary R Aquarii environment were obtained with the Very Large Array (VLA) at 2, 6, and 20 em at the same epoch. The observed spectral index and strong linear polarization reveal that emission from the compact double radio source discovered in previous observations is nonthermal; thus, this source is not associated with R Aquarii but is an extragalactic background object. The spectral index of the compact nebula surrounding R Aquarii indicates that the emission is thermal and the nebula is ionized by an unseen, hot companion to the Mira-like variable R Aquarii. As expected, this region shows no indication of linear polarization, and we have determined a steady state mass loss of ~ 2. 7 x 10- 7 M 0 yr- 1 from the system. However, the spectral index and polarization observations of the extended jet ~6 away from R Aquarii indicate that this amorphous source is definitely thermal and optically thin in nature. These new observations place severe constraints on possible models which have been proposed from previous investigations. We suggest that our new observations of the jet can be best explained by enhanced mass exchange occurring periodically in the symbiotic system. Comparison of 6 em data taken with the same VLA configuration but separated by 495 days does not indicate any appreciable morphological change or statistically significant integrated flux difference and thus suggests that on these time scales the jet is now quite stable. High-resolution white light images of R Aquarii and environs obtained with the 4 m telescope at Kitt Peak just prior to the VLA observations show a high degree of correlation with the 6 em radio data and place a limit on the apparent visual magnitude of the compact double radio source; optical speckle interferometry failed to resolve any components in the R Aquarii system

    Radial Structure in the TW Hya Circumstellar Disk

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    We present new near-infrared interferometric data from the CHARA array and the Keck Interferometer on the circumstellar disk of the young star, TW Hya, a proposed "transition disk." We use these data, as well as previously published, spatially resolved data at 10 μm and 7 mm, to constrain disk models based on a standard flared disk structure. We find that we can match the interferometry data sets and the overall spectral energy distribution with a three-component model, which combines elements at spatial scales proposed by previous studies: optically thin, emission nearest the star, an inner optically thick ring of emission at roughly 0.5 AU followed by an opacity gap and, finally, an outer optically thick disk starting at ~4 AU. The model demonstrates that the constraints imposed by the spatially resolved data can be met with a physically plausible disk but this requires a disk containing not only an inner gap in the optically thick disk as previously suggested, but also a gap between the inner and outer optically thick disks. Our model is consistent with the suggestion by Calvet et al. of a planet with an orbital radius of a few AU. We discuss the implications of an opacity gap within the optically thick disk

    Multiplicity of Galactic Cepheids from long-baseline interferometry~III. Sub-percent limits on the relative brightness of a close companion of δ\delta~Cephei

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    We report new CHARA/MIRC interferometric observations of the Cepheid archetype δ\delta Cep, which aimed at detecting the newly discovered spectroscopic companion. We reached a maximum dynamic range ΔH\Delta H = 6.4, 5.8, and 5.2 mag, respectively within the relative distance to the Cepheid r<25r < 25 mas, 25<r<5025 < r < 50 mas and 50<r<10050 < r < 100 mas. Our observations did not show strong evidence of a companion. We have a marginal detection at 3σ3\sigma with a flux ratio of 0.21\%, but nothing convincing as we found other possible probable locations. We ruled out the presence of companion with a spectral type earlier than F0V, A1V and B9V, respectively for the previously cited ranges rr. From our estimated sensitivity limits and the Cepheid light curve, we derived lower-limit magnitudes in the HH band for this possible companion to be Hcomp>9.15,8.31H_\mathrm{comp} > 9.15, 8.31 and 7.77 mag, respectively for r<25r < 25 mas, 25<r<5025 < r < 50 mas and 50<r<10050 < r < 100 mas. We also found that to be consistent with the predicted orbital period, the companion has to be located at a projected separation <24< 24 mas with a spectral type later than a F0V star.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA

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