8,321 research outputs found
Cooling of 2 kW H subscript 2-O subscript 2 fuel cell
An extensive research and development program has been carried out to devise an improved method of removing waste heat of reaction from a developmental 2 kW hydrogen-oxygen fuel cell
Abdominal functional electrical stimulation to assist ventilator weaning in acute tetraplegia: a cohort study
Background
Severe impairment of the major respiratory muscles resulting from tetraplegia reduces respiratory function, causing many people with tetraplegia to require mechanical ventilation during the acute stage of injury. Abdominal Functional Electrical Stimulation (AFES) can improve respiratory function in non-ventilated patients with sub-acute and chronic tetraplegia. The aim of this study was to investigate the clinical feasibility of using an AFES training program to improve respiratory function and assist ventilator weaning in acute tetraplegia.<p></p>
Methods
AFES was applied for between 20 and 40 minutes per day, five times per week on four alternate weeks, with 10 acute ventilator dependent tetraplegic participants. Each participant was matched retrospectively with a ventilator dependent tetraplegic control, based on injury level, age and sex. Tidal Volume (VT) and Vital Capacity (VC) were measured weekly, with weaning progress compared to the controls.<p></p>
Results
Compliance to training sessions was 96.7%. Stimulated VT was significantly greater than unstimulated VT. VT and VC increased throughout the study, with mean VC increasing significantly (VT: 6.2 mL/kg to 7.8 mL/kg VC: 12.6 mL/kg to 18.7 mL/kg). Intervention participants weaned from mechanical ventilation on average 11 (sd: ± 23) days faster than their matched controls.<p></p>
Conclusion
The results of this study indicate that AFES is a clinically feasible technique for acute ventilator dependent tetraplegic patients and that this intervention may improve respiratory function and enable faster weaning from mechanical ventilation.<p></p>
Bulk and surface energetics of lithium hydride crystal: benchmarks from quantum Monte Carlo and quantum chemistry
We show how accurate benchmark values of the surface formation energy of
crystalline lithium hydride can be computed by the complementary techniques of
quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) and wavefunction-based molecular quantum chemistry.
To demonstrate the high accuracy of the QMC techniques, we present a detailed
study of the energetics of the bulk LiH crystal, using both pseudopotential and
all-electron approaches. We show that the equilibrium lattice parameter agrees
with experiment to within 0.03 %, which is around the experimental uncertainty,
and the cohesive energy agrees to within around 10 meV per formula unit. QMC in
periodic slab geometry is used to compute the formation energy of the LiH (001)
surface, and we show that the value can be accurately converged with respect to
slab thickness and other technical parameters. The quantum chemistry
calculations build on the recently developed hierarchical scheme for computing
the correlation energy of a crystal to high precision. We show that the
hierarchical scheme allows the accurate calculation of the surface formation
energy, and we present results that are well converged with respect to basis
set and with respect to the level of correlation treatment. The QMC and
hierarchical results for the surface formation energy agree to within about 1
%.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
The Influence of Fatty Acid Ester Alcohol Moiety Molecular Structure on Diesel Combustion and Emissions
At present, biodiesel is primarily comprised of fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) obtained by the transesterification of a variety of vegetable oils with methanol. However, transesterification can be carried out with a wide variety of alcohols other than methanol. This paper presents experimental studies carried out on a diesel engine supplied with a range of single-molecule fuels to investigate the effect of fuel molecular structure on combustion and emissions. Eight fatty acid esters that can be produced by transesterification of vegetable oils and animal fats using methanol, ethanol, n-propanol, n-butanol, iso-propanol, iso-butanol, and tert-butanol were investigated. The aim was to ascertain the way in which the structure of the alcohol reactant and the corresponding moiety in the ester molecule affects combustion and emissions. Previously obtained experimental results from a second set of 18 nonoxygenated acyclic hydrocarbons were used to assist the interpretation of the test results from the eight fatty acid esters. The engine tests were carried out at constant injection timing, and they were repeated at constant ignition timing and at constant ignition delay, the latter being achieved through the addition to the various fuels of small quantities of ignition improver (2-ethyl hexyl nitrate). Only small differences in ignition quality of the fatty acid esters were found with variation of the molecular structure of the alcohol moiety. Where present, differences in ignition delay were found to be the main driver of both combustion phasing and emissions production. With the effect of ignition delay isolated, physical properties of the esters, such as thermal degradation prior to vaporization and boiling point, were found to exert an influence on levels of particulate and NOx emissions
The evolution of inverted magnetic fields through the inner heliosphere
Local inversions are often observed in the heliospheric magnetic field (HMF), but their origins and evolution are not yet fully understood.Parker Solar Probe has recently observed rapid, Alfvénic, HMF inversions in the inner heliosphere, known as ‘switchbacks’, which have been interpreted as the possible remnants of coronal jets. It has also been suggested that inverted HMF may be produced by near-Sun interchange reconnection; a key process in mechanisms proposed for slow solar wind release. These cases suggest that the source of inverted HMF is near the Sun, and it follows that these inversions would gradually decay and straighten as they propagate out through the heliosphere. Alternatively, HMF inversions could form during solar wind transit, through phenomena such velocity shears, draping over ejecta, or waves and turbulence. Such processes are expected to lead to a qualitatively radial evolution of inverted HMF structures. Using Helios measurements spanning 0.3–1 AU, we examine the occurrence rate of inverted HMF, as well as other magnetic field morphologies, as a function of radial distance r, and find that it continually increases. This trend may be explained by inverted HMF observed between 0.3–1 AU being primarily driven by one or more of the above in-transit processes, rather than created at the Sun. We make suggestions as to the relative importance of these different processes based on the evolution of the magnetic field properties associated with inverted HMF. We also explore alternative explanations outside of our suggested driving processes which may lead to the observed trend
Combustion and emissions characteristics of toluene/n-heptane and 1-octene/n-octane binary mixtures in a direct injection compression ignition engine
Successfully designing and making effective of use of the next generation of liquid fuels, which will be
derived from a range of biomass and fossil sources, requires an understanding of the interactions
between structurally similar and dissimilar fuel components when utilised in current engine technology.
Interactions between fuel components can influence the release of energy and production of harmful
emissions in compression ignition combustion through determination of the autoignition behavior of
the fuel. This paper presents experimental studies carried out in a single-cylinder engine supplied with
a range of binary mixture fuels to investigate the effect of fuel component interactions on autoignition
in direct injection compression ignition. A range of binary mixtures consisting of toluene and n-heptane
and also 1-octene and n-octane were tested so as to observe respectively the effect of an aromatic compound
and an alkene on n-alkane combustion and emissions. The engine tests were carried out at constant
injection timing and they were repeated at constant ignition timing and at constant ignition
delay, the latter being achieved through the addition to the various fuels of small quantities of ignition
improver (2-ethylhexyl nitrate). Increasing the presence of toluene in the toluene/n-heptane binary mixtures
resulted in an increased ignition delay time and generated a distinct two stage ignition process. An
increased level of 1-octene in the binary mixtures of 1-octene/n-octane was also found to increase ignition
delay, though to a much lesser extent than toluene in the case of the toluene/n-heptane mixtures.
Interactions between the fuel components during the ignition delay period appear important in the case
of the toluene/n-heptane mixtures but not those of 1-octene/n-octane. At constant injection and constant
ignition timings, the combustion phasing and the level of emissions produced by each binary mixture
were primarily driven by the ignition delay time. With ignition delay equalised, an effect of adiabatic
flame temperature on NOx production was visible
Ray helicity: a geometric invariant for multi-dimensional resonant wave conversion
For a multicomponent wave field propagating into a multidimensional
conversion region, the rays are shown to be helical, in general. For a
ray-based quantity to have a fundamental physical meaning it must be invariant
under two groups of transformations: congruence transformations (which shuffle
components of the multi-component wave field) and canonical transformations
(which act on the ray phase space). It is shown that for conversion between two
waves there is a new invariant not previously discussed: the intrinsic helicity
of the ray
Concurrent Segmentation and Localization for Tracking of Surgical Instruments
Real-time instrument tracking is a crucial requirement for various
computer-assisted interventions. In order to overcome problems such as specular
reflections and motion blur, we propose a novel method that takes advantage of
the interdependency between localization and segmentation of the surgical tool.
In particular, we reformulate the 2D instrument pose estimation as heatmap
regression and thereby enable a concurrent, robust and near real-time
regression of both tasks via deep learning. As demonstrated by our experimental
results, this modeling leads to a significantly improved performance than
directly regressing the tool position and allows our method to outperform the
state of the art on a Retinal Microsurgery benchmark and the MICCAI EndoVis
Challenge 2015.Comment: I. Laina and N. Rieke contributed equally to this work. Accepted to
MICCAI 201
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