2,669 research outputs found
Solar photochemical process engineering for production of fuels and chemicals
The engineering costs and performance of a nominal 25,000 scmd (883,000 scfd) photochemical plant to produce dihydrogen from water were studied. Two systems were considered, one based on flat-plate collector/reactors and the other on linear parabolic troughs. Engineering subsystems were specified including the collector/reactor, support hardware, field transport piping, gas compression equipment, and balance-of-plant (BOP) items. Overall plant efficiencies of 10.3 and 11.6% are estimated for the flat-plate and trough systems, respectively, based on assumed solar photochemical efficiencies of 12.9 and 14.6%. Because of the opposing effects of concentration ratio and operating temperature on efficiency, it was concluded that reactor cooling would be necessary with the trough system. Both active and passive cooling methods were considered. Capital costs and energy costs, for both concentrating and non-concentrating systems, were determined and their sensitivity to efficiency and economic parameters were analyzed. The overall plant efficiency is the single most important factor in determining the cost of the fuel
Localization in one-dimensional incommensurate lattices beyond the Aubry-Andr\'e model
Localization properties of particles in one-dimensional incommensurate
lattices without interaction are investigated with models beyond the
tight-binding Aubry-Andr\'e (AA) model. Based on a tight-binding t_1 - t_2
model with finite next-nearest-neighbor hopping t_2, we find the localization
properties qualitatively different from those of the AA model, signaled by the
appearance of mobility edges. We then further go beyond the tight-binding
assumption and directly study the system based on the more fundamental
single-particle Schr\"odinger equation. With this approach, we also observe the
presence of mobility edges and localization properties dependent on
incommensuration.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Review of solar fuel-producing quantum conversion processes
The status and potential of fuel-producing solar photochemical processes are discussed. Research focused on splitting water to produce dihydrogen and is at a relatively early stage of development. Current emphasis is primarily directed toward understanding the basic chemistry underlying such quantum conversion processes. Theoretical analyses by various investigators predict a limiting thermodynamic efficiency of 31% for devices with a single photosystem operating with unfocused sunlight at 300 K. When non-idealities are included, it appears unlikely that actual devices will have efficiencies greater than 12 to 15%. Observed efficiencies are well below theoretical limits. Cyclic homogeneous photochemical processes for splitting water have efficiencies considerably less than 1%. Efficiency can be significantly increased by addition of a sacrificial reagent; however, such systems are no longer cyclic and it is doubtful that they would be economical on a commercial scale. The observed efficiencies for photoelectrochemical processes are also low but such systems appear more promising than homogeneous photochemical systems. Operating and systems options, including operation at elevated temperature and hybrid and coupled quantum-thermal conversion processes, are also considered
CD44 Staining of Cancer Stem-Like Cells Is Influenced by Down-Regulation of CD44 Variant Isoforms and Up-Regulation of the Standard CD44 Isoform in the Population of Cells That Have Undergone Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition
PMCID: PMC3577706This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
Localization in one dimensional lattices with non-nearest-neighbor hopping: Generalized Anderson and Aubry-Andr\'e models
We study the quantum localization phenomena of noninteracting particles in
one-dimensional lattices based on tight-binding models with various forms of
hopping terms beyond the nearest neighbor, which are generalizations of the
famous Aubry-Andr\'e and noninteracting Anderson model. For the case with
deterministic disordered potential induced by a secondary incommensurate
lattice (i.e. the Aubry-Andr\'e model), we identify a class of self dual
models, for which the boundary between localized and extended eigenstates are
determined analytically by employing a generalized Aubry-Andr\'e
transformation. We also numerically investigate the localization properties of
non-dual models with next-nearest-neighbor hopping, Gaussian, and power-law
decay hopping terms. We find that even for these non-dual models, the
numerically obtained mobility edges can be well approximated by the
analytically obtained condition for localization transition in the self dual
models, as long as the decay of the hopping rate with respect to distance is
sufficiently fast. For the disordered potential with genuinely random
character, we examine scenarios with next-nearest-neighbor hopping,
exponential, Gaussian, and power-law decay hopping terms numerically. We find
that the higher order hopping terms can remove the symmetry in the localization
length about the energy band center compared to the Anderson model.
Furthermore, our results demonstrate that for the power-law decay case, there
exists a critical exponent below which mobility edges can be found. Our
theoretical results could, in principle, be directly tested in shallow atomic
optical lattice systems enabling non-nearest-neighbor hopping.Comment: 18 pages, 24 figures updated with additional reference
Morphology and biomechanics of the nests of the Common Blackbird Turdus merula
Capsule Common blackbirds select different materials, with varying biomechanical properties, to construct different parts of their nest.
Aims This study tested the hypothesis that outer components of a nest have a more structural role and so are stronger than materials used to line the cup.
Methods Blackbird nests were measured prior to being dismantled to isolate structural components which were tested for mechanical strength and rigidity.
Results Outer nest wall materials were significantly thicker, stronger and more rigid than materials in the inner structural wall or the cup lining. In the vertical plane materials used in the structural wall did not differ. By contrast, lining materials from the bottom of the nest cup were significantly thicker, stronger and more rigid than materials from the top of the cup.
Conclusion Blackbirds use different materials in nest construction roles suited to their properties and so may be able to recognise the structural properties of these materials. Materials on the outside of the nest may have a key structural role during construction
- …
