171 research outputs found

    Can Polarity-Inverted Surfactants Self-Assemble in Nonpolar Solvents

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    We investigate the self-assembly process of a surfactant with inverted polarity in water and cyclohexane using both all-atom and coarse grained hybrid particle-field molecular dynamics simulations. Unlike conventional surfactants, the molecule under study, proposed in a recent experiment, is formed by a rigid and compact hydrophobic adamantane moiety, and a long and floppy triethylene glycol tail. In water, we report the formation of stable inverted micelles with the adamantane heads grouping together into a hydrophobic core, and the tails forming hydrogen bonds with water. By contrast, microsecond simulations do not provide evidence of stable micelle formation in cyclohexane. Validating the computational results by comparison with experimental diffusion constant and small-angle X-ray scattering intensity, we show that at laboratory thermodynamic conditions the mixture resides in the supercritical region of the phase diagram, where aggregated and free surfactant states co-exist in solution. Our simulations also provide indications about how to escape this region, to produce thermodynamically stable micellar aggregates.Comment: 14 pages, 10 Figures, accepted for publication (2020

    Investigation of intergranular corrosion welded joint of austenitic stainless steel by electrochemical methods

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    Sensitization degree of the austenitic stainless steel welded joints was investigated by electrochemical methods: the double loop electrochemical potentiokinetic reactivation (DL EPR) in H2SO4 + KSCN solution and by of the corrosion potentials measurement of the steel in the solution drop of HNO3 + FeCl3 6H2O + HCl. The welded joints, by an X-ray radiographic method on possible presence of the weld defects, were tested. Grain size of the base metal and the welded joints, by applying an optical microscopy were determined. The existence of compatibility between the results for different electrochemical methods is shown. Heat affected zone (HAZ) of the austenitic stainless steel welded joints has shown significant degree of sensitization. The corrosion potentials measurement method is simple, nondestructive method, that gives qualitative informations about degree of the sensitizations of the stainless steel. The double loop electrochemical potentiokinetic method gives quantitative evidence about susceptibility of the stainless steel to intergranular corrosion. This method can be applied with some adaptation in field environments

    Analysis of floating-head heat exchanger bolts failure

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    As-received floating-head heat exchanger bolts were broken (BB) and deposite-coated. The aim was to estimate a cause of their failure. The new bolts of the same material were used as a reference material (reference bolt – RB). After visual and radiographic examination, their chemical composition, structure and room-temperature mechanical properties were determined and compared. Comparison was made with the values set by standard, as well. Afterwards, fractography was performed on fractured surfaces of tensile specimens and originally (during exploitation) BBs to try to get an impression about bolts failure mechanism. Qualitative analysis of deposite was employed in order to confirm was there any possible influence of surroundings during their failure in terms of corrosion-assisted cracking. Chemical composition of RB and BB materials was analyzed by use of spectrophotometry and structure properties with light optical microscope (LOM). Fractured surfaces of tensile specimens and of BBs, as well as deposite chemistry, were analyzed by use of Scanning Electron Microscopy with Energy Dispersive System (SEM-EDS). BBs had an approximately three times higher sulphur content and lesser manganese content, lower ductility and higher strength values comparing to those of the RBs. Generally, fracture surfaces of both, RB and BB tensile specimens have a similar rosette-like macro-appearance. The only difference is that the radial marks in the case of the RBs are rougher. The surface has a more fibrous area and shear lip presence. Fracture mode can be characterized as dimple rupture and micromechanism as microvoid coalescence. In the case of BB tensile specimens, the mixed presence of dimples and cleavage facets was noticed. The macrofractography of originally broken surfaces shows a rough and complex topography of fracture surfaces indicating on a possibility that bolts failure has been a result of complex loading conditions. Presence of sulphur- and chlorine-containing particles on the fracture surfaces of BBs and in deposite reveals a possibility that failure was environmentally-assisted

    Semiconductor-cavity QED in high-Q regimes: Detuning effect

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    The non-resonant interaction between the high-density excitons in a quantum well and a single mode cavity field is investigated. An analytical expression for the physical spectrum of the excitons is obtained. The spectral properties of the excitons, which are initially prepared in the number states or the superposed states of the two different number states by the resonant femtosecond pulse pumping experiment, are studied. Numerical study of the physical spectrum is carried out and a discussion of the detuning effect is presented.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure

    Tradeoffs in jet inlet design: a historical perspective

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    The design of the inlet(s) is one of the most demanding tasks of the development process of any gas turbine-powered aircraft. This is mainly due to the multi-objective and multidisciplinary nature of the exercise. The solution is generally a compromise between a number of conflicting goals and these conflicts are the subject of the present paper. We look into how these design tradeoffs have been reflected in the actual inlet designs over the years and how the emphasis has shifted from one driver to another. We also review some of the relevant developments of the jet age in aerodynamics and design and manufacturing technology and we examine how they have influenced and informed inlet design decision

    The STRANDS project: long-term autonomy in everyday environments

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    Thanks to the efforts of the robotics and autonomous systems community, the myriad applications and capacities of robots are ever increasing. There is increasing demand from end users for autonomous service robots that can operate in real environments for extended periods. In the Spatiotemporal Representations and Activities for Cognitive Control in Long-Term Scenarios (STRANDS) project (http://strandsproject.eu), we are tackling this demand head-on by integrating state-of-the-art artificial intelligence and robotics research into mobile service robots and deploying these systems for long-term installations in security and care environments. Our robots have been operational for a combined duration of 104 days over four deployments, autonomously performing end-user-defined tasks and traversing 116 km in the process. In this article, we describe the approach we used to enable long-term autonomous operation in everyday environments and how our robots are able to use their long run times to improve their own performance

    Prevalence of Trachomatous Trichiasis in Ten Evaluation Units of Embu and Kitui Counties, Kenya.

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    BACKGROUND: Late-stage blinding sequalae of trachoma such as trachomatous trichiasis (TT) typically take decades to develop and often do so in the absence of ongoing ocular Chlamydia trachomatis infection. This suggests that most TT risk accumulates in early life; as a result, population-level TT incidence and prevalence can remain high years after C. trachomatis transmission among children has decreased. In Embu and Kitui counties, Kenya, the prevalence of trachomatous inflammation - follicular is low in children. In this survey, we set out to determine the prevalence of TT in ten evaluation units (EUs) in these counties. METHODS: We undertook ten cross-sectional prevalence surveys for TT. In each EU, people aged ≥15 years were selected by a two-stage cluster sampling method and examined for TT. Those with TT were asked questions on whether they had been offered management for it. Prevalence was adjusted to the underlying age and gender structure of the population. RESULTS: A total of 18,987 people aged ≥15 years were examined. Per EU, the median number of examined participants was 1,656 (range: 1,451 - 3,016) and median response rate was 86% (range: 81 - 95%). The prevalence of TT unknown to the health system in people aged ≥15 years was above the threshold for elimination (≥0.2%) in all ten EUs studied (range: 0.2-0.7%). TT was significantly more common in older than younger individuals and in women than in men. DISCUSSION: Provision of surgical services should be strengthened in Embu and Kitui counties of Kenya to achieve the World Health Organization threshold for eliminating TT as a public health problem

    Characterization of Contaminants from a Sanitized Milk Processing Plant

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    Milk processing lines offer a wide variety of microenvironments where a diversity of microorganisms can proliferate. We sampled crevices and junctions where, due to deficient reach by typical sanitizing procedures, bacteria can survive and establish biofilms. The sampling sites were the holding cell, cold storage tank, pasteurizer and storage tank - transfer pump junction. The culturable bacteria that were isolated after the sanitation procedure were predominantly Pseudomonas spp., Serratia spp, Staphylococcus sciuri and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia. We assayed several phenotypic characteristics such as the ability to secrete enzymes and siderophores, as well as the capacity of the strains to form biofilms that might contribute to their survival in a mixed species environment. The Pseudomonas spp. isolates were found to either produce proteases or lecithinases at high levels. Interestingly, protease production showed an inverse correlation with siderophore production. Furthermore, all of the Serratia spp. isolates were strong biofilm formers and spoilage enzymes producers. The organisms identified were not mere contaminants, but also producers of proteins with the potential to lower the quality and shelf-life of milk. In addition, we found that a considerable number of the Serratia and Pseudomonas spp. isolated from the pasteurizer were capable of secreting compounds with antimicrobial properties

    The Orphan Gene ybjN Conveys Pleiotropic Effects on Multicellular Behavior and Survival of Escherichia coli

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    YbjN, encoding an enterobacteria-specific protein, is a multicopy suppressor of temperature sensitivity in the ts9 mutant strain of Escherichia coli. In this study, we further explored the role(s) of ybjN. First, we demonstrated that the ybjN transcript was about 10-fold lower in the ts9 strain compared to that of E. coli strain BW25113 (BW). Introduction of multiple copies of ybjN in the ts9 strain resulted in over-expression of ybjN by about 10-fold as compared to that of BW. These results suggested that temperature sensitivity of the ts9 mutant of E. coli may be related to expression levels of ybjN. Characterization of E. coli ybjN mutant revealed that ybjN mutation resulted in pleiotropic phenotypes, including increased motility, fimbriation (auto-aggregation), exopolysaccharide production, and biofilm formation. In contrast, over-expression of ybjN (in terms of multiple copies) resulted in reduced motility, fimbriation, exopolysaccharide production, biofilm formation and acid resistance. In addition, our results indicate that a ybjN-homolog gene from Erwinia amylovora, a plant enterobacterial pathogen, is functionally conserved with that of E. coli, suggesting similar evolution of the YbjN family proteins in enterobacteria. A microarray study revealed that the expression level of ybjN was inversely correlated with the expression of flagellar, fimbrial and acid resistance genes. Over-expression of ybjN significantly down-regulated genes involved in citric acid cycle, glycolysis, the glyoxylate shunt, oxidative phosphorylation, amino acid and nucleotide metabolism. Furthermore, over-expression of ybjN up-regulated toxin-antitoxin modules, the SOS response pathway, cold shock and starvation induced transporter genes. Collectively, these results suggest that YbjN may play important roles in regulating bacterial multicellular behavior, metabolism, and survival under stress conditions in E. coli. These results also suggest that ybjN over-expression-related temperature rescue of the ts9 mutant may be due to down-regulation of metabolic activity and activation of stress response genes in the ts9 mutant
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