132 research outputs found

    Influence of harvest method on the quality and storage of highbush blueberry

    Get PDF
    Blueberry quality is one of the most important elements that needs to be evaluated when automatisation processes, such as harvest automation, occur along the supply chain. The aim of this work was to evaluate the suitability of two blueberry cultivars, of new introduction for the area of study, to the mechanical harvest. Particularly the influence of harvest method was evaluated on the quality of cv. CargoŸ and Top ShelfŸ for a short storage time (max. 28 days) in normal atmosphere assuming so an immediate sale of blueberries. Samples mechanically harvested were compared in terms of qualitative performance with samples manually picked throught two activity carried on two years. In the activity 1 a preliminary laboratory test simulation of mechanical harvest was carried on to evaluate the attitude of both cultivars to the automatisation process and the berries were evaluated immediately after the harvest time. The activity 2 was aimed to evaluate the quality of berries mechanically harvested in field and after the storage process at 2 ± 1 °C and 90% RH in a cold room for 28 days under normal atmospheric conditions (NA). The higher percentage of shrivelled berries for the simulation of mechanical harvest samples (SEH) (activity 1) and berries harvested with the Easy Harvester machineŸ (EH samples) (activity 2) in the post-harvest period was probably due to the low % of pruin on berries skin content at the harvest time (0 days). All samples although achieved a quality assessment equivalent to still marketable berries after 28 days of storage. TSSC were significantly higher in the EH group for both years. TSSC and TA were higher in CargoŸ than in Top ShelfŸ. In general the automatisation of the harvesting process did not significantly affect blueberry quality after storage

    First multi-target application of exclusion net in nectarine orchards: Effectiveness against pests and impact on beneficial arthropods, postharvest rots and fruit quality

    Get PDF
    Over the past few years, there has been an increasing interest in the development of alternative pest control strategies to reduce environmental impact. In this contest, exclusion nets have been evaluated as a sustainable alternative to pesticides. In this study, the use of a photoselective exclusion net was investigated in semi-field conditions as a potential strategy to protect nectarine orchards from different pests (i.e., fruit moths, Halyomorpha halys and Drosophila suzukii) in NW Italy. The presence and abundance of pest populations inside and outside the net, as well as the damage they caused on fruits, were evaluated. Moreover, any possible effects of the net on beneficial arthropods, postharvest rots and fruit quality and nutraceutical parameters were considered. The exclusion net significantly reduced pest populations. At harvest, fruit damage caused by Grapholita molesta and H. halys in netted plots was reduced up to 90% and to 78%, respectively, compared with insecticide-treated plots. The exclusion net allowed the production of healthier fruits with a strong reduction of insecticide treatments (up to seven less) and of their related costs without any negative impact on postharvest rots, neither fruit quality nor nutraceutical properties

    Fractionation of polydisperse systems: multi-phase coexistence

    Full text link
    The width of the distribution of species in a polydisperse system is employed in a small-variable expansion, to obtain a well-controlled and compact scheme by which to calculate phase equilibria in multi-phase systems. General and universal relations are derived, which determine the partitioning of the fluid components among the phases. The analysis applies to mixtures of arbitrarily many slightly-polydisperse components. An explicit solution is approximated for hard spheres.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Universal law of fractionation for slightly polydisperse systems

    Get PDF
    By perturbing about a general monodisperse system, we provide a complete description of two-phase equilibria in any system which is slightly polydisperse in some property (e.g., particle size, charge, etc.). We derive a universal law of fractionation which is corroborated by comprehensive experiments on a model colloid-polymer mixture. We furthermore predict that phase separation is an effective method of reducing polydispersity only for systems with a skewed distribution of the polydisperse property

    Reactivation of Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 (HSV-1) Detected on Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid (BALF) Samples in Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients Undergoing Invasive Mechanical Ventilation: Preliminary Results from Two Italian Centers

    Get PDF
    Reactivation of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) has been described in critically ill patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pneumonia. In the present two-center retrospective experience, we primarily aimed to assess the cumulative risk of HSV-1 reactivation detected on bronchoalveolar fluid (BALF) samples in invasively ventilated COVID-19 patients with worsening respiratory function. The secondary objectives were the identification of predictors for HSV-1 reactivation and the assessment of its possible prognostic impact. Overall, 41 patients met the study inclusion criteria, and 12/41 patients developed HSV-1 reactivation (29%). No independent predictors of HSV-1 reactivation were identified in the present study. No association was found between HSV-1 reactivation and mortality. Eleven out of 12 patients with HSV-1 reactivation received antiviral therapy with intravenous acyclovir. In conclusion, HSV-1 reactivation is frequently detected in intubated patients with COVID-19. An antiviral treatment in COVID-19 patients with HSV-1 reactivation and worsening respiratory function might be considered

    New measurement of the radiative decay Ke3g at the NA62 experiment at CERN

    Get PDF
    The NA62 experiment at CERN reports new results from the study of the radiative kaon decay K+→π0e+ÎœÎł (Ke3Îł ), using a data sample recorded in 2017 and 2018. Preliminary results with the most precise measurement of the Ke3Îł branching ratio, and a T-asymmetry measurement in the Ke3Îł decay, are presented

    Search for lepton number and flavour violation in K+ and pi0 decays

    Get PDF
    The NA62 experiment at CERN collected a large sample of charged kaon decays into ïŹnal states with multiple charged particles in 2016-2018. This sample provides sensitivities to rare decays with branching ratios as low as 10 −11 . Searches for the lepton number violating K + → π − ” + e+ decay and the lepton ïŹ‚avour violating K + → π + ” − e + and π 0 → ” − e + decays are reported. No evidence for these decays is found and upper limits of the branching ratios are obtained at 90% conïŹdence level. These results improve by one order of magnitude over previous results for these decay modes
    • 

    corecore