1,998 research outputs found

    Catalytic materials based on silica and alumina: Structural features and generation of surface acidity

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    The structural, surface chemical and catalytic properties of the materials belonging to the SiO2-Al2O3 system are reviewed critically. In particular, amorphous silicas, transitional aluminas, different silica-aluminas (silica-rich and alumina-rich) and protonic zeolites are taken into consideration. The nature of the acid sites, of the Lewis and of the Bronsted type, over these surfaces is discussed and rationalized, based on the fundamental chemistry and structural chemistry of silicon and aluminum compounds

    First experiences with the H-maser EFOS 1

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    The results are given on the performance measurements, on the dependence on external temperature, and on external magnetic field of a hydrogen maser. It is compared with another hydrogen maser. Details of the transportation and installation of the maser are given. The hydrogen maser frequency is compared with cesium oscillators to derive long-term behavior

    Mock Catalogs for UHECR Studies

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    We provide realistic mock-catalogs of cosmic rays above 40 EeV, for a pure proton composition, assuming their sources are a random subset of ordinary galaxies in a simulated, volume-limited survey, for various choices of source density: 10^-3.5 Mpc^-3, 10^-4.0 Mpc^-3 and 10^-4.5 Mpc^-3. The spectrum at the source is taken to be E^-2.3 and the effects of cosmological redshifting as well as photo-pion and e^+ e^- energy losses are included.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Pierre Auger Data, Photons, and Top-Down Cosmic Ray Models

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    We consider the ultra-high energy cosmic ray (UHECR) spectrum as measured by the Pierre Auger Observatory. Top-down models for the origin of UHECRs predict an increasing photon component at energies above about 1019.710^{19.7}eV. Here we present a simple prescription to compare the Auger data with a prediction assuming a pure proton component or a prediction assuming a changing primary component appropriate for a top-down model. We find that the UHECR spectrum predicted in top-down models is a good fit to the Auger data. Eventually, Auger will measure a composition-independent spectrum and will be capable of either confirming or excluding the quantity of photons predicted in top-down models.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure

    A Study of the Pyrolysis Products of Kraft Lignin

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    In order to valorize lignin wastes to produce useful aromatic compounds, the thermal degradation pyrolysis of Kraft lignin in the absence of catalysts has been investigated at 350, 450, and 550 \ub0C. The high content of sulfur in the fresh sample led to the formation of S\u2010containing compounds in products whose evolution in the gas phase was monitored through GC\u2010MS analysis. Py-rolytic gas is rich in CH4, CO, CO2, and H2S with the presence of other sulfur compounds in smaller amounts (i.e., CH3SH, CH3\u2010S\u2010CH3, SO2, COS, and CS2). Biochar morphology and elemental composition have been investigated by means of SEM and EDX. The carbon content reaches ~90% after pyrolysis at 550 \ub0C, while the oxygen content showed a decreasing trend with increasing tempera-ture. From GC\u2010MS analysis, bio\u2010oil resulted rich in alkyl\u2010alkoxy phenols, together with (alkyl)dihy-droxy benzenes and minor amounts of hydrocarbons and sulfur compounds. NaOH/H2O and EtOH/H2O extraction were performed with the aim of extracting phenolic\u2010like compounds. Sodium hydroxide solution allowed a better but still incomplete extraction of phenolic compounds, leaving a bio\u2010oil richer in sulfur

    Damage detection based on strain transmissibility for beam structure by using distributed fiber optics

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    Structural damage identification is a coral and challenging research topic. Research mainly focuses on identification and detection of linear damage in structures by using modal parameters such as change of natural frequency, frequency response function, mode shape, etc. Transmissibility is conventionally defined as the spectra ratio of two measurement points, which has been utilized for damage identification as a powerful damage indicator. In this paper, strain transmissibility, defined as ratio of strain response spectra, is proposed as a new damage indicator. In order to achieve more precise sensing information, distributed fiber optics has been applied to damage detection on a beam structure, which adds new capability of sensing with its combination of high spatial density sensing and dynamic acquisition over a single optical fiber sensor. A numerical simulation has been conducted to investigate the feasibility of strain transmissibility for damage detection which has revealed a better performance compared to traditional transmissibility. The applicability of the proposed method has been confirmed by applying distributed fiber optics on a clamped-clamped beam. Both simulation and experiment validate the effectiveness of damage detection approach based on strain transmissibility by using distributed fiber optics

    On the role of triethylene glycol in the preparation of highly active Ni-Mo/Al2O3 hydrodesulfurization catalysts: A spectroscopic study

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    The interaction of triethylene glycol (TEG) with alumina and its role in preparing improved NiMo/Al2O3 hydrodesulfurization catalysts was investigated by spectroscopic methods. The FT-IR study shows that TEG is mainly adsorbed on the corners and edges of the alumina microcrystals where the strongest Lewis sites and the higher OH frequency hydroxyl groups are mainly located. It is also observed that the Mo O stretching vibration of surface molybdenyl groups in the oxide catalyst precursor is shifted down in the presence of TEG, indicating a lower interaction with the alumina surface. The IR spectra of CO adsorbed on the reduced/sulfided NiMo/Al2O3 catalysts confirm that the amount of promoted phase (NiMoS sites) increases in the samples prepared with TEG. Accordingly, the activity measurements in the HDS of 4,6-dimethyldibenzothiophene show that the catalyst prepared with TEG is more active than the one prepared without it. It is proposed that TEG and its decomposition products, formed upon heating (mainly acetates) occupy preferably the strongly interacting edge and corner sites of the alumina crystals, forcing the Mo and Ni species to migrate mainly to the less reactive plane faces. This weakens the metalsupport interaction allowing a better sulfidation and, at the same time, favoring the Ni\u2013Mo interaction and the formation of the promoted NiMoS phase

    Broadband distortion modeling in Lyman-α\alpha forest BAO fitting

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    In recent years, the Lyman-α\alpha absorption observed in the spectra of high-redshift quasars has been used as a tracer of large-scale structure by means of the three-dimensional Lyman-α\alpha forest auto-correlation function at redshift z2.3z\simeq 2.3, but the need to fit the quasar continuum in every absorption spectrum introduces a broadband distortion that is difficult to correct and causes a systematic error for measuring any broadband properties. We describe a kk-space model for this broadband distortion based on a multiplicative correction to the power spectrum of the transmitted flux fraction that suppresses power on scales corresponding to the typical length of a Lyman-α\alpha forest spectrum. Implementing the distortion model in fits for the baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) peak position in the Lyman-α\alpha forest auto-correlation, we find that the fitting method recovers the input values of the linear bias parameter bFb_{F} and the redshift-space distortion parameter βF\beta_{F} for mock data sets with a systematic error of less than 0.5\%. Applied to the auto-correlation measured for BOSS Data Release 11, our method improves on the previous treatment of broadband distortions in BAO fitting by providing a better fit to the data using fewer parameters and reducing the statistical errors on βF\beta_{F} and the combination bF(1+βF)b_{F}(1+\beta_{F}) by more than a factor of seven. The measured values at redshift z=2.3z=2.3 are $\beta_{F}=1.39^{+0.11\ +0.24\ +0.38}_{-0.10\ -0.19\ -0.28}and and b_{F}(1+\beta_{F})=-0.374^{+0.007\ +0.013\ +0.020}_{-0.007\ -0.014\ -0.022}(1 (1\sigma,2, 2\sigmaand3 and 3\sigma$ statistical errors). Our fitting software and the input files needed to reproduce our main results are publicly available.Comment: 28 pages, 15 figures, matches the published versio
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