7,844 research outputs found
Low-temperature alkaline activation of feldspathic solid solutions: Development of high strength geopolymers
Most of the natural solid solutions, as a result of the history of their formation and crystallization, present a fraction of amorphous or metastable materials that may easily be dissolved or activated in alkaline media. In this work, trachyte, granite, pegmatite and sand for comparison are used as principal solid precursors for the design of high strength geopolymers. The particularity of the solid-solution based geopolymers is the high fraction of crystalline phases incongruently dissolved that may react essentially at the surface, thus developing very resistant bonds. While working with 100 wt% of solid solution is almost unrealistic for the production of geopolymers, it was found that 15 to 30 wt% of metakaolin in replacement of the solid-solution powder conducts to low porosity (10 vol.%), high flexural strength (20-30 MPa) and compact microstructure. Preliminary resonance-based mechanical tests showed that the elastic modulus of the investigated samples ranged between 11-15 GPa, as also confirmed by instrumented micro-indentations. It was concluded that a high strength and durable matrix are a result of chemico-mechanical equilibrium of phases contained within the composites including the pore volume and pore-size distribution, which are significant for the life cycle of geopolymer composites
Possible Enhancement of High Frequency Gravitational Waves
We study the tensor perturbations in a class of non-local, purely
gravitational models which naturally end inflation in a distinctive phase of
oscillations with slight and short violations of the weak energy condition. We
find the usual generic form for the tensor power spectrum. The presence of the
oscillatory phase leads to an enhancement of gravitational waves with
frequencies somewhat less than 10^{10} Hz.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, LaTeX.2
Solidification of small para-H2 clusters at zero temperature
We have determined the ground-state energies of para-H clusters at zero
temperature using the diffusion Monte Carlo method. The liquid or solid
character of each cluster is investigated by restricting the phase through the
use of proper importance sampling. Our results show inhomogeneous
crystallization of clusters, with alternating behavior between liquid and solid
phases up to N=55. From there on, all clusters are solid. The ground-state
energies in the range N=13--75 are established and the stable phase of each
cluster is determined. In spite of the small differences observed between the
energy of liquid and solid clusters, the corresponding density profiles are
significantly different, feature that can help to solve ambiguities in the
determination of the specific phase of H clusters.Comment: 17 pages, accepted for publication in J. Phys. Chem.
Huge field-effect surface charge injection and conductance modulation in metallic thin films by electrochemical gating
The field-effect technique, popular thanks to its application in common field-effect transistors, is here applied to metallic thin films by using as a dielectric a novel polymer electrolyte solution. The maximum injected surface charge, determined by a suitable modification of a classic method of electrochemistry called double-step chronocoulometry, reached more than 4 × 10 15 charges/cm 2 . At room temperature, relative variations of resistance up to 8%, 1.9% and 1.6% were observed in the case of gold, silver and copper, respectively and, if the films are thick enough (≥25 nm), results can be nicely explained within a free-electron model with parallel resistive channels. The huge charge injections achieved make this particular field-effect technique very promising for a vast variety of materials such as unconventional superconductors, graphene and 2D-like materials. © 2012 Elsevier B.V
Inhomogeneous vacuum energy
Vacuum energy remains the simplest model of dark energy which could drive the
accelerated expansion of the Universe without necessarily introducing any new
degrees of freedom. Inhomogeneous vacuum energy is necessarily interacting in
general relativity. Although the four-velocity of vacuum energy is undefined,
an interacting vacuum has an energy transfer and the vacuum energy defines a
particular foliation of spacetime with spatially homogeneous vacuum energy in
cosmological solutions. It is possible to give a consistent description of
vacuum dynamics and in particular the relativistic equations of motion for
inhomogeneous perturbations given a covariant prescription for the vacuum
energy, or equivalently the energy transfer four-vector, and we construct
gauge-invariant vacuum perturbations. We show that any dark energy cosmology
can be decomposed into an interacting vacuum+matter cosmology whose
inhomogeneous perturbations obey simple first-order equations.Comment: 8 pages; v2 clarified discussion of Chaplygin gas model, references
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Unparticle Physics in Single Top Signals
We study the single production of top quarks in and
collisions in the context of unparticle physics through the Flavor Violating
(FV) unparticle vertices and compute the total cross sections for single top
production as functions of scale dimension d_{\U}. We find that among all,
LHC is the most promising facility to probe the unparticle physics via single
top quark production processes.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Spread of Epidemic MRSA-ST5-IV Clone Encoding PVL as a Major Cause of Community Onset Staphylococcal Infections in Argentinean Children
BACKGROUND: Community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus-(CA-MRSA) strains have emerged in Argentina. We investigated the clinical and molecular evolution of community-onset MRSA infections (CO-MRSA) in children of Córdoba, Argentina, 2005-2008. Additionally, data from 2007 were compared with the epidemiology of these infections in other regions of the country. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Two datasets were used: i) lab-based prospective surveillance of CA-MRSA isolates from 3 Córdoba pediatric hospitals-(CBAH1-H3) in 2007-2008 (compared to previously published data of 2005) and ii) a sampling of CO-MRSA from a study involving both, healthcare-associated community-onset-(HACO) infections in children with risk-factors for healthcare-associated infections-(HRFs), and CA-MRSA infections in patients without HRFs detected in multiple centers of Argentina in 2007. Molecular typing was performed on the CA-MRSA-(n: 99) isolates from the CBAH1-H3-dataset and on the HACO-MRSA-(n: 51) and CA-MRSA-(n: 213) isolates from other regions. Between 2005-2008, the annual proportion of CA-MRSA/CA-S. aureus in Córdoba hospitals increased from 25% to 49%, P<0.01. Total CA-MRSA infections increased 3.6 fold-(5.1 to 18.6 cases/100,000 annual-visits, P<0.0001), associated with an important increase of invasive CA-MRSA infections-(8.5 fold). In all regions analyzed, a single genotype prevailed in both CA-MRSA (82%) and HACO-MRSA(57%), which showed pulsed-field-gel electrophoresis-(PFGE)-type-"I", sequence-type-5-(ST5), SCCmec-type-IVa, spa-t311, and was positive for PVL. The second clone, pulsotype-N/ST30/CC30/SCCmecIVc/t019/PVL(+), accounted for 11.5% of total CA-MRSA infections. Importantly, the first 4 isolates of Argentina belonging to South American-USA300 clone-(USA300/ST8/CC8/SCCmecIVc/t008/PVL(+)/ACME(-)) were detected. We also demonstrated that a HA-MRSA clone-(pulsotype-C/ST100/CC5) caused 2% and 10% of CA-MRSA and HACO-MRSA infections respectively and was associated with a SCCmec type closely related to SCCmecIV(2B&5). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The dissemination of epidemic MRSA clone, ST5-IV-PVL(+) was the main cause of increasing staphylococcal community-onset infections in Argentinean children (2003-2008), conversely to other countries. The predominance of this clone, which has capacity to express the h-VISA phenotype, in healthcare-associated community-onset cases suggests that it has infiltrated into hospital-settings
Fast evaluation of appointment schedules for outpatients in health care
We consider the problem of evaluating an appointment schedule for outpatients in a hospital. Given a fixed-length session during which a physician sees K patients, each patient has to be given an appointment time during this session in advance. When a patient arrives on its appointment, the consultations of the previous patients are either already finished or are still going on, which respectively means that the physician has been standing idle or that the patient has to wait, both of which are undesirable. Optimising a schedule according to performance criteria such as patient waiting times, physician idle times, session overtime, etc. usually requires a heuristic search method involving a huge number of repeated schedule evaluations. Hence, the aim of our evaluation approach is to obtain accurate predictions as fast as possible, i.e. at a very low computational cost. This is achieved by (1) using Lindley's recursion to allow for explicit expressions and (2) choosing a discrete-time (slotted) setting to make those expression easy to compute. We assume general, possibly distinct, distributions for the patient's consultation times, which allows us to account for multiple treatment types, as well as patient no-shows. The moments of waiting and idle times are obtained. For each slot, we also calculate the moments of waiting and idle time of an additional patient, should it be appointed to that slot. As we demonstrate, a graphical representation of these quantities can be used to assist a sequential scheduling strategy, as often used in practice
Geometric Approach to Lyapunov Analysis in Hamiltonian Dynamics
As is widely recognized in Lyapunov analysis, linearized Hamilton's equations
of motion have two marginal directions for which the Lyapunov exponents vanish.
Those directions are the tangent one to a Hamiltonian flow and the gradient one
of the Hamiltonian function. To separate out these two directions and to apply
Lyapunov analysis effectively in directions for which Lyapunov exponents are
not trivial, a geometric method is proposed for natural Hamiltonian systems, in
particular. In this geometric method, Hamiltonian flows of a natural
Hamiltonian system are regarded as geodesic flows on the cotangent bundle of a
Riemannian manifold with a suitable metric. Stability/instability of the
geodesic flows is then analyzed by linearized equations of motion which are
related to the Jacobi equations on the Riemannian manifold. On some geometric
setting on the cotangent bundle, it is shown that along a geodesic flow in
question, there exist Lyapunov vectors such that two of them are in the two
marginal directions and the others orthogonal to the marginal directions. It is
also pointed out that Lyapunov vectors with such properties can not be obtained
in general by the usual method which uses linearized Hamilton's equations of
motion. Furthermore, it is observed from numerical calculation for a model
system that Lyapunov exponents calculated in both methods, geometric and usual,
coincide with each other, independently of the choice of the methods.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, REVTeX
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