381 research outputs found

    The Surface Coverage of Fat on Food Powders Analyzed by Esca (Electron Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis)

    Get PDF
    ES.A (electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis) was used to estimate the fat coverage on different spray-dried food powder surfaces. The method presented here represents a new way of estimating the actual surface coverage of fat on a food powder. The ESCAmethod is illustrated with three different series of experimen ts. The results obtained with the ESCA-technique are combined with the results obtained from the conventional free fat extraction technique for different spray-dried powders. In the first series , emulsion s containing different ratios of protein to fat were spray-dried. An increase in the amount of fat in the emulsion gives an increased surface coverage of fat. Powders with a high fat content shows a high free fat level, indicating a continuous network of fat in side the particles. Secondly, the effect of heat treatment on the ability of bovine serum albumin to encapsulate fat has been investigated . The results show that albumin treated at high temperature encapsulates the fat less completely than the albumin treated at low temperature. Finally, emulsions containing oil phases with different melting points were spray-dried and analyzed. Powders with a high melting fat show very well encapsulated fat with only a minor surface coverage of fat. Powders with a qualitatively different distribution of fat can be identified by comparing the surface coverage of fat estimated by ESCA with the free fat measurements

    Density-Matrix functional theory of strongly-correlated lattice fermions

    Full text link
    A density functional theory (DFT) of lattice fermion models is presented, which uses the single-particle density matrix gamma_{ij} as basic variable. A simple, explicit approximation to the interaction-energy functional W[gamma] of the Hubbard model is derived from exact dimer results, scaling properties of W[gamma] and known limits. Systematic tests on the one-dimensional chain show a remarkable agreement with theBethe-Ansatz exact solution for all interaction regimes and band fillings. New results are obtained for the ground-state energyand charge-excitation gap in two dimensions. A successful description of strong electron correlations within DFT is achieved.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures Submitted to PR

    Interaction energy functional for lattice density functional theory: Applications to one-, two- and three-dimensional Hubbard models

    Full text link
    The Hubbard model is investigated in the framework of lattice density functional theory (LDFT). The single-particle density matrix γij\gamma_{ij} with respect the lattice sites is considered as the basic variable of the many-body problem. A new approximation to the interaction-energy functional W[γ]W[\gamma] is proposed which is based on its scaling properties and which recovers exactly the limit of strong electron correlations at half-band filling. In this way, a more accurate description of WW is obtained throughout the domain of representability of γij\gamma_{ij}, including the crossover from weak to strong correlations. As examples of applications results are given for the ground-state energy, charge-excitation gap, and charge susceptibility of the Hubbard model in one-, two-, and three-dimensional lattices. The performance of the method is demonstrated by comparison with available exact solutions, with numerical calculations, and with LDFT using a simpler dimer ansatz for WW. Goals and limitations of the different approximations are discussed.Comment: 25 pages and 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Controls on pathogen species richness in plants’ introduced and native ranges: roles of residence time, range size and host traits

    Get PDF
    Introduced species escape many pathogens and other enemies, raising three questions. How quickly do introduced hosts accumulate pathogen species? What factors control pathogen species richness? Are these factors the same in the hosts’ native and introduced ranges? We analysed fungal and viral pathogen species richness on 124 plant species in both their native European range and introduced North American range. Hosts introduced 400 years ago supported six times more pathogens than those introduced 40 years ago. In hosts’ native range, pathogen richness was greater on hosts occurring in more habitat types, with a history of agricultural use and adapted to greater resource supplies. In hosts’ introduced range, pathogen richness was correlated with host geographic range size, agricultural use and time since introduction, but not any measured biological traits. Introduced species have accumulated pathogens at rates that are slow relative to most ecological processes, and contingent on geographic and historic circumstance

    Neural Models of Normal and Abnormal Behavior: What Do Schizophrenia, Parkinsonism, Attention Deficit Disorder, and Depression Have in Common?

    Full text link
    Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and Office of Naval Research (N00014-95-1-0409); National Science Foundation (IRI-97-20333

    [Analyse de la dégradation thermique du Poly(éther imide)]

    Get PDF
    The thermal degradation of PEI has been studied in wide ranges of temperature (between 180 and 250 °C) and oxygen partial pressure (between 0.21 and 50 bars). First of all, the thermal ageing mechanisms have been analysed and elucidated by FTIR spectroscopy and by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) on sufficiently thin PEI films (between 10 and 60 μm thickness) to be totally free of the effects of oxygen diffusion. As expected, and by analogy with other aromatic polymers of similar chemical structure, oxidation occurs preferentially on the methyl groups of the isopropylidene unit of the bisphenol A part, leading to the disappearance of their characteristic IR absorption band at 2970 cm -1 and the growth of a new IR absorption band centered at 3350 cm -1 and attributed to alcohol groups. In addition, oxidation leads successively to a relative predominance of chain scissions (decrease in T g ) and crosslinking (increase in T g ). Finally, the consequences of oxidation on the elastic properties have been analysed and elucidated by micro-indentation on preliminarily polished cross-sections of PEI plates of 3 mm thickness. However, the increase in Young's modulus in the superficial oxidized layer is mainly due to a physical ageing

    Differential Response of High-Elevation Planktonic Bacterial Community Structure and Metabolism to Experimental Nutrient Enrichment

    Get PDF
    Nutrient enrichment of high-elevation freshwater ecosystems by atmospheric deposition is increasing worldwide, and bacteria are a key conduit for the metabolism of organic matter in these oligotrophic environments. We conducted two distinct in situ microcosm experiments in a high-elevation lake (Emerald Lake, Sierra Nevada, California, USA) to evaluate responses in bacterioplankton growth, carbon utilization, and community structure to short-term enrichment by nitrate and phosphate. The first experiment, conducted just following ice-off, employed dark dilution culture to directly assess the impact of nutrients on bacterioplankton growth and consumption of terrigenous dissolved organic matter during snowmelt. The second experiment, conducted in transparent microcosms during autumn overturn, examined how bacterioplankton in unmanipulated microbial communities responded to nutrients concomitant with increasing phytoplankton-derived organic matter. In both experiments, phosphate enrichment (but not nitrate) caused significant increases in bacterioplankton growth, changed particulate organic stoichiometry, and induced shifts in bacterial community composition, including consistent declines in the relative abundance of Actinobacteria. The dark dilution culture showed a significant increase in dissolved organic carbon removal in response to phosphate enrichment. In transparent microcosms nutrient enrichment had no effect on concentrations of chlorophyll, carbon, or the fluorescence characteristics of dissolved organic matter, suggesting that bacterioplankton responses were independent of phytoplankton responses. These results demonstrate that bacterioplankton communities in unproductive high-elevation habitats can rapidly alter their taxonomic composition and metabolism in response to short-term phosphate enrichment. Our results reinforce the key role that phosphorus plays in oligotrophic lake ecosystems, clarify the nature of bacterioplankton nutrient limitation, and emphasize that evaluation of eutrophication in these habitats should incorporate heterotrophic microbial communities and processes

    High-Throughput Sequencing to Reveal Genes Involved in Reproduction and Development in Bactrocera dorsalis (Diptera: Tephritidae)

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Tephritid fruit flies in the genus Bactrocera are of major economic significance in agriculture causing considerable loss to the fruit and vegetable industry. Currently, there is no ideal control program. Molecular means is an effective method for pest control at present, but genomic or transcriptomic data for members of this genus remains limited. To facilitate molecular research into reproduction and development mechanisms, and finally effective control on these pests, an extensive transcriptome for the oriental fruit fly Bactrocera dorsalis was produced using the Roche 454-FLX platform. RESULTS: We obtained over 350 million bases of cDNA derived from the whole body of B. dorsalis at different developmental stages. In a single run, 747,206 sequencing reads with a mean read length of 382 bp were obtained. These reads were assembled into 28,782 contigs and 169,966 singletons. The mean contig size was 750 bp and many nearly full-length transcripts were assembled. Additionally, we identified a great number of genes that are involved in reproduction and development as well as genes that represent nearly all major conserved metazoan signal transduction pathways, such as insulin signal transduction. Furthermore, transcriptome changes during development were analyzed. A total of 2,977 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were detected between larvae and pupae libraries, while there were 1,621 DEGs between adults and larvae, and 2,002 between adults and pupae. These DEGs were functionally annotated with KEGG pathway annotation and 9 genes were validated by qRT-PCR. CONCLUSION: Our data represent the extensive sequence resources available for B. dorsalis and provide for the first time access to the genetic architecture of reproduction and development as well as major signal transduction pathways in the Tephritid fruit fly pests, allowing us to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying courtship, ovipositing, development and detailed analyses of the signal transduction pathways
    corecore