717 research outputs found

    Optimización de la producción de biomasa usando glicerol crudo, de una cepa mutante de Yarrowia lipolytica con actividad incrementada de lipasa

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    218-225The yeast Yarrowia lipolytica accumulates oils and is able to produce extracellular lipases when growing in different carbon sources including glycerol, the principal by-product of the biodiesel industry. In this study, biomass production of a novel mutant strain of Y. lipolytica was statistically optimized by Response Surface Methodology in media containing biodiesel-derived glycerol as main carbon source. This strain exhibited distinctive morphological and fatty acid profile characteristics, and showed an increased extracellular lipase activity. An organic source of nitrogen and the addition of 1.0 g/l olive oil were necessary for significant lipase production. Plackett-Burman and Central Composite Statistical Designs were employed for screening and optimization of fermentation in shaken flasks cultures, and the maximum values obtained were 16.1 g/l for biomass and 12.2 Units/ml for lipase, respectively. Optimized batch bioprocess was thereafter scaled in aerated bioreactors and the values reached for lipase specific activity after 95 percent of the glycerol had been consumed, were three-fold higher than those obtained in shaken flasks cultures. A sustainable bioprocess to obtain biomass and extracellular lipase activity was attained by maximizing the use of the by-products of biodiesel industry

    Condensation Coefficient Measurement for Water in the UMR Cloud Simulation Chamber

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    A systematic series of condensation coefficient measurements of water have been made using the University of Missouri-Rolla cooled-wall expansion chamber which simulates the thermodynamics of cloud. This coefficient is seen to decrease from a value near unity, at the outset of simulation, to a value in the neighborhood of 0.01 toward the end of a simulation. Final values of this coefficient are sufficiently low as to contribute significantly to the broadening of the drop-size distribution in cloud

    Measurement of the Condensation Coefficient of Water in the UMR Simulation Chamber

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    The UMR Cloud Simulation Facility is described. The facility is designed to provide a controlled environment simulating the conditions of natural atmospheric processes. It consists of two cooled-wall expansion cloud chambers and peripheral instrumentation for generation and characterization of aerosols used for cloud formation studies. Results of initial studies of the growth of warm cloud droplets and inferred measurements of the condensation coefficient are described

    Measurement of the Condensation Coefficient of Water in the UMR Cloud Simulation Chamber

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    Measurements of the condensation coefficient of water under conditions closely approximating those in natural atmospheric cloud have been made in the cooled-wall UMR cloud simulation chamber. Current measurements disclose a value of condensation coefficient near unity at the outset of the experiment, generally decreasing to lower values (~ .01) as the experiment progresses. The significance of the magnitude of condensation coefficient in atmospheric cloud is briefly discussed

    Magnetic phase diagram and magnetoelastic coupling of NdB4 studied by high-resolution capacitance dilatometry up to 35 T

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    We report high-resolution dilatometry studies on single crystals of the Shastry-Sutherland-latticemagnet NdB4 supported by specific heat and magnetometry data. Our dilatometric studies evidence pronounced anomalies at the phase boundaries, which imply strong magnetoelastic coupling. The evolution of the three zero-field phase transitions separating distinct antiferromagnetic phases at TN = 17.2 K, TIT = 6.8 K, and TLT = 4.8 K can thus be traced in applied magnetic fields, which provides the magnetic phase diagrams for B // c up to 15 T and for B // [110] up to 35 T. In-field phases are discovered for both field directions and already known phases are confirmed. In particular, phase boundaries between different phases are unambiguously shown by sign changes of observed anomalies and corresponding changes in uniaxial pressure effects. For B||c, we find a 1/4-magnetization plateau in addition to a previously reported plateau at 1/5 of the saturation magnetization. TN increases for B // c in fields up to 15 T implying that magnetic moments of the all-in/all-out structure in the high-temperature AFM ordered phase are driven towards the c axis in high magnetic fields. Uniaxial pressure dependencies ∂Tcrit/∂ pc of the phase transition temperatures for magnetic fields and pressure applied along the c axis are derived from the data

    Detecting deceptive reviews using argumentation

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    The unstoppable rise of social networks and the web is facing a serious challenge: identifying the truthfulness of online opinions and reviews. In this paper we use Argumentation Frameworks (AFs) extracted from reviews and explore whether the use of these AFs can improve the performance of machine learning techniques in detecting deceptive behaviour, resulting from users lying in order to mislead readers. The AFs represent how arguments from reviews relate to arguments from other reviews as well as to arguments about the goodness of the items being reviewed

    The Fundamental Diagram of Pedestrian Movement Revisited

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    The empirical relation between density and velocity of pedestrian movement is not completely analyzed, particularly with regard to the `microscopic' causes which determine the relation at medium and high densities. The simplest system for the investigation of this dependency is the normal movement of pedestrians along a line (single-file movement). This article presents experimental results for this system under laboratory conditions and discusses the following observations: The data show a linear relation between the velocity and the inverse of the density, which can be regarded as the required length of one pedestrian to move. Furthermore we compare the results for the single-file movement with literature data for the movement in a plane. This comparison shows an unexpected conformance between the fundamental diagrams, indicating that lateral interference has negligible influence on the velocity-density relation at the density domain 1m2<ρ<5m21 m^{-2}<\rho<5 m^{-2}. In addition we test a procedure for automatic recording of pedestrian flow characteristics. We present preliminary results on measurement range and accuracy of this method.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
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