13,451 research outputs found
An overview of sustainable practices in food processing supply chain environments
Climate change has been a great challenge that the world is facing, it is a menace to the society and it is causing more damage than expected. The researchers are working tirelessly to reduce its impact on the planet in order to save the future. Mitigation of greenhouse gas emission and other sustainable practices is encouraged every day to make the world a better place to live Sustainable practice has been identified as one of the major tools to control this greenhouse gas emission especially in the emergent nations where industrialization is now growing rapidly. This paper discusses and analyzes the food security and food processing industry in the emergent nations. It also reviews literature on food processing, supply chain environments, sustainability and sustainable practices in relation to how these could help in promoting the sustainable development and environmental protection goals in the emergent nations
A Framework for Improving the Sharing of Manufacturing Knowledge through Micro-Blogging
The purpose of this paper is to report on an industrial investigation, conducted within a leading power generation manufacturer, to better understand the organisational processes and challenges present in relation to the management and sharing of knowledge during product manufacturing. Findings reveal that the organisation is failing to fully benefit from web 2.0 technologies and particularly micro-blogging. Details of the investigation results are presented and a conceptual framework is proposed to demonstrate how organisations may enhance the sharing of explicit manufacturing knowledge using micro-blogging tools
Estimation of Health State Utility Values in Fabry Disease Using Vignette Development and Valuation
Background: Health state utilities are measures of health-related quality of life that reflect the value placed on improvements in patients' health status and are necessary for estimation of quality-adjusted life-years. Health state utility data on Fabry disease (FD) are limited. In this study we used vignette (scenario) construction and valuation to develop health state utilities. Objectives: The aim of this study was to use vignette construction and valuation to estimate health state utility values suitable for inclusion in economic models of FD treatments. Methods: Health state vignettes were developed from semistructured qualitative telephone interviews with patients with FD and informed by published literature and input from an expert. Each vignette was valued in an online survey by members of the United Kingdom (UK) general population using the composite time trade-off (TTO) method, which aims to determine the time the respondent would trade to live in full health compared with each impaired health state. Results: Eight adults (50% women) with FD from the UK were interviewed. They were recruited via various approaches, including patient organizations and social media. The interviewees' responses, evidence from published literature, and input from a clinical expert informed the development of 6 health state vignettes (pain, moderate clinically evident FD [CEFD], severe CEFD, end-stage renal disease [ESRD], stroke, and cardiovascular disease [CVD]) and 3 combined health states (severe CEFD + ESRD, severe CEFD + CVD, and severe CEFD + stroke). A vignette valuation survey was administered to 1222 participants from the UK general population who were members of an external surveying organization and agreed to participate in this study; 1175 surveys were successfully completed and included in the analysis. Responses to TTO questions were converted into utility values for each health state. Pain was the highest valued health state (0.465), and severe CEFD + ESRD was the lowest (0.033). Discussion: Overall, mean utility values declined as the severity of the vignettes increased, indicating that respondents were more willing to trade life-years to avoid a severe health state. Conclusions: Health state vignettes reflect the effects of FD on all major health-related quality-of-life domains and may help to support economic modeling for treatment of FD
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy and trastuzumab versus neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by post-operative trastuzumab for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus trastuzumab (NCT) increases the rate of pathological complete response (pCR) and event-free survival (EFS) compared to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NC) alone in women with HER2 positive breast cancer (BC). pCR in this setting is associated with improved EFS. Whether NCT preferentially improves EFS in comparison to NC followed by adjuvant trastuzumab initiated postoperatively (NCAT) has not been addressed. Using clinical data from women with HER2 positive BC treated at 7 European institutions between 2007 and 2010 we sought to investigate the impact on breast cancer outcomes of concomitant (NCT) versus sequential (NCAT) treatment in HER2 positive early BC. The unadjusted hazard ratio (HR) for event free survival with NCT compared with NCAT was 0.63 (95% CI 0.37–1.08; p = 0.091). Multivariable analysis revealed that treatment group, tumour size and ER status were significantly associated with EFS from diagnosis. In the whole group NCT was associated with a reduced risk of an event relative to NCAT, an effect that was confined to ER negative (HR: 0.25; 95% CI, 0.10–0.62; p = 0.003) as opposed to ER positive tumours (HR: 1.07; 95% CI, 0.46–2.52; p = 0.869). HER2 positive/ER negative BC treated with NC gain greatest survival benefit when trastuzumab is administered in both the neoadjuvant and adjuvant period rather than in the adjuvant period alone. These data support the early introduction of targeted combination therapy in HER2 positive/ER negative BC
Dissipation and Decoherence in Nanodevices: a Generalized Fermi's Golden Rule
We shall revisit the conventional adiabatic or Markov approximation, which
--contrary to the semiclassical case-- does not preserve the positive-definite
character of the corresponding density matrix, thus leading to highly
non-physical results. To overcome this serious limitation, originally pointed
out and partially solved by Davies and co-workers almost three decades ago, we
shall propose an alternative more general adiabatic procedure, which (i) is
physically justified under the same validity restrictions of the conventional
Markov approach, (ii) in the semiclassical limit reduces to the standard
Fermi's golden rule, and (iii) describes a genuine Lindblad evolution, thus
providing a reliable/robust treatment of energy-dissipation and dephasing
processes in electronic quantum devices. Unlike standard master-equation
formulations, the dependence of our approximation on the specific choice of the
subsystem (that include the common partial trace reduction) does not threaten
positivity, and quantum scattering rates are well defined even in case the
subsystem is infinitely extended/has continuous spectrum.Comment: 6 pages, 0 figure
Dissipation and Decoherence in Nanodevices: a Generalized Fermi's Golden Rule
We shall revisit the conventional adiabatic or Markov approximation, which
--contrary to the semiclassical case-- does not preserve the positive-definite
character of the corresponding density matrix, thus leading to highly
non-physical results. To overcome this serious limitation, originally pointed
out and partially solved by Davies and co-workers almost three decades ago, we
shall propose an alternative more general adiabatic procedure, which (i) is
physically justified under the same validity restrictions of the conventional
Markov approach, (ii) in the semiclassical limit reduces to the standard
Fermi's golden rule, and (iii) describes a genuine Lindblad evolution, thus
providing a reliable/robust treatment of energy-dissipation and dephasing
processes in electronic quantum devices. Unlike standard master-equation
formulations, the dependence of our approximation on the specific choice of the
subsystem (that include the common partial trace reduction) does not threaten
positivity, and quantum scattering rates are well defined even in case the
subsystem is infinitely extended/has continuous spectrum.Comment: 6 pages, 0 figure
Dissipation and Decoherence in Nanodevices: a Generalized Fermi's Golden Rule
We shall revisit the conventional adiabatic or Markov approximation, which
--contrary to the semiclassical case-- does not preserve the positive-definite
character of the corresponding density matrix, thus leading to highly
non-physical results. To overcome this serious limitation, originally pointed
out and partially solved by Davies and co-workers almost three decades ago, we
shall propose an alternative more general adiabatic procedure, which (i) is
physically justified under the same validity restrictions of the conventional
Markov approach, (ii) in the semiclassical limit reduces to the standard
Fermi's golden rule, and (iii) describes a genuine Lindblad evolution, thus
providing a reliable/robust treatment of energy-dissipation and dephasing
processes in electronic quantum devices. Unlike standard master-equation
formulations, the dependence of our approximation on the specific choice of the
subsystem (that include the common partial trace reduction) does not threaten
positivity, and quantum scattering rates are well defined even in case the
subsystem is infinitely extended/has continuous spectrum.Comment: 6 pages, 0 figure
Polymer-Layered Silicate Nanocomposites for Cryotank Applications
Previous composite cryotank designs have relied on the use of conventional composite materials to reduce microcracking and permeability. However, revolutionary advances in nanotechnology derived materials may enable the production of ultra-lightweight cryotanks with significantly enhanced durability and damage tolerance, as well as reduced propellant permeability. Layered silicate nanocomposites are especially attractive in cryogenic storage tanks based on results that have been reported for epoxy nanocomposite systems. These materials often exhibit an order of magnitude reduction in gas permeability when compared to the base resin. In addition, polymer-silicate nanocomposites have been shown to yield improved dimensional stability, strength, and toughness. The enhancement in material performance of these systems occurs without property trade-offs which are often observed in conventionally filled polymer composites. Research efforts at NASA Glenn Research Center have led to the development of epoxy-clay nanocomposites with 70% lower hydrogen permeability than the base epoxy resin. Filament wound carbon fiber reinforced tanks made with this nanocomposite had a five-fold lower helium leak rate than the corresponding tanks made without clay. The pronounced reduction observed with the tank may be due to flow induced alignment of the clay layers during processing. Additionally, the nanocomposites showed CTE reductions of up to 30%, as well as a 100% increase in toughness
Inflection point in the magnetic field dependence of the ordered moment of URu2Si2 observed by neutron scattering in fields up to 17 T
We have measured the magnetic field dependence of the ordered
antiferromagnetic moment and the magnetic excitations in the heavy-fermion
superconductor URu2Si2 for fields up to 17 Tesla applied along the tetragonal c
axis, using neutron scattering. The decrease of the magnetic intensity of the
tiny moment with increasing field does not follow a simple power law, but shows
a clear inflection point, indicating that the moment disappears first at the
metamagnetic transition at ~40 T. This suggests that the moment m is connected
to a hidden order parameter Phi which belongs to the same irreducible
representation breaking time-reversal symmetry. The magnetic excitation gap at
the antiferromagnetic zone center Q=(1,0,0) increases continuously with
increasing field, while that at Q=(1.4,0,0) is nearly constant. This field
dependence is opposite to that of the gap extracted from specific-heat data.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
- …