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Mass-transport resistances of acid and alkaline ionomer layers: A microelectrode study part 1 - Microelectrode development
The use of microelectrodes to study localized mass-transport phenomena in fuel-cell catalyst layers is an increasingly valuable tool. However, existing microelectrode cells have been used in static, equilibrated environment modes with poorly controlled interfaces. In this work, we present a microelectrode cell design that expands the experimental space addressable by microelectrodes to include mechanical pressure, gas flow and ionomer medium, and experimental throughput. The feasibility of the design is examined for fuel-cell reactions, with oxygen reduction currents independent of mechanical pressure and gas flowrate. Finally, cell equilibration time and IR drop across the electrolyte are estimated. The new cell design is robust and provides a consistent base from which to perform more complicated studies examining mass-transport properties of ionomers and/or the electrochemical reaction kinetics of hydrogen oxidation and oxygen reduction
Explanation of the activity sensitivity of Mn I 5394.7 \AA
There is a long-standing controversy concerning the reason why the Mn I
5394.7 A line in the solar irradiance spectrum brightens more at larger
activity than most other photospheric lines. The claim that this activity
sensitivity is caused by spectral interlocking to chromospheric emission in Mg
II h & k is disputed.
Classical one-dimensional modeling is used for demonstration; modern
three-dimensional MHD simulation for verification and analysis.
The Mn I 5394.7 A line thanks its unusual sensitivity to solar activity to
its hyperfine structure. This overrides the thermal and granular Doppler
smearing through which the other, narrower, photospheric lines lose such
sensitivity. We take the nearby Fe I 5395.2 A line as example of the latter and
analyze the formation of both lines in detail to demonstrate and explain
granular Doppler brightening. We show that this affects all narrow lines.
Neither the chromosphere nor Mg II h & k play a role, nor is it correct to
describe the activity sensitivity of Mn I 5394.7 A through plage models with
outward increasing temperature contrast.
The Mn I 5394.7 A line represents a proxy diagnostic of strong-field magnetic
concentrations in the deep solar photosphere comparable to the G band and the
blue wing of H-alpha, but not a better one than these. The Mn I lines are more
promising as diagnostic of weak fields in high-resolution Stokes polarimetry.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted by A&
Sunrise: instrument, mission, data and first results
The Sunrise balloon-borne solar observatory consists of a 1m aperture Gregory
telescope, a UV filter imager, an imaging vector polarimeter, an image
stabilization system and further infrastructure. The first science flight of
Sunrise yielded high-quality data that reveal the structure, dynamics and
evolution of solar convection, oscillations and magnetic fields at a resolution
of around 100 km in the quiet Sun. After a brief description of instruments and
data, first qualitative results are presented. In contrast to earlier
observations, we clearly see granulation at 214 nm. Images in Ca II H display
narrow, short-lived dark intergranular lanes between the bright edges of
granules. The very small-scale, mixed-polarity internetwork fields are found to
be highly dynamic. A significant increase in detectable magnetic flux is found
after phase-diversity-related reconstruction of polarization maps, indicating
that the polarities are mixed right down to the spatial resolution limit, and
probably beyond.Comment: accepted by ApJ
Increased blood pressure in adult offspring of families with Balkan Endemic Nephropathy: a prospective study
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have linked smaller kidney dimensions to increased blood pressure. However, patients with Balkan Endemic Nephropathy (BEN), whose kidneys shrink during the course of the disease, do not manifest increased blood pressure. The authors evaluated the relationship between kidney cortex width, kidney length, and blood pressure in the offspring of BEN patients and controls. METHODS: 102 offspring of BEN patients and 99 control offspring of non-BEN hospital patients in the Vratza District, Bulgaria, were enrolled in a prospective study and examined twice (2003/04 and 2004/05). Kidney dimensions were determined using ultrasound, blood pressure was measured, and medical information was collected. The parental disease of BEN was categorized into three groups: mother, father, or both parents. Repeated measurements were analyzed with mixed regression models. RESULTS: In all participants, a decrease in minimal kidney cortex width of 1 mm was related to an increase in systolic blood pressure of 1.4 mm Hg (p = 0.005). There was no association between kidney length and blood pressure. A maternal history of BEN was associated with an increase in systolic blood pressure of 6.7 mm Hg (p = 0.03); paternal BEN, +3.2 mm Hg (p = 0.35); or both parents affected, +9.9 mm Hg (p = 0.002). There was a similar relation of kidney cortex width and parental history of BEN with pulse pressure; however, no association with diastolic blood pressure was found. CONCLUSION: In BEN and control offspring, a smaller kidney cortex width predisposed to higher blood pressure. Unexpectedly, a maternal history of BEN was associated with average increased systolic blood pressure in offspring
The quiet Sun average Doppler shift of coronal lines up to 2 MK
The average Doppler shift shown by spectral lines formed from the
chromosphere to the corona reveals important information on the mass and energy
balance of the solar atmosphere, providing an important observational
constraint to any models of the solar corona. Previous spectroscopic
observations of vacuum ultra-violet (VUV) lines have revealed a persistent
average wavelength shift of lines formed at temperatures up to 1 MK. At higher
temperatures, the behaviour is still essentially unknown. Here we analyse
combined SUMER/SoHO and EIS/Hinode observations of the quiet Sun around disk
centre to determine, for the first time, the average Doppler shift of several
spectral lines formed between 1 and 2 MK, where the largest part of the quiet
coronal emission is formed. The measurements are based on a novel technique
applied to EIS spectra to measure the difference in Doppler shift between lines
formed at different temperatures. Simultaneous wavelength-calibrated SUMER
spectra allow establishing the absolute value at the reference temperature of 1
MK. The average line shifts at 1 MK < T < 1.8 MK are modestly, but clearly
bluer than those observed at 1 MK. By accepting an average blue shift of about
(-1.8+/-0.6) km/s at 1 MK (as provided by SUMER measurements), this translates
into a maximum Doppler shift of (-4.4+/-2.2) km/s around 1.8 MK. The measured
value appears to decrease to about (-1.3+/-2.6) km/s at the Fe XV formation
temperature of 2.1 MK. The measured average Doppler shift between 0.01 and 2.1
MK, for which we provide a parametrisation, appears to be qualitatively and
roughly quantitatively consistent with what foreseen by 3-D coronal models
where heating is produced by dissipation of currents induced by photospheric
motions and by reconnection with emerging magnetic flux.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures. Astronomy and Astrophysics (in press
Performance and Durability of Proton Exchange Membrane Vapor-Fed Unitized Regenerative Fuel Cells
With growing demand on electricity, clean hydrogen production and usage can be an asset not only to mitigate emissions, but also for long-term energy storage. Hydrogen gas, a high-density energy carrier, can be made through electrolysis in charging mode and generate electricity via a fuel cell in discharging mode in a unitized regenerative fuel cell (URFC). While URFCs reduce cost by combining charging and discharging modes in a singular device, switching between modes becomes burdensome, and water management is a major challenge. One way to mitigate these issues is to operate the entire system in the vapor phase. Vapor-phase operation simplifies the physics of the system, but introduces losses within the system, primarily ohmic and mass transport during the charging mode. Here, we explore the performance of a proton exchange membrane (PEM)-URFC under vapor-phase conditions and the impact of different PEMs, feed gases, and relative humidity on performance and durability. By tailoring operating conditions and membrane, the vapor-URFC achieves a roundtrip efficiency of 42% and a lifetime of 50,000 accelerated stress test cycles for fully humidified feeds. Discussion of vapor-URFC for energy storage and extensions to look at various applications shows the promise of this technology
The Role of Water in Vapor-fed Proton-Exchange-Membrane Electrolysis
Water-vapor fed electrolysis, a simplified single-phase electrolyzer using a proton exchange membrane electrode assembly, achieved >100 mA/cm2 performance at <1.7 V, the best for water-vapor electrolysis to date, and was tested under various operating conditions (temperature and inlet relative humidity (RH)).To further probe the limitations of the electrolyzer, a mathematical model was used to identify the overpotentials, local water activity, water content values, and temperature within the cell at these various conditions. The major limitations within the water-vapor electrolyzer are caused by a decreased water content within the membrane phase, indicated by increased Ohmic and mass transport losses seen in applied voltage breakdowns. Further investigations show the water content (λ, mole of water/mole of sulfonic acid) can decrease from 13 at low current densities down to 6 at high current densities. Increasing the temperature or decreasing RH exacerbates this dry-out effect. Using our mathematical model, we show how these mass transport limitations can be alleviated by considering the role of water as both a reactant and a hydrating agent. We show that low cathode RH can be tolerated as long as the anode RH remains high, showing equivalent performance as symmetric RH feeds
Supported Oxygen Evolution Catalysts by Design: Toward Lower Precious Metal Loading and Improved Conductivity in Proton Exchange Membrane Water Electrolyzers
Reducing the precious metal content of water oxidation catalysts for proton-exchange-membrane water electrolyzers remains a critical barrier to their large-scale deployment. Herein, we present an engineered architecture for supported iridium catalysts, which enables decreased precious metal content and improved activity and conductivity. The improvement in performance at lower precious metal loading is realized by the deposition of a conformal layer of platinum nanoparticles on titanium dioxide (TiO2) using a facile photoreduction method to prepare conductive layer coated supports (CCSs). Platinum nanoparticles are homogeneously dispersed on TiO2, and the conductivity of the subsequent catalysts with 39 wt % precious group metal loadings is significantly higher than the commercial 75 wt % loaded IrO2-TiO2 catalysts. The conformal conductive layer also maintains an enhanced conductivity and electrochemical activity upon thermal annealing when compared to catalysts without the conductive layer and nonconformal heterogeneous conductive layer. The iridium mass activity from half-cell studies shows a 141% improvement for CCS supported catalysts at 42% lower loadings compared to the commercial catalysts. The conductive layer also improves the single cell electrolyzer performance at a similar catalyst loading in comparison to a commercial state-of-the-art catalyst. We correlate the physical properties of the engineered catalysts with their electrochemical performance in electrolyzers to understand structure–activity relationships, and we anticipate further performance improvements upon synthesis and materials optimizations
Offspring of parents with Balkan Endemic Nephropathy have higher C-reactive protein levels suggestive of inflammatory processes: a longitudinal study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Despite the characteristic extensive tubulointerstitial fibrosis, Balkan Endemic Nephropathy (BEN) is usually considered a non-inflammatory disease.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We examined a marker of inflammation, C-reactive protein (CRP), in the offspring of patients with BEN, a population at risk for BEN, prior to development of established disease to determine if an inflammatory process could be identified in the early stages of the disease. In 2003/04, 102 adult offspring whose parents had BEN and a control group of 99 adult offspring of non-BEN patients were enrolled in this prospective study. This cohort was re-examined yearly for four consecutive years. Levels of serum CRP were measured in years 3 and 4 and compared between groups. The data were analyzed with mixed models.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Compared to controls, offspring of BEN parents had statistically higher CRP levels in two consecutive years, suggestive of early inflammatory reactivity. Whenever the mother was affected by BEN (both parents, or mother only), serum CRP was significantly increased, but not if only the father had BEN. CRP was inversely related to kidney cortex width but not to markers or renal function.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Early stages of BEN may involve inflammatory processes. The observation of a maternal involvement supports the concept of fetal programming, which has been implicated in the pathogenesis of other chronic kidney diseases.</p
The formation of sunspot penumbra. I. Magnetic field properties
We study the formation of a sunspot penumbra in the active region NOAA11024.
We simultaneously observed the Stokes parameters of the photospheric iron lines
at 1089.6 nm with the TIP and 617.3 nm with the GFPI spectropolarimeters along
with broad-band images using G-band and CaIIK filters at the German VTT. The
formation of the penumbra is intimately related to the inclined magnetic field.
Within 4.5 h observing time, the magnetic flux of the penumbra increases from
9.7E+20 to 18.2E+20 Mx, while the magnetic flux of the umbra remains constant
at about 3.8E+20 Mx. Magnetic flux in the immediate surroundings is
incorporated into the spot, and new flux is supplied via small flux patches
(SFPs), which on average have a flux of 2-3E+18 Mx. The spot's flux increase
rate of 4.2E+16 Mx/s corresponds to the merging of one SFP per minute. We also
find that during the formation of the spot penumbra: a) the maximum magnetic
field strength of the umbra does not change, b) the magnetic neutral line keeps
the same position relative to the umbra, c) the new flux arrives on the
emergence side of the spot while the penumbra forms on the opposite side, d)
the average LRF inclination of the light bridges decreases from 50 to 37 deg,
and e) as the penumbra develops, the mean magnetic field strength at the spot
border decreases from 1.0 to 0.8 kG. The SFPs associated with elongated
granules are the building blocks of structure formation in active regions.
During the sunspot formation, their contribution is comparable to the
coalescence of pores. A quiet environment in the surroundings is important for
penumbral formation. As remnants of trapped granulation between merging pores,
the light bridges are found to play a crucial role in the formation process.
They seem to channel the magnetic flux through the spot during its formation.
Light bridges are also the locations where the first penumbral filaments form.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted by A&
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