106 research outputs found
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Tensile strength of ash cake beds at high-temperature conditions
The Energy and Environmental Research Center (EERC) is working with Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) and a consortium of companies in partnership with the US Department of Energy (DOE) to perform the research necessary to determine the factors that cause hot-gas cleanup filters to be blinded by ash or to develop deposits that can bridge the filters and cause them to fail. The primary deliverable will be a graphics-driven computer model that can be used as an engineering tool to help predict ash-related hot-gas filter problems based on analyses of coal and sorbent, as well as system operating parameters. This paper presents preliminary testing data on determining the tensile strengths of coal ash particles at elevated temperatures and simulated combustor gas conditions. The range in temperatures for tensile testing is ambient to 900 C. The simulated gas atmosphere includes carbon dioxide, water vapor, oxygen, sulfur dioxide, sodium chloride, hydrochloric acid, and nitrogen. At present, all testing has been performed using ash from the Westinghouse advanced particle filter (APF) at the American Electric Power Service Corporation (AEP) Tidd pressurized fluidized-bed combustor (PFBC) demonstration plant in Ohio. Other sources of filter ashes, including several from non-American PFBC systems, will also be evaluated
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Hot-Gas Filter Ash Characterization Project
Large-scale hot-gas testing over the past several years has revealed numerous cases of cake buildup on filter elements that have been difficult, if not impossible to remove. At times, the cake can bridge between candle filters, leading to high filter failure rates. Physical factors, including particle-size distribution, particle shape, the aerodynamics of deposition, and system temperature contribute to difficulty in removing the cake. It is speculated that chemical as well as physical effects are playing a role in leading the ash to bond to the filter or to itself. The Energy and Environmental research Center (EERC) at the University of North Dakota is working with Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) and a consortium of companies in partnership with the US Department of Energy (DOE) to perform the research necessary to determine the factors that cause hot-gas cleanup filters to be blinded by ash or to develop deposits that can bridge the filters and cause them to fail. The objectives of this overall project are threefold: first, to determine the mechanisms by which difficult-to-clean ash is formed; second, to develop a method to determine the rate of blinding/bridging based on fuel and sorbent properties and operating conditions; finally, to provide suggestions fro ways to prevent filter blinding by the troublesome ash. The projects consists of four tasks: field sampling and archive sample analyses, laboratory-scale testing, bench-scale testing, and model and database development testing. This paper present preliminary data from Task 2 on determining the tensile strengths of coal ash particles at elevated temperatures and simulated combustor gas conditions
High-Risk Human Papillomavirus Detection in Urine Samples from a Referral Population with Cervical Biopsy-Proven High-Grade Lesions
Objective The aim of the study was to evaluate the performance of the HPV-HR test to detect high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) in urine samples in comparison with a commercial molecular HPV test. Materials and Methods This is a prospective study, in which 350 patients diagnosed previously with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) grade 2 or higher were enrolled. Urine and cervical specimens were collected. Urine was tested with the HPV-HR test and cervical specimens were tested with the Cobas. Results Of the 336 evaluable patients, there were 271 cases of CIN 2+, of which 202 were CIN 3+ and the remaining 65 patients were less than CIN 2. Positivity was 77.1% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 72.5-81.5) for the urine samples and 83.6% (95% CI = 79.6-87.6) for the cervical samples. Agreement between cervical and urine samples for HPV detection was 79.8% (κ = 0.363; 95% CI = 0.243-0.484). Sensitivity for CIN 2+ was 83.4% (95% CI = 78.4-87.6) for urine and 90.8% (95% CI = 86.7-92.9) for cervical samples. The sensitivity for CIN 3+ was 85.6% (95% CI = 80.0-90.2) for urine and 92.6% (95% CI = 88.0-95.8) for cervical samples. Specificity for worse than CIN 2 was 50.8% (95% CI = 33.7-59.0) and 46.2% (95% CI = 33.7-59.0) for urine and cervical samples, respectively. Conclusions Although these results demonstrated slightly higher detection rates for HR-HPV and clinical sensitivity in cervical samples than in urine, when compared with histological diagnoses, urine sampling is a viable alternative to access women who do not participate in routine screening programs
O poder e a luta pela propriedade da terra no vale do rio Iconha/Piúma: o caso Thomaz Dutton Junior (1870-1906)
Ao chegar ao povoado de Piúma, região sul capixaba, por volta dos anos iniciais da década de 1870, Thomaz Dutton Junior, inglês de nascimento e mais tarde naturalizado brasileiro, desejava fazer parte da boa sociedade e ter direito a todas as prerrogativas que o grupo proporcionaria. No território de Piúma, adquiriu boa parte da massa falida de João Baptista Rodocanachi, um comerciante grego de grosso trato que explorava madeiras de lei e as comercializava para construção civil e naval. Na fazenda Monte Bello, após instalar colonos ingleses, Thomaz Dutton se envolveu em querelas jurídico-fundiárias com mandões do lugar com quem tinha relações interdependentes, sobretudo com Alexandrino Pires Martins e José Gonçalves Costa Beiriz, que ocultavam, ao fim e ao cabo, um complexo jogo por disputas políticas locais, por prestígio, por boa reputação e poder. No seio dessas disputas estava a propriedade da terra, símbolo de poder e mando, que o levou à insolvência. Este estudo investiga a trajetória de Thomaz Dutton, pautando-se na teoria da Configuração de Norbert Elias associada à teoria do Poder Simbólico de Pierre Bourdier. Objetiva compreender a maneira como as práticas do poder são materializadas nas relações sociais, identificando a aprendizagem extraída de relações interdependentes bem como os valores construídos a partir delas. Parte de análises de fontes documentais, como relatórios presidenciais provinciais, requerimentos, atas, cartas e artigos de jornais corpus documental, dominante nesta investigação , buscando vestígios no conteúdo dos discursos ali inseridos para poder descortinar as tramas do tecido social com lentes de objetivas aumentadas. Desse modo, torna possível trazer à tona a história local do território do vale do Iconha/Piúma no espaço de tempo entre 1870 e 1906 e assim expor suas particularidades e singularidades, inserindo-a no contexto da história regional capixaba e nacional. Destarte, usando o alicerce teórico-metodológico já apresentado, destaca as particularidades e feitos do passado da sociedade piumense que ainda estavam fora do campo de experiência e precisavam ser conhecidas para fazer parte da História do Espírito Santo
Full genome of Phialocephala scopiformis DAOMC 229536, a fungal endophyte of spruce producing the potent anti-insectan compound rugulosin
We present the full genome of Phialocephala scopiformis DAOMC 229536 (Helotiales, Ascomycota), a foliar endophyte of white spruce from eastern Quebec. DAOMC 229536 produces the anti-insectan compound rugulosin, which inhibits a devastating forestry pest, the spruce budworm. This genome will enable fungal genotyping and host-endophyte evolutionary genomics in inoculated trees
Cure of Chronic Viral Infection and Virus-Induced Type 1 Diabetes by Neutralizing Antibodies
The use of neutralizing antibodies is one of the most successful methods to interfere with receptor–ligand interactions in vivo. In particular blockade of soluble inflammatory mediators or their corresponding cellular receptors was proven an effective way to regulate inflammation and/or prevent its negative consequences. However, one problem that comes along with an effective neutralization of inflammatory mediators is the general systemic immunomodulatory effect. It is, therefore, important to design a treatment regimen in a way to strike at the right place and at the right time in order to achieve maximal effects with minimal duration of immunosuppression or hyperactivation. In this review, we reflect on two examples of how short time administration of such neutralizing antibodies can block two distinct inflammatory consequences of viral infection. First, we review recent findings that blockade of IL-10/IL-10R interaction can resolve chronic viral infection and second, we reflect on how neutralization of the chemokine CXCL10 can abrogate virus-induced type 1 diabetes
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