3,879 research outputs found

    Advantage of high turndown SUB for intensified process

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    Disposable technology is being used more each year in the biotechnology industry. Disposable bioreactors allow the user to avoid expenses associated with cleaning, assembly and operations, as well as equipment validation. Disposable bioreactors have played a key role to meet the increasing run rate of the Cell Culture Pilot Plant while maintaining a high success rate, reducing labor costs, increasing efficiency, and lowering the risk of contamination. Recent effort to evaluate the next generation 10:1 turndown single use bioreactor with different cell retention devices to challenges oxygen mass transfer, carbon-dioxide stripping while assessing foaming, and vent filter sizing. This presentation will focus primarily on the advantage of the next generation high turndown single use bioreactor that comes with different sparger options (enhanced DHS and mircrosparger), and tubing for different cell retention device connection. Additionally, the high turndown provided a wide range of working volume allowing us to truly test the true scale down of the cell retention device for its maximum flux and filter throughput. The evaluation provided important system performance, operation experience, and cell culture performance data when comparing the next generation high turndown disposable system with respect to the legacy 2:1 and 5:1 turndown single use bioreactors, and conventional stainless-steel bioreactor system

    Interview with Shonen Knife

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    Autonomic influence on pharmacologically-induced cardiac arrhythmogenesis

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    An Efficient Approach for Generalized Load Balancing in Multipath Packet Switched Networks

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    This paper is a quantitative analysis on packet switched network with a view to generalize load balancing and determination of appropriate routing algorithm in multipath environment. Several routing algorithms have been introduced for routing of packets from source to destination. Some of them route packets accurately with increased workload and some of them drastically cut down the workload. A few of them can find out a minimum workload deviation for both UDP and TCP packets. We simulated these approaches in a well defined simulator, analyzed and evaluated their performance. After expanding our analysis with varying weights and number of paths we found that the recently proposed routing algorithm Mixed Weighted Fair Routing (MWFR) outperforms the existing routing algorithms by reducing the routing and network overhead and saving the scarce bandwidth as well as CPU consumption for packet switching networks.Comment: 12 Pages, IJCNC Journal 201
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