310 research outputs found
Simultaneous saccharification and fermentation of steam exploded duckweed: Improvement of the ethanol yield by increasing yeast titre
This study investigated the conversion of Lemna minor biomass to bioethanol. The biomass was pre-treated by steam explosion (SE, 210 °C, 10 min) and then subjected to simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) using CellicÒ CTec 2 (20 U or 0.87 FPU gﰂ1 substrate) cellulase plus b-glucosidase (2 U gﰂ1 substrate) and a yeast inoculum of 10% (v/v or 8.0 ﰀ 107 cells mLﰂ1). At a substrate concentration of 1% (w/v) an ethanol yield of 80% (w/w, theoretical) was achieved. However at a substrate concentration of 20% (w/v), the ethanol yield was lowered to 18.8% (w/w, theoretical). Yields were considerably improved by increasing the yeast titre in the inoculum or preconditioning the yeast on steam exploded liquor. These approaches enhanced the ethanol yield up to 70% (w/w, theoretical) at a substrate concen- tration of 20% (w/v) by metabolising fermentation inhibitors
General analytic predictions of two-field inflation and perturbative reheating
16 pages, 5 figures, Version 2 includes a revised comparison with Meyers and Tarrant [41
Exploring the cognitive model of social anxiety in autistic young people—the central role of bodily symptoms
We explored the role of negative performance beliefs and self-focused attention considered central to psychological models of social anxiety but not studied in autism. Firstly, we compared self- and observer ratings of performance on a social task for 71 young autistic people, 41 high and 30 low in social anxiety, finding a significant main effect of social anxiety but not rater. Subsequently, 76 autistic young people, 46 high and 30 low social anxiety completed measures of interoceptive sensibility and focus of attention following a social task. Only heightened interoceptive sensibility fully mediated the relationship between self-ratings of social performance and social anxiety. These findings suggest awareness of bodily sensations are critical to anxiety in social situations with implications for treatment
Transport equations for the inflationary trispectrum
We use transport techniques to calculate the trispectrum produced in
multiple-field inflationary models with canonical kinetic terms. Our method
allows the time evolution of the local trispectrum parameters, tauNL and gNL,
to be tracked throughout the inflationary phase. We illustrate our approach
using examples. We give a simplified method to calculate the superhorizon part
of the relation between field fluctuations on spatially flat hypersurfaces and
the curvature perturbation on uniform density slices, and obtain its
third-order part for the first time. We clarify how the 'backwards' formalism
of Yokoyama et al. relates to our analysis and other recent work. We supply
explicit formulae which enable each inflationary observable to be computed in
any canonical model of interest, using a suitable first-order ODE solver.Comment: 24 pages, plus references and appendix. v2: matches version published
in JCAP; typo fixed in Eq. (54
Release of cell wall phenolic esters during hydrothermal pretreatment of rice husk and rice straw
Background: Rice husk and rice straw represent promising sources of biomass for production of renewable fuels and chemicals. For efficient utilisation, lignocellulosic components must first be pretreated to enable efficient enzymatic saccharification and subsequent fermentation. Existing pretreatments create breakdown products such as sugar-derived furans, and lignin-derived phenolics that inhibit enzymes and fermenting organisms. Alkali pretreatments have also been shown to release significant levels of simple, free phenolics such as ferulic acid that are normally esterified to cell wall polysaccharides in the intact plant. These phenolics have recently been found to have considerable inhibitory properties. The aim of this research has been to establish the extent to which such free phenolic acids are also released during hydrothermal pretreatment of rice straw (RS) and rice husk (RH). Results: RS and RH were subjected to hydrothermal pretreatments over a wide range of severities (1.57–5.45). FTIR analysis showed that the pretreatments hydrolysed and solubilised hemicellulosic moieties, leading to an enrichment of lignin and crystalline cellulose in the insoluble residue. The residues also lost the capacity for UV autofluorescence at pH 7 or pH 10, indicating the breakdown or release of cell wall phenolics. Saponification of raw RS and RH enabled identification and quantification of substantial levels of simple phenolics including ferulic acid (tFA), coumaric acid (pCA) and several diferulic acids (DiFAs) including 8-O-4′-DiFA, 8,5′-DiFA and 5,5′-DiFA. RH had higher levels of pCA and lower levels of tFA and DiFAs compared with RS. Assessment of the pretreatment liquors revealed that pretreatment-liberated phenolics present were not free but remained as phenolic esters (at mM concentrations) that could be readily freed by saponification. Many were lost, presumably through degradation, at the higher severities. Conclusion: Differences in lignin, tFA, DiFAs and pCA between RS and RH reflect differences in cell wall physiology, and probably contribute to the higher recalcitrance of RH compared with RS. Hydrothermal pretreatments, unlike alkali pretreatments, release cinnamic acid components as esters. The potential for pretreatment-liberated phenolic esters to be inhibitory to fermenting microorganisms is not known. However, the present study shows that they are found at concentrations that could be significantly inhibitory if released as free forms by enzyme activity
Characterisation of lignocellulosic sugars from municipal solid waste residue.
Municipal solid waste (MSW) contains significant quantities of plant-derived carbohydrates which have the potential to be exploited as a biomass source. This study evaluated the chemical composition and fractionation of MSW water-insoluble organic matter remaining after recycling of other components (MSWR). The organic matter was prepared as a dry, alcohol insoluble residue (MSWR-AIR, comprising w = 6% of original MSW) and size fractionated into fractions A, B, C & D. Carbohydrates were present in all the sub-fractions, comprising up to w = 54%; their complexity was also assessed by FT-IR spectroscopy. The lignin content in the samples ranged from w = 11–22%. The most carbohydrate-rich subfraction (C; w = 4% original MSW) was sequentially extracted to provide information on the likely constituent cell wall-derived polymers, sugar compositions and uronic acid content. The results indicate that approximately w = 25% of the MSWR-AIR comprises glucose, which appears to be mostly cellulosic in origin. The results are discussed in relation to the potential for exploitation
Oxidative stress, a trigger of hepatitis C and B virus-induced liver carcinogenesis
Virally induced liver cancer usually evolves over long periods of time in the context of a strongly oxidative microenvironment, characterized by chronic liver inflammation and regeneration processes. They ultimately lead to oncogenic mutations in many cellular signaling cascades that drive cell growth and proliferation. Oxidative stress, induced by hepatitis viruses, therefore is one of the factors that drives the neoplastic transformation process in the liver. This review summarizes current knowledge on oxidative stress and oxidative stress responses induced by human hepatitis B and C viruses. It focuses on the molecular mechanisms by which these viruses activate cellular enzymes/systems that generate or scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) and control cellular redox homeostasis. The impact of an altered cellular redox homeostasis on the initiation and establishment of chronic viral infection, as well as on the course and outcome of liver fibrosis and hepatocarcinogenesis will be discussed The review neither discusses reactive nitrogen species, although their metabolism is interferes with that of ROS, nor antioxidants as potential therapeutic remedies against viral infections, both subjects meriting an independent review.publishersversionPeer reviewe
The inflationary bispectrum with curved field-space
We compute the covariant three-point function near horizon-crossing for a
system of slowly-rolling scalar fields during an inflationary epoch, allowing
for an arbitrary field-space metric. We show explicitly how to compute its
subsequent evolution using a covariantized version of the separate universe or
"delta-N" expansion, which must be augmented by terms measuring curvature of
the field-space manifold, and give the nonlinear gauge transformation to the
comoving curvature perturbation. Nonlinearities induced by the field-space
curvature terms are a new and potentially significant source of
non-Gaussianity. We show how inflationary models with non-minimal coupling to
the spacetime Ricci scalar can be accommodated within this framework. This
yields a simple toolkit allowing the bispectrum to be computed in models with
non-negligible field-space curvature.Comment: 22 pages, plus appendix and reference
The δN formula is the dynamical renormalization group
We derive the 'separate universe' method for the inflationary bispectrum,
beginning directly from a field-theory calculation. We work to tree-level in
quantum effects but to all orders in the slow-roll expansion, with masses
accommodated perturbatively. Our method provides a systematic basis to account
for novel sources of time-dependence in inflationary correlation functions, and
has immediate applications. First, we use our result to obtain the correct
matching prescription between the 'quantum' and 'classical' parts of the
separate universe computation. Second, we elaborate on the application of this
method in situations where its validity is not clear. As a by-product of our
calculation we give the leading slow-roll corrections to the three-point
function of field fluctuations on spatially flat hypersurfaces in a canonical,
multiple-field model.Comment: v1: 33 pages, plus appendix and references; 5 figures. v2:
typographical typos fixed, minor changes to the main text and abstract,
reference added; matches version published in JCA
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