2,370 research outputs found
Effective squirmer models for self-phoretic chemically active spherical colloids
Various aspects of self-motility of chemically active colloids in Newtonian
fluids can be captured by simple models for their chemical activity plus a
phoretic slip hydrodynamic boundary condition on their surface. For particles
of simple shapes (e.g., spheres) -- as employed in many experimental studies --
which move at very low Reynolds numbers in an unbounded fluid, such models of
chemically active particles effectively map onto the well studied so-called
hydrodynamic squirmers [S. Michelin and E. Lauga, J. Fluid Mech. \textbf{747},
572 (2014)]. Accordingly, intuitively appealing analogies of
"pusher/puller/neutral" squirmers arise naturally. Within the framework of
self-diffusiophoresis we illustrate the above mentioned mapping and the
corresponding flows in an unbounded fluid for a number of choices of the
activity function (i.e., the spatial distribution and the type of chemical
reactions across the surface of the particle). We use the central collision of
two active particles as a simple, paradigmatic case for demonstrating that in
the presence of other particles or boundaries the behavior of chemically active
colloids may be \textit{qualitatively} different, even in the far field, from
the one exhibited by the corresponding "effective squirmer", obtained from the
mapping in an unbounded fluid. This emphasizes that understanding the
collective behavior and the dynamics under geometrical confinement of
chemically active particles necessarily requires to explicitly account for the
dependence of the hydrodynamic interactions on the distribution of chemical
species resulting from the activity of the particles.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figure
Chemical, microbial and sensory changes of silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) fish treated with black cumin (Nigella sativa L.) extract during storage at refrigerator
The changes in chemical, microbial and quality sensory of fillets for silver carp fish treated with black cumin extract during refrigerated storage were investigated. The fish were divided into two groups. First group was dipped in black cumin extract with concentration of 1% and received the highest score in sensory evaluation. Then the fishes were wrapped in polyethylene package. The second group, as the control samples, were wrapped in polyethylene package after dipping in distilled water. All treatments were stored at refrigerator temperature (1±4°C). The microbial tests including total viable count, psychrotrophic count and chemical tests including peroxide index, thiobarbituric acid, free fatty acid value and total volatile basic nitrogen, with sensory evaluation, were done at 4°C over a period of 15 days. The results showed that the black cumin extract delayed lipid oxidation and protein analyses significantly in treated fishes. Psycrotrophic bacteria and total viable count of samples being treated with black cumin extract were maintained lower than the proposed acceptable limit (7 log cfu/g). In comparison to the control samples, microbial spoilage significantly decreased in treated samples. Furthermore, according to sensory analysis, the treatment with black cumin extract led to high quality during storage.The findings indicated that black cumin exerts had strong antioxidant and antibacterial impacts on silver carp fish, such that the shelf life of fillets being treated with black cumin were 2.5 times more than that of control samples during storage in refrigerator
Frequency and Voltage Control Techniques through Inverter-Interfaced Distributed Energy Resources in Microgrids: A Review
Microgrids (MG) are small-scale electric grids with local voltage control and power management systems to facilitate the high penetration and grid integration of renewable energy resources (RES). The distributed generation units (DGs), including RESs, are connected to (micro) grids through power electronics-based inverters. Therefore, new paradigms are required for voltage and frequency regulation by inverter-interfaced DGs (IIDGs). Notably, employing effective voltage and frequency regulation methods for establishing power-sharing among parallel inverters in MGs is the most critical issue. This paper provides a comprehensive study, comparison, and classification of control methods including communication-based, decentralized, and construction and compensation control techniques. The development of inverter-dominated MGs has caused limitations in employing classical control techniques due to their defective performance in handling non-linear models of IIDGs. To this end, this article reviews and illustrates advanced controllers that can deal with the challenges that are created due to the uncertain and arbitrary impedance characteristics of IIDGs in dynamics/transients
Deep Injective Prior for Inverse Scattering
In electromagnetic inverse scattering, the goal is to reconstruct object
permittivity using scattered waves. While deep learning has shown promise as an
alternative to iterative solvers, it is primarily used in supervised frameworks
which are sensitive to distribution drift of the scattered fields, common in
practice. Moreover, these methods typically provide a single estimate of the
permittivity pattern, which may be inadequate or misleading due to noise and
the ill-posedness of the problem. In this paper, we propose a data-driven
framework for inverse scattering based on deep generative models. Our approach
learns a low-dimensional manifold as a regularizer for recovering target
permittivities. Unlike supervised methods that necessitate both scattered
fields and target permittivities, our method only requires the target
permittivities for training; it can then be used with any experimental setup.
We also introduce a Bayesian framework for approximating the posterior
distribution of the target permittivity, enabling multiple estimates and
uncertainty quantification. Extensive experiments with synthetic and
experimental data demonstrate that our framework outperforms traditional
iterative solvers, particularly for strong scatterers, while achieving
comparable reconstruction quality to state-of-the-art supervised learning
methods like the U-Net.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
Age, growth and maturity of Hilsa shad (Tenualosa ilisha) in northwestern part of the Persian Gulf
In this study age, growth and maturity of Hilsa shad in Khuzestan province were analyzed. 394 number of fishes from marine habitat (Lifeh-Boseif), estuaries (Bahmanshir and Arvand) and rivers (Bahmanshir and Karoon) from February 2014 to September 2014 were collected using commercial fishing with gill net. Total length and wet weight of each fish were measured with precision of 1 cm and 1 gram. Sagittal otoliths were extracted for age determination of the fish. Since the otoliths were fragile, they were sectioned by polishing with sandpapers 800, 1500 and 2000. Then abdominal cavity of each sample were opened for determining sex and maturity stage. Growth parameters were calculated using von Bertalanffy growth function (L_∞=58.365, K=0.26, t0=-0.16). Phi-prime constant was obtained 2.95. Length and age at first maturity were obtained 27.32cm and 2.4 g respectively using logistic model to fit a and b parameters with observed data in spawning season
Rate, ratio and amount of annual discards in commercial trawl net in northwestern part of the Persian Gulf (Khuzestan Coastal Waters)
The main goal of this study was estimating discards of trawl nets in north western part of the Persian Gulf. Data were collected from fishing boats in fishing areas of Khuzestan from October 2011 to September 2012 with collaboration of fishery office. Discard samples include 101 species from 61 families which are 39.5% of commercial catch and 60.4% of non-commercial catches. Rayfish and catfish have been observed in most fishing nets. The average size of bony fishes in discard samples was lower than 15 cm. Total weights of discards was estimated about 1109 tons per year. Total weight of commercial fishes with small size in discards was estimated 2736 tones. The rate and proportion of discards in total catch of trawl was estimated 0.5 and 1.03 respectively. Osteichthyes with 70 species and 50.7% of trawl catch has the highest percentage of discards in trawl nets. High rate of small fishes in commercially important species of discards is probably due to nursery role of Khuzestan coastal waters
Procedural Complications During Early Versus Late Endovascular Treatment in Acute Stroke: Frequency and Clinical Impact
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Endovascular treatment (EVT) in acute ischemic stroke is effective in the late time window in selected patients. However, the frequency and clinical impact of procedural complications in the early versus late time window has received little attention. METHODS: We retrospectively studied all acute ischemic strokes from 2015 to 2019 receiving EVT in the Acute Stroke Registry and Analysis of Lausanne. We compared the procedural EVT complications in the early (<6 hours) versus late (6-24 hours) window and correlated them with short-term clinical outcome. RESULTS: Among 695 acute ischemic strokes receiving EVT (of which 202 were in the late window), 113 (16.3%) had at least one procedural complication. The frequency of each single, and for overall procedural complications was similar for early versus late EVT (16.2% versus 16.3%, Padj=0.90). Procedural complications lead to a significantly less favorable short-term outcome, reflected by the absence of National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale improvement in late EVT (delta-National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale-24 hours, -2.5 versus 2, Padj=0.01). CONCLUSIONS: In this retrospective analysis of consecutive EVT, the frequency of procedural complications was similar for early and late EVT patients but very short-term outcome seemed less favorable in late EVT patients with complications
One-year outcomes from an international study of the Ovation Abdominal Stent Graft System for endovascular aneurysm repair
ObjectiveThis study evaluated 1-year safety and effectiveness outcomes of the United States regulatory trial for the Ovation Abdominal Stent Graft System (TriVascular Inc, Santa Rosa, Calif) for endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs).MethodsThis prospective, multicenter, single-arm trial was conducted at 36 sites in the United States, Germany, and Chile to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Ovation stent graft. From November 2009 to May 2011, 161 patients (88% males; mean age, 73 ± 8 years) with AAAs (mean diameter, 54 ± 9 mm) were treated with the Ovation stent graft. The main body is a modular two-docking limb device with a 14F outer diameter delivery system, active suprarenal fixation, and polymer-filled proximal rings that accommodate the aortic neck for seal. Main inclusion criteria included proximal aortic neck length ≥7 mm, inner neck diameter between 16 and 30 mm, distal iliac landing zones length ≥10 mm, and diameter between 8 and 20 mm. Patients were treated under a common protocol, including clinical and imaging follow-up at discharge, 30 days, 6 months, and annually through 5 years. A Clinical Events Committee adjudicated adverse events, an independent imaging core laboratory analyzed imaging, and a Data Safety and Monitoring Board provided study oversight. Complete 1-year follow-up data were available for this report.ResultsThe Ovation stent graft was implanted successfully in 161 patients (100%), including 69 (42.9%) by percutaneous access. General anesthesia was used in 106 patients (65.8%). Technical success was 100%, and mean procedure time was 110 minutes. Median procedural blood loss was 150 mL, and median hospital stay was 1 day. The 30-day major adverse event rate was 2.5%. At 1 year, AAA-related and all-cause mortality were 0.6% and 2.5%, respectively. Major adverse event and serious adverse event rates through 1 year were 6.2% and 38.5%, respectively. The 1-year treatment success rate was 99.3%. The imaging core laboratory reported no stent graft migration or type I, III, or IV endoleaks. At 1 year, type II endoleaks were identified in 34% of patients, and AAA enlargement was identified in one patient (0.7%). No AAA rupture or conversion to open surgery was reported. AAA-related secondary procedures were performed in 10 patients (6.2%) for 12 findings, including endoleak (six), aortic main body stenosis (three), and iliac limb stenosis or occlusion (three).ConclusionsThe 1-year results of the Ovation Abdominal Stent Graft System demonstrate excellent safety and effectiveness in treatment of patients with AAAs, particularly in patients with challenging anatomic characteristics, including short aortic necks and narrow iliac arteries. Longer-term follow-up is needed
Temporal and spatial distribution of fish larvae in Khur-e-Mussa Channel (Khuzestan-Persian Gulf)
Temporal and spatial distribution of fish larvae population in eastern and western parts of Khure-e-Mussa channel in Khuzestan province (Persian Gulf) was studied during 2007-2008. Monthly samples were collected by 300µm mesh size plankton net during which 9440 larvae were collected. Totally, 22 families were identified including Bregmacerotidae, Callionymidae, Carangidae, Clupeidae, Cepolidae, Cynoglossidae, Gobiidae, Leiognathidae, Mugilidae, Platycephalidae, Scaridae, Sciaenidae, Scatophagidae, Scorpaenidae, Sillaginidae, Soleidae, Sparidae, Stromateidae, Syngnathidae, Engraulidae, Trichiuridae, Triacanthidae.The most frequent families were Gobiidae (22.26 ), Clupeidae (17.61 , and Sparidae (8.77%), respectively. The highest densities of larvae were observed in beginning of spring. Two peak of population was observed. The first one in early spring (April) and the second peak was in mid-summer (August and September). Cluster analysis based on average annual abundance of 12 important families classified stations into three groups with 70% similarity. The results of cluster analysis separated western stations 1, 2 and 3 from others. Higher densities of fish larvae in the western coast of Khur-e-Mussa channel showed that western parts better for nursery grounds for the studied fish larvae
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