1,179 research outputs found

    Equilibrium Search with Multiple Attributes and the Impact of Equal Opportunities for Women

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    This paper considers equilibrium two-sided search with ex ante heterogeneous agents, vectors of attributes, and idiosyncratic match draws. The analysis applies to a large class of models, from the nontransferable utility case to the collective household model with bargaining, for which transferable utility is a special case. The approach is powerful for it identifies a simple algorithm that, in our numerical application, is found to rapidly converge to equilibrium. Our application explores the impact of equal opportunities for women in the labor market on female match incentives and the timing of marriage

    Equilibrium Search with Multiple Attributes and the Impact of Equal Opportunities for Women

    Get PDF
    This paper considers equilibrium two-sided search with ex ante heterogeneous agents, vectors of attributes, and idiosyncratic match draws. The analysis applies to a large class of models, from the nontransferable utility case to the collective household model with bargaining, for which transferable utility is a special case. The approach is powerful for it identifies a simple algorithm that, in our numerical application, is found to rapidly converge to equilibrium. Our application explores the impact of equal opportunities for women in the labor market on female match incentives and the timing of marriage

    cfd optimization of cpc solar collectors

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    Abstract The use of solar energy for industrial purpose at medium-low temperature is receiving attention. As a matter of fact, this temperature range, usually between 80-200°C, requires low cost devices to convert solar energy into useful heat. In particular, the use of CPCs collectors has been suggested in literature because they can be operated without the use of a tracking system, at least within certain limits. The thermal losses of these devices are often reduced by using an evacuated pipe, but this solution increases the manufacturing costs and reduces the reliability and the optical efficiency of the receiver. A series of alternative methods for the thermal losses reduction has been proposed in this paper, for working temperature up to 200°C. Their effectiveness was evaluated by means of a previously validated CFD model. A cylindrical receiver and a concentration ratio of 2 were taken into account. The results were analyzed in terms of temperature contours and thermal efficiency. In particular, the optical efficiency was focused as a key parameter in the performances of a CPC. As conclusion, it was found that a proper arrangement of the absorber with a baffle may entail an improvement of the thermal efficiency without significantly increasing the complexity of the system

    Impact and Compression-After-Impact Performance of a Thin Z-Pinned Composite Laminate

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    Impact and compression-after-impact (CAI) tests were carried out on [02/ ± 45]s carbon/epoxy samples to characterize the effect of z-pinning on the delamination resistance and damage tolerance properties of the laminate. Unpinned and z-pinned samples were subjected to impacts between 2 and 36 J to produce damage conditions that extend from barely visible impact damage (BVID) to complete penetration. The damage induced by impact and the damage modes leading to ultimate CAI failure were examined by Xradiography and by direct observations of the sample faces during CAI loading. The analyses indicate that the role of z-pins on the impact and CAI response of the laminate is dependent on the size and features of the damage. Z-pins do not modify the structural response to impact of the laminate, but they are effective in reducing the extent of damage for impact energies above a threshold value. Z-pinning is also effective in improving the CAI strength of the laminate for impact energies above this threshold value, even though it degrades the residual compressive strength for lower impact energies. Reductions in impact delamination size of up to 50% and improvements in CAI strength of about 20% were achieved by z-pinning for highenergy impacts. The mechanisms by which the z-pins affect the CAI response of the samples are illustrated and examined in detail for different impact damage severities

    an experimental and numerical analysis of the performances of a wankel steam expander

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    Abstract In the last decades, the energy market increased its interest towards the smart grids and electrically isolated systems. These systems utilize small size power generators in which volumetric expanders may be employed for a wide range of operative conditions, because of their robustness and reliability. In this work a study on a volumetric expander based on the Wankel mechanism was carried out. The aim of this study was to develop a lumped parameters numerical model able to predict the brake effective torque and working fluid consumption of the expander. This model was validated by comparison with experimental results obtained using steam as working fluid. This model allowed to trace the trends of mechanical and thermal losses versus rotating speed and inlet pressure. The experimental results encouraged the need for a further development of this expander, and showed the capability of the numerical model to predict the effective performances of the device

    Opportunities for Women ∗

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    Economics, University of Essex, for private circulation to interested readers. They often represent preliminary reports on work in progress and should therefore be neither quoted nor referred to in published work without the written consent of the author. Equilibrium Search and the Impact of Equa

    Synthesis and antibacterial effects of cobalt–cellulose magnetic nanocomposites

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    © The Royal Society of Chemistry. Green synthesis is employed to prepare cobalt/cellulose nanocomposites with cubic (α-cobalt) cobalt as a main component with antibacterial and magnetic properties. An in situ reduction of aqueous solutions of cobalt ions on a model cellulose substrate surface using hydrogen gas affords spherical, cellulose-stabilised cobalt nanoclusters with magnetic properties and an average diameter of 7 nm that are distributed evenly over the surface of the cellulose fibres. These cobalt/cellulose nanocomposites exhibit good antibacterial action against opportunistic pathogens both Gram-positive (S. aureus) and Gram-negative (E. coli, A. baumannii and P. aeruginosa), with zones of inhibition up to 15 mm, thereby encouraging the deployment of these advanced materials for the treatment of wastewater or within medical dressings. This method of preparation is compared with the analogous in situ reduction of cobalt ions on a cellulose surface using sodium borohydride as reducing agent

    HIV-1 Tat alters neuronal intrinsic excitability

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    Objective: In HIV+ individuals, the virus enters the central nervous system and invades innate immune cells, producing important changes that result in neurological deficits. We aimed to determine whether HIV plays a direct role in neuronal excitability. Of the HIV peptides, Tat is secreted and acts in other cells. In order to examine whether the HIV Tat can modify neuronal excitability, we exposed primary murine hippocampal neurons to that peptide, and tested its effects on the intrinsic membrane properties, 4 and 24 h after exposure. Results: The exposure of hippocampal pyramidal neurons to Tat for 4 h did not alter intrinsic membrane properties. However, we found a strong increase in intrinsic excitability, characterized by increase of the slope (Gain) of the input-output function, in cells treated with Tat for 24 h. Nevertheless, Tat treatment for 24 h did not alter the resting membrane potential, input resistance, rheobase and action potential threshold. Thus, neuronal adaptability to Tat exposure for 24 h is not applicable to basic neuronal properties. A restricted but significant effect on coupling the inputs to the outputs may have implications to our knowledge of Tat biophysical firing capability, and its involvement in neuronal hyperexcitability in neuroHIV

    experimental results of a wankel type expander fuelled by compressed air and saturated steam

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    Abstract The work presented in this paper deals with the experimental tests which were carried out on a prototype of a rotary volumetric expansion device based on the Wankel mechanism. This expansion device is addressed to small size power plants (in the range 5-50 kW) for distributed micro-generation using various sources of thermal energy, such as sun, biomass and waste heat. The prototype was built using an internal combustion Wankel engine, employing the shaft, the rotor, the bearings, while the statoric case was newly built on the design of the University of Pisa. Firstly, the tests were carried out with the compressed air produced by a compressor, then the prototype was fed with the saturated steam produced by a biomass boiler. In the first case, the exhaust back-pressure was the atmospheric one, in the second case vacuum conditions were employed thanks to a condenser. The inlet pressure was between 4 and 8 bar. The results showed the capability of the prototype to rotate regularly at 3000 rpm, and allowed the validation of numerical models presented in previous papers. Moreover, the expansion device showed the capability of developing the expected power

    Prenatal and childhood adverse life events, inflammation and depressive symptoms across adolescence

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    Background No study has investigated the role of inflammation in explaining the association between early exposures to adverse life events and depressive symptoms in adolescence. Method Using data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, we tested if inflammatory markers [serum C-reactive protein (CRP) and interleukin 6 (IL-6)] at age 9 years mediate the association between adverse life events, measured separately for the prenatal (since the beginning of pregnancy) and the childhood (ages 0–9 years) periods, and the development of depressive symptoms at ages 10–17 years. Data (n = 4,263) were analyzed using mediation analysis in a latent growth curve modeling framework. Results Depressive symptoms at the beginning of adolescence (age 10) were associated with the number of prenatal events, the number of events around birth and the increase in events over time in childhood (ages 0–9), even after adjustment for confounders. IL-6 partially mediated the association between increasing exposure to events over time in childhood and depressive symptoms at the beginning of adolescence. IL-6 did not mediate any other association between events and symptoms. There was no evidence for mediation by CRP, which was generally unrelated to exposure to events. Limitations The small size of the mediation effect and the robust direct effects of events prenatally and around birth suggest there are multiple routes from early stressors to adolescent depression. Conclusions In the general adolescent population, increasing exposure to psychosocial stressors over time during childhood is associated with the early onset of depressive symptoms, partly via increasing levels of plasma IL-6
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