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Potential of short wavelength laser ablation of organic materials
Although the literature contains several articles on UV laser ablation of synthetic polymers [1] and human tissue for surgical applications, to our knowledge there is no published record on organic geochemical applications for UV laser pyrolysis–gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (LA-GC-MS). In this study we have demonstrated the use of a 213 nm UV laser beam for ablating kerogens and organic rich rocks to liberate and analyse hydrocarbon signatures and compared the results against IR laser pyrolysis and traditional Py-GC-MS. It is possible to equate laser wavelength to electron volts where 1064 nm (IR) = 1.2 eV and 213 nm (UV) = 5.8 eV. Most chemical bonds have an energy between 2-4 eV and C-C bonds are ~3.6 eV. Organic materials can absorb radiation from a UV laser and chemical bonds can be cleaved cleanly by complex photochemical pathways by a single photon [2]. Ablation occurs with almost no heating of the sample and hence the term laser ablation instead of pyrolysis. Visible or IR lasers have insufficient energy to break bonds with a single photon this results in the heating of sample by the absobtion of energy into the vibrational modes of the molecule which can then result in pyrolysis. A solvent-extracted kerogen consisting mainly of higher plant material (Brownie Butte, Montanna, ~ 70 Ma) was used for initial experiments. A number of other samples have also been analysed. Laser ablation work was performed off-line in a static helium cell followed by solvent extraction of the laser cell. Separate analysis of the same samples using a more traditional flash pyrolysis approach was performed with a CDS pyroprobe and IR laser pyrolysis [3] for comparative purposes. As can be seen in Fig 1 UV laser ablation is able to liberate relatively high molecular weight fragments with no alkenes or other pyrolysis artefacts detected. SEM images of ablation pits indicate there is no obvious thermal alteration of the sample. The results of the pyrolysis techniques (on-line and IR laser pyrolysis) are similar and display a number of artefacts related to the pyrolysis process. Laser ablation of a number of samples has also shown that the distributions of biomarkers are comparable with the solvent extracts. Product yields although not quantified appear to be much higher than traditional pyrolysis technique
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Is UV laser ablation a suitable tool for geochemical analysis of organic rich source materials?
Abstract not available
Alice falls into a black hole: Entanglement in non-inertial frames
Two observers determine the entanglement between two free bosonic modes by
each detecting one of the modes and observing the correlations between their
measurements. We show that a state which is maximally entangled in an inertial
frame becomes less entangled if the observers are relatively accelerated. This
phenomenon, which is a consequence of the Unruh effect, shows that entanglement
is an observer-dependent quantity in non-inertial frames. In the high
acceleration limit, our results can be applied to a non-accelerated observer
falling into a black hole while the accelerated one barely escapes. If the
observer escapes with infinite acceleration, the state's distillable
entanglement vanishes.Comment: I.F-S published before with maiden name Fuentes-Guridi Replaced with
published version. Phys. Rev. Lett. in pres
Pd/Ti electrocatalyst in technological significance reactions
New materials operating as future electrocatalysts into fuel cells or in environmental remediation processes are continuously under research. Here we studied palladium modified electrodes, such as Pd/Ti and Pd/GC (glassy carbon), which are electrochemically built and used in chromate detection, in oxygen reduction and alcohols oxidation reaction. The palladium material electrodeposited at constant potential was characterized by X-ray diffraction, and scanning electron microscopy. The response of Pd/Ti nanoelectrodes, by oxygen reduction was observed in alkaline and acid supporting electrolytes. The diffusion coefficient of 2 10-5 cm2/s with a transference of 4e -in 0.1M H2SO4 solution was calculated. A higher coefficient value in 0.05 M NaOH was evaluated, because Ti substrate is also active in oxygen reduction in alkaline media. The reduction of Cr(VI) with Pd/Ti electrode proceeds at +0.58 V vs Ag/AgCl in H2SO4 0.1M, with a diffusion coefficient of 2.210-5 0.01 cm2/s and a linear range between 0.019 -0.69 mM Cr(VI). The lowest sensitivity 0.5 M Cr(VI) was determined with Pd/Ti electrode in the range permissible by drinking water of The oxidation of alcohol molecules in alkaline environment showed by Tafel curves, the activity order on Pd/Ti electrocatalyts is ethanoln-propanol >ethylene glycol. The calibration curve obtained by anodic peak current density of cyclic voltammetries upon an increasing alcohol concentration (3 to 90 mM alcohol) in NaOH 0.05 M, permitted to evaluate an activity of PdTi(+0.1V)PdTi(-0.3V)>PdTi(-0.9V). The performance of Pd/Ti electrocatalysts was better when compared with a modified Pd/GC electrocatalyst, in the studied reactions.Fil: Aguirre, María del Carmen. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Córdoba. Instituto de Física "Enrique Gaviola"; ArgentinaFil: Fuentes, A. S.. Universidad Nacional de Catamarca. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; ArgentinaFil: Filippin, A. F.. Universidad Nacional de Catamarca. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentin
History of degenerative spondylolisthesis: From anatomical description to surgical management
This review of the historical medical literature aimed at understanding the evolution of surgical management of degenerative spondylolisthesis over time. The Medic@, IndexCat and Gallica historical databases and PubMed and Embase medical databases were used, with several search-terms, exploring the years 1700-2018. Data from anatomical, biomechanical, pathophysiological and surgical studies were compiled. In total, 150 documents were obtained, dating from 1782 to 2018: 139 from PubMed, 1 from Medic@, 7 from IndexCat, and 3 from Gallica. The review thus ranges in time from (1) description of the first clinical cases by several authors in Europe (1782), (2) the identification of a distinct entity by MacNab (1963), and (3) surgical management by the emerging discipline of minimally invasive spine surgery, to its subsequent evolution up to the present day. Spondylolisthesis is a frequent condition potentially responsible for a variety of functional impairments. Understanding and surgical management have progressed since the 20th century. Historically, the first descriptions of treatments concerned only spondylolisthesis associated with spondylolysis, especially in young adults. More recently, there has been progress in the understanding of the disease in elderly people, with the recognition of degenerative spondylolisthesis. New technologies and surgical techniques, aided by advances in supportive care, now provide spine surgeons with powerful treatment tools. Better knowledge of the evolution of surgery throughout history should enable better understanding of current approaches and concepts for treating degenerative spondylolisthesis
System Integration Issues of DC to DC converters in the sLHC Trackers
The upgrade of the trackers at the sLHC experiments requires implementing new powering schemes that will provide an increased power density with reduced losses and material budget. A scheme based on buck and switched capacitors DC to DC converters has been proposed as an optimal solution. The buck converter is based on a power ASIC, connected to a custom made air core inductor. The arrangement of the parts and the board layout of the power module are designed to minimize the emissions of EMI in a compact volume, enabling its integration on the tracker modules and staves
The Magnetic Electron Ion Spectrometer (MagEIS) Instruments Aboard the Radiation Belt Storm Probes (RBSP) Spacecraft
This paper describes the Magnetic Electron Ion Spectrometer (MagEIS) instruments aboard the RBSP spacecraft from an instrumentation and engineering point of view. There are four magnetic spectrometers aboard each of the two spacecraft, one low-energy unit (20–240 keV), two medium-energy units (80–1200 keV), and a high-energy unit (800–4800 keV). The high unit also contains a proton telescope (55 keV–20 MeV). The magnetic spectrometers focus electrons within a selected energy pass band upon a focal plane of several silicon detectors where pulse-height analysis is used to determine if the energy of the incident electron is appropriate for the electron momentum selected by the magnet. Thus each event is a two-parameter analysis, an approach leading to a greatly reduced background. The physics of these instruments are described in detail followed by the engineering implementation. The data outputs are described, and examples of the calibration results and early flight data presented
Entanglement of Dirac fields in non-inertial frames
We analyze the entanglement between two modes of a free Dirac field as seen
by two relatively accelerated parties. The entanglement is degraded by the
Unruh effect and asymptotically reaches a non-vanishing minimum value in the
infinite acceleration limit. This means that the state always remains entangled
to a degree and can be used in quantum information tasks, such as
teleportation, between parties in relative uniform acceleration. We analyze our
results from the point of view afforded by the phenomenon of entanglement
sharing and in terms of recent results in the area of multi-qubit
complementarity.Comment: 15 pages, with 8 figures (Mar 2006); accepted to Physical Review A,
July 2006 - slightly revise
Polarizational stopping power of heavy-ion diclusters in two-dimensional electron liquids
The in-plane polarizational stopping power of heavy-ion diclusters in a
two-dimensional strongly coupled electron liquid is studied. Analytical
expressions for the stopping power of both fast and slow projectiles are
derived. To go beyond the random-phase approximation we make use of the inverse
dielectric function obtained by means of the method of moments and some recent
analytical expressions for the static local-field correction factor.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. Published in Physical Review B
http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v75/e11510
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