83 research outputs found
Aerosol growth in CO2 absorption with MEA, modelling and comparison with experimental results
A new and improved aerosol model has been developed and tested against experimental data. An e-NRTL equilibrium model for MEA was extended to cover sulphuric acid containing droplets and validated against new eboulliometer data in this work. The droplet model predicts emissions without demister installed in the absorber, within ± 20% and with demister, 30-80% of the measured emissions. The model predicts well the change in emissions from NG-based to coal-based exhaust. Under conditions reported in this work, the droplet number concentration was found to have a small effect on predicted emissions because of more MEA gas-phase depletion with high droplet concentrations and slower growth. The effects counteract each other. With significant MEA depletion in the gas phase, the emissions are largely determined by the mass transfer rate from the bulk liquid. The initial droplet sulphuric acid concentration had a minor effect on the outlet droplet size distribution. The effect on MEA emissions was significant: the emissions went up with increased initial sulphuric acid concentration. The effect of sulphuric acid was stronger for low inlet gas CO2 concentration (NG) than for coal-based exhaust. The increase in emissions is believed to be caused by the increase in overall driving force for MEA between bulk liquid phase and droplets. The log-normal model does not catch small inlet droplet sizes in the range below 20-30nm. These droplet sizes hardly grow in the absorber and water wash and in the total emissions, these droplets have a negligible impact on emissions.publishedVersio
Cohesive properties of alkali halides
We calculate cohesive properties of LiF, NaF, KF, LiCl, NaCl, and KCl with
ab-initio quantum chemical methods. The coupled-cluster approach is used to
correct the Hartree-Fock crystal results for correlations and to systematically
improve cohesive energies, lattice constants and bulk moduli. After inclusion
of correlations, we recover 95-98 % of the total cohesive energies. The lattice
constants deviate from experiment by at most 1.1 %, bulk moduli by at most 8 %.
We also find good agreement for spectroscopic properties of the corresponding
diatomic molecules.Comment: LaTeX, 10 pages, 1 figure, accepted by Phys. Rev.
Proposal of an extended t-J Hamiltonian for high-Tc cuprates from ab initio calculations on embedded clusters
A series of accurate ab initio calculations on Cu_pO-q finite clusters,
properly embedded on the Madelung potential of the infinite lattice, have been
performed in order to determine the local effective interactions in the CuO_2
planes of La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4 compounds. The values of the first-neighbor
interactions, magnetic coupling (J_{NN}=125 meV) and hopping integral
(t_{NN}=-555 meV), have been confirmed. Important additional effects are
evidenced, concerning essentially the second-neighbor hopping integral
t_{NNN}=+110meV, the displacement of a singlet toward an adjacent colinear
hole, h_{SD}^{abc}=-80 meV, a non-negligible hole-hole repulsion
V_{NN}-V_{NNN}=0.8 eV and a strong anisotropic effect of the presence of an
adjacent hole on the values of the first-neighbor interactions. The dependence
of J_{NN} and t_{NN} on the position of neighbor hole(s) has been rationalized
from the two-band model and checked from a series of additional ab initio
calculations. An extended t-J model Hamiltonian has been proposed on the basis
of these results. It is argued that the here-proposed three-body effects may
play a role in the charge/spin separation observed in these compounds, that is,
in the formation and dynamic of stripes.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Members of the autophagy class III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase complex I interact with GABARAP and GABARAPL1 via LIR motifs
Autophagosome formation depends on a carefully orchestrated interplay between membraneassociated protein complexes. Initiation of macroautophagy/autophagy is mediated by the ULK1 (unc51 like autophagy activating kinase 1) protein kinase complex and the autophagy-specific class III
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase complex I (PtdIns3K-C1). The latter contains PIK3C3/VPS34, PIK3R4/
VPS15, BECN1/Beclin 1 and ATG14 and phosphorylates phosphatidylinositol to generate phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PtdIns3P). Here, we show that PIK3C3, BECN1 and ATG14 contain functional LIR
motifs and interact with the Atg8-family proteins with a preference for GABARAP and GABARAPL1. High
resolution crystal structures of the functional LIR motifs of these core components of PtdIns3K-C1were
obtained. Variation in hydrophobic pocket 2 (HP2) may explain the specificity for the GABARAP family.
Mutation of the LIR motif in ATG14 did not prevent formation of the PtdIns3K-C1 complex, but blocked
colocalization with MAP1LC3B/LC3B and impaired mitophagy. The ULK-mediated phosphorylation of
S29 in ATG14 was strongly dependent on a functional LIR motif in ATG14. GABARAP-preferring LIR
motifs in PIK3C3, BECN1 and ATG14 may, via coincidence detection, contribute to scaffolding of
PtdIns3K-C1 on membranes for efficient autophagosome formation
Human immunodeficiency virus and AIDS and other important predictors of maternal mortality in Mulago Hospital Complex Kampala Uganda
BACKGROUND: Women with severe maternal morbidity are at high risk of dying. Quality and prompt management and sometimes luck have been suggested to reduce on the risk of dying. The objective of the study was to identify the direct and indirect causes of severe maternal morbidity, predictors of progression from severe maternal morbidity to maternal mortality in Mulago hospital, Kampala, Uganda. METHODS: This was a longitudinal follow up study at the Mulago hospital's Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. Participants were 499 with severe maternal morbidity admitted in Mulago hospital between 15th November 2001 and 30th November 2002 were identified, recruited and followed up until discharge or death. Potential prognostic factors were HIV status and CD4 cell counts, socio demographic characteristics, medical and gynaecological history, past and present obstetric history and intra- partum and postnatal care. RESULTS: Severe pre eclampsia/eclampsia, obstructed labour and ruptured uterus, severe post partum haemorrhage, severe abruptio and placenta praevia, puerperal sepsis, post abortal sepsis and severe anaemia were the causes for the hospitalization of 499 mothers. The mortality incidence rate was 8% (n = 39), maternal mortality ratio of 7815/100,000 live births and the ratio of severe maternal morbidity to mortality was 12.8:1.The independent predictors of maternal mortality were HIV/AIDS (OR 5.1 95% CI 2-12.8), non attendance of antenatal care (OR 4.0, 95% CI 1.3-9.2), non use of oxytocics (OR 4.0, 95% CI 1.7-9.7), lack of essential drugs (OR 3.6, 95% CI 1.1-11.3) and non availability of blood for transfusion (OR 53.7, 95% CI (15.7-183.9) and delivery of amale baby (OR 4.0, 95% CI 1.6-10.1). CONCLUSION: The predictors of progression from severe maternal morbidity to mortality were: residing far from hospital, low socio economic status, non attendance of antenatal care, poor intrapartum care, and HIV/AIDS.There is need to improve on the referral system, economic empowerment of women and to offer comprehensive emergency obstetric care so as to reduce the maternal morbidity and mortality in our community
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