211 research outputs found
Asymmetric Organocatalysis-A Powerful Technology Platform for Academia and Industry: Pregabalin as a Case Study
Enantioselective organocatalysis has quickly established itself as the third pillar of asymmetric catalysis. It is a powerful technology platform, and it has a tremendous impact in both academic and industrial settings. By focusing on pregabalin, as a case study, this Perspective aims to show how a process amenable to industry of a simple chiral molecule can be tackled in several different ways using organocatalysis
The Palermo (Sicily) seismic cluster of September 2002 in the seismotectonic framework of the Tyrrhenian Sea-Sicily border area
The northern coast of Sicily and its offshore area represent a hinge zone between a sector of the Tyrrhenian Basin, characterized by the strongest crustal thinning, and the sector of the Sicilian belt which has emerged. This hinge zone is part of a wider W-E trending right-lateral shear zone, which has been affecting the Maghrebian Chain units since the Pliocene. Seismological and structural data have been used to evaluate the seismotectonic behavior of the area investigated here. Seismological analysis was performed on a data set of about 2100 seismic
events which occurred between January 1988 and October 2002 in the Southern Tyrrhenian Sea. This paper focuses in particular on a set of data relating to the period from 6th September 2002, including both the main shock and about 540 aftershocks of the Palermo seismic sequence. The distribution of the hypocenters revealed
the presence of two main seismogenic zones. The events of the easternmost zone may be related to the Ionian lithospheric slab diving beneath the Calabrian Arc. The seismicity associated with the westernmost zone is closely clustered around a sub-horizontal regression plane contained within the thinned Southern Tyrrhenian crust, hence suggesting that this seismogenic zone is strictly connected to the deformation field active within the hinge zone. On the basis of both structural and seismological data, the brittle deformation pattern is characterized by high-angle faults, mainly represented by transcurrent synthetic right-lateral and antithetic left-lateral systems, producing both restraining/uplifting and releasing/subsiding zones which accommodate strains developing in response to the current stress field (characterized by a maximum axis trending NW-SE) which has been active in
the area since the Pliocene. The cluster of the seismic sequence which started with the 6th September 2002's main shock is located within the hinge zone. The distribution of the hypocenters relative to this sequence emphasizes the presence of a high-angle NE-SW-oriented deformation belt within which several shear surfaces are considered to be found sub-parallel to that established for the main shock. The kinematics of all these structures is consistent with a compressive right-lateral focal mechanism
The Palermo (Sicily) seismic cluster of September 2002, in the seismotectonic framework of the Tyrrhenian Sea-Sicily border area
The northern coast of Sicily and its offshore area represent a hinge zone between a sector of the Tyrrhenian
Basin, characterized by the strongest crustal thinning, and the sector of the Sicilian belt which has emerged. This
hinge zone is part of a wider W-E trending right-lateral shear zone, which has been affecting the Maghrebian
Chain units since the Pliocene. Seismological and structural data have been used to evaluate the seismotectonic
behavior of the area investigated here. Seismological analysis was performed on a data set of about 2100 seismic
events which occurred between January 1988 and October 2002 in the Southern Tyrrhenian Sea. This paper
focuses in particular on a set of data relating to the period from 6th September 2002, including both the main
shock and about 540 aftershocks of the Palermo seismic sequence. The distribution of the hypocenters revealed
the presence of two main seismogenic zones. The events of the easternmost zone may be related to the Ionian
lithospheric slab diving beneath the Calabrian Arc. The seismicity associated with the westernmost zone is closely
clustered around a sub-horizontal regression plane contained within the thinned Southern Tyrrhenian crust,
hence suggesting that this seismogenic zone is strictly connected to the deformation field active within the hinge
zone. On the basis of both structural and seismological data, the brittle deformation pattern is characterized by
high-angle faults, mainly represented by transcurrent synthetic right-lateral and antithetic left-lateral systems,
producing both restraining/uplifting and releasing/subsiding zones which accommodate strains developing in response
to the current stress field (characterized by a maximum axis trending NW-SE) which has been active in
the area since the Pliocene. The cluster of the seismic sequence which started with the 6th September 2002's
main shock is located within the hinge zone. The distribution of the hypocenters relative to this sequence emphasizes
the presence of a high-angle NE-SW-oriented deformation belt within which several shear surfaces are
considered to be found sub-parallel to that established for the main shock. The kinematics of all these structures
is consistent with a compressive right-lateral focal mechanism
Changes Induced by Exposure of the Human Lung to Glass Fiber–Reinforced Plastic
The inhalation of glass dusts mixed in resin, generally known as glass fiber–reinforced plastic (GRP), represents a little-studied occupational hazard. The few studies performed have highlighted nonspecific lung disorders in animals and in humans. In the present study we evaluated the alteration of the respiratory system and the pathogenic mechanisms causing the changes in a group of working men employed in different GRP processing operations and exposed to production dusts. The study was conducted on a sample of 29 male subjects whose mean age was 37 years and mean length of service 11 years. All of the subjects were submitted to a clinical check-up, basic tests, and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL); microscopic studies and biochemical analysis were performed on the BAL fluid. Tests of respiratory function showed a large number of obstructive syndromes; scanning electron microscopy highlighted qualitative and quantitative alterations of the alveolar macrophages; and transmission electron microscopy revealed the presence of electron-dense cytoplasmatic inclusions indicating intense and active phlogosis (external inflammation). Biochemical analyses highlighted an increase in protein content associated with alterations of the lung oxidant/antioxidant homeostasis. Inhalation of GRP, independent of environmental concentration, causes alterations of the cellular and humoral components of pulmonary interstitium; these alterations are identified microscopically as acute alveolitis
Observation of Dirac plasmons in a topological insulator
Plasmons are the quantized collective oscillations of electrons in metals and
doped semiconductors. The plasmons of ordinary, massive electrons are since a
long time basic ingredients of research in plasmonics and in optical
metamaterials. Plasmons of massless Dirac electrons were instead recently
observed in a purely two-dimensional electron system (2DEG)like graphene, and
their properties are promising for new tunable plasmonic metamaterials in the
terahertz and the mid-infrared frequency range. Dirac quasi-particles are known
to exist also in the two-dimensional electron gas which forms at the surface of
topological insulators due to a strong spin-orbit interaction. Therefore,one
may look for their collective excitations by using infrared spectroscopy. Here
we first report evidence of plasmonic excitations in a topological insulator
(Bi2Se3), that was engineered in thin micro-ribbon arrays of different width W
and period 2W to select suitable values of the plasmon wavevector k. Their
lineshape was found to be extremely robust vs. temperature between 6 and 300 K,
as one may expect for the excitations of topological carriers. Moreover, by
changing W and measuring in the terahertz range the plasmonic frequency vP vs.
k we could show, without using any fitting parameter, that the dispersion curve
is in quantitative agreement with that predicted for Dirac plasmons.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, published in Nature Nanotechnology (2013
Twenty years of experience in juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma (JNA) preoperative endovascular embolization: An effective procedure with a low complications rate
Juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma (JNA) is a benign tumor of the nasal cavity that predominantly affects young boys. Surgical removal remains the gold standard for the management of this disease. Preoperative intra-arterial embolization (PIAE) is useful for reductions in intraoperative blood loss and surgical complications. In our series of 79 patients who underwent preoperative embolization from 1999 to 2020, demographics, procedural aspects, surgical management and follow-up outcome were analyzed. Embolization was performed in a similar fashion for all patients, with a superselective microcatheterization of external carotid artery (ECA) feeders and an injection of polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) particles, followed, in some cases, by the deployment of coils. Procedural success was reached in 100% of cases, with no complications such as bleeding or thromboembolic occlusion, and surgical intraoperative blood loss was significantly decreased. In conclusion, PIAE is a safe and effective technique in JNA treatment, minimizing intraoperative bleeding
Mechanical thrombectomy in patients with proximal occlusions and low NIHSS: Results from a large prospective registry
Background: Mechanical thrombectomy is now standard of care for treatment of acute ischemic stroke secondary to large vessel occlusion in the setting of high NIHSS. We analysed a large nationwide registry focusing on patients with large vessel occlusion and low NIHSS on admission to evaluate the efficacy and safety of thrombectomy in this patient population Methods: 2826 patients treated with mechanical thrombectomy were included in a multicentre registry from January 1, 2011 to December 31, 2015. We included patients with large vessel occlusion and NIHSS ≤ 6 on admission. Baseline characteristics, imaging, clinical outcome, procedure adverse events and positive and negative outcome predictors were analysed. Results: 134 patients were included. 90/134 had an anterior circulation and 44 a posterior circulation stroke. One patient died before treatment. Successful revascularization (mTICI 2b-3) was achieved in 73.7% (98/133) of the patients. Intraprocedural adverse event was observed in 3% (4/133) of cases. Symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage rate was 5.3% (7/133). At three months, 70.9% (95/134) of the patients had mRS score 0-2, 15.7% (21/134) mRS 3-5 and 13.4% (18/134) mRS 6. Age and successful recanalization were significant predictors of a good clinical outcome on both univariate (p= 0.005 and p=0.007) and multivariable (p=0.0018 and p=0.009 [nat log]) analysis. Absence of vessel recanalization and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage were independent predictors of poor outcome (p=0.021). Conclusions: Our study suggests that patients with large vessel occlusion and low NIHSS score on admission can benefit from mechanical thrombectomy. Randomized trials are warranted
Overview of Plasma Lens Experiments and Recent Results at SPARC_LAB
Beam injection and extraction from a plasma module is still one of the
crucial aspects to solve in order to produce high quality electron beams with a
plasma accelerator. Proper matching conditions require to focus the incoming
high brightness beam down to few microns size and to capture a high divergent
beam at the exit without loss of beam quality. Plasma-based lenses have proven
to provide focusing gradients of the order of kT/m with radially symmetric
focusing thus promising compact and affordable alternative to permanent magnets
in the design of transport lines. In this paper an overview of recent
experiments and future perspectives of plasma lenses is reported
Coherent control of orbital wavefunctions in the quantum spin liquid
Resonant driving of electronic transitions with coherent laser sources
creates quantum coherent superpositions of the involved electronic states. Most
time-resolved studies have focused on gases or isolated subsystems embedded in
insulating solids, aiming for applications in quantum information. Here, we
demonstrate coherent control of orbital wavefunctions in pyrochlore
, which forms an interacting spin liquid ground state. We
show that resonant excitation with a strong THz pulse creates a coherent
superposition of the lowest energy Tb 4f states before the magnetic
interactions eventually dephase them. The coherence manifests itself as a
macroscopic oscillating magnetic dipole, which is detected by ultrafast
resonant x-ray diffraction. The induced quantum coherence demonstrates coherent
control of orbital wave functions, a new tool for the ultrafast manipulation
and investigation of quantum materials
Terahertz displacive excitation of a coherent Raman-active phonon in V2O3
Nonlinear processes involving frequency-mixing of light fields set the basis for ultrafast coherent spectroscopy of collective modes in solids. In certain semimetals and semiconductors, generation of coherent phonon modes can occur by a displacive force on the lattice at the difference-frequency mixing of a laser pulse excitation on the electronic system. Here, as a low-frequency counterpart of this process, we demonstrate that coherent phonon excitations can be induced by the sum-frequency components of an intense terahertz light field, coupled to intraband electronic transitions. This nonlinear process leads to charge-coupled coherent dynamics of Raman-active phonon modes in the strongly correlated metal V2O3. Our results show an alternative up-conversion pathway for the optical control of Raman-active modes in solids mediated by terahertz-driven electronic excitation
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