2,730 research outputs found
A new high entropy alloy brazing filler metal design for joining skutterudite thermoelectrics to copper
A new High Entropy Alloy (HEA) in the ZnGaCu-(AuSn) system was designed to join skutterudite thermoelectrics (CoSb2.75Sn0.05Te0.20), with a diffusion barrier of Ni applied, to Cu. Such a joint could be part of a device for thermal energy recovery within automotive exhaust systems. A rapid large-scale screening calculation technique based on Python programming has been introduced to conduct the HEA selection process, resulting in a series of alloys, which have been experimentally verified. It is demonstrated that a particular ZnGaCu-(AuSn) HEA alloy can join Ni and Cu successfully; a good joint is formed, and the average electrical contact resistance of the interfaces after joining is promising at room temperature, which shows that it has the potential to improve on the existing fillers used in such applications. The alloy design methodology used here suggests a potential efficient route to design new filler metals for a wide array of applications in which existing filler metals are not suitable
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Interplay between chromosomal architecture and termination of DNA replication in bacteria
Copyright © 2023 Goodall, Warecka, Hawkins and Rudolph. Faithful transmission of the genome from one generation to the next is key to life in all cellular organisms. In the majority of bacteria, the genome is comprised of a single circular chromosome that is normally replicated from a single origin, though additional genetic information may be encoded within much smaller extrachromosomal elements called plasmids. By contrast, the genome of a eukaryote is distributed across multiple linear chromosomes, each of which is replicated from multiple origins. The genomes of archaeal species are circular, but are predominantly replicated from multiple origins. In all three cases, replication is bidirectional and terminates when converging replication fork complexes merge and ‘fuse’ as replication of the chromosomal DNA is completed. While the mechanics of replication initiation are quite well understood, exactly what happens during termination is far from clear, although studies in bacterial and eukaryotic models over recent years have started to provide some insight. Bacterial models with a circular chromosome and a single bidirectional origin offer the distinct advantage that there is normally just one fusion event between two replication fork complexes as synthesis terminates. Moreover, whereas termination of replication appears to happen in many bacteria wherever forks happen to meet, termination in some bacterial species, including the well-studied bacteria Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis, is more restrictive and confined to a ‘replication fork trap’ region, making termination even more tractable. This region is defined by multiple genomic terminator (ter) sites, which, if bound by specific terminator proteins, form unidirectional fork barriers. In this review we discuss a range of experimental results highlighting how the fork fusion process can trigger significant pathologies that interfere with the successful conclusion of DNA replication, how these pathologies might be resolved in bacteria without a fork trap system and how the acquisition of a fork trap might have provided an alternative and cleaner solution, thus explaining why in bacterial species that have acquired a fork trap system, this system is remarkably well maintained. Finally, we consider how eukaryotic cells can cope with a much-increased number of termination events.The work was supported by Research Grant BB/N014995/1 from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council to CR and MH, and Research Grant BB/W000393/1 from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council to CR
Improving the reliability and availability of railway track switching by analysing historical failure data and introducing functionally redundant subsystems
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Sage under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Track switches are safety critical assets that not only provide flexibility to rail networks but also present single points of failure. Switch failures within dense-traffic passenger rail systems cause a disproportionate level of delay. Subsystem redundancy is one of a number of approaches, which can be used to ensure an appropriate safety integrity and/or
operational reliability level, successfully adopted by, for example, the aeronautical and nuclear industries. This paper models the adoption of a functional redundancy approach to the functional subsystems of traditional railway track switching arrangements in order to evaluate the potential increase in the reliability and availability of switches. The
paper makes three main contributions. First, 2P-Weibull failure distributions for each functional subsystem of each common category of points operating equipment are established using a timeline and iterative maximum likelihood estimation approach, based on almost 40,000 sampled failure events over 74,800 years of continuous operation. Second,
these results are used as baselines in a reliability block diagram approach to model engineering fault tolerance, through
subsystem redundancy, into existing switching systems. Third, the reliability block diagrams are used with a Monte-Carlo simulation approach in order to model the availability of redundantly engineered track switches over expected asset lifetimes. Results show a significant improvement in the reliability and availability of switches; unscheduled downtime
reduces by an order of magnitude across all powered switch types, whilst significant increases in the whole-system reliability are demonstrated. Hence, switch designs utilising a functional redundancy approach are well worth further investigation. However, it is also established that as equipment failures are engineered out, switch reliability/availability
can be seen to plateau as the dominant contributor to unreliability becomes human error
Neurophysiology
Contains reports on four research projects.National Institutes of Health (Grant B-1865-(C3), Grant MH-04737-02)United States Air Force, Aeronautical Systems Division (Contract AF33(616)-7783)Teagle Foundation, IncorporatedBell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporate
Health related quality of life outcomes in HIV-Infected patients starting different combination regimens in a randomised multinational trial: the INITIO-QoL Substudy
The health-related quality of life (HRQoL) outcomes in HIV-infected, treatment-naive patients starting different HAART regimens in a 3-year, randomized, multinational trial were compared. HRQoL was measured in a subgroup of patients enrolled in the INITIO study (153/911), using a modified version of the MOS-HIV questionnaire. The regimens compared in the INITIO trial were composed by two NRTIs (didanosine + stavudine) plus either an NNRTI (efavirenz) or a PI (nelfinavir), or both (efavirenz + nelfinavir). Primary HRQoL outcomes were Physical and Mental Health Summary scores (PHS and MHS, respectively). During follow-up, an increase of PHS score was observed in all treatment arms. The MHS score remained substantially unchanged with the four-drug combination and showed with both NNRTI- and PI-based three-drug regimens a marked trend toward improvement, which became statistically significant when a multiple imputation method was used to adjust for missing data. Overall, starting all the combination regimens compared in the INITIO study was associated with a maintained or slightly improved HRQOL status, consistently with the positive immunological and virological changes observed in the main study. The observed differences in the MHS indicate a possible HRQoL benefit associated to the use of three-drug, two-class regimens and no additional benefit for the use of four-drug, three-class regimens, confirming that three-drug, two-class regimens that include two NRTIs plus either an NNRTI or a PI should be preferred as initial treatment of HIV infection
The inverse-Compton ghost HDF 130 and the giant radio galaxy 6C 0905+3955: matching an analytic model for double radio source evolution
We present new GMRT observations of HDF 130, an inverse-Compton (IC) ghost of
a giant radio source that is no longer being powered by jets. We compare the
properties of HDF 130 with the new and important constraint of the upper limit
of the radio flux density at 240 MHz to an analytic model. We learn what values
of physical parameters in the model for the dynamics and evolution of the radio
luminosity and X-ray luminosity (due to IC scattering of the cosmic microwave
background (CMB)) of a Fanaroff-Riley II (FR II) source are able to describe a
source with features (lobe length, axial ratio, X-ray luminosity, photon index
and upper limit of radio luminosity) similar to the observations. HDF 130 is
found to agree with the interpretation that it is an IC ghost of a powerful
double-lobed radio source, and we are observing it at least a few Myr after jet
activity (which lasted 5--100 Myr) has ceased. The minimum Lorentz factor of
injected particles into the lobes from the hotspot is preferred to be
for the model to describe the observed quantities well,
assuming that the magnetic energy density, electron energy density, and lobe
pressure at time of injection into the lobe are linked by constant factors
according to a minimum energy argument, so that the minimum Lorentz factor is
constrained by the lobe pressure. We also apply the model to match the features
of 6C 0905+3955, a classical double FR II galaxy thought to have a low-energy
cutoff of in the hotspot due to a lack of hotspot
inverse-Compton X-ray emission. The models suggest that the low-energy cutoff
in the hotspots of 6C 0905+3955 is , just slightly above
the particles required for X-ray emission.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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