108 research outputs found

    Oxalic acid hydrogenation to glycolic acid:heterogeneous catalysts screening

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    To meet our ambitions of a future circular economy and drastically reduce CO2 emissions, we need to make use of CO2 as a feedstock. Turning CO2 into monomers to produce sustainable plastics is an attractive option for this purpose. It can be achieved by electrochemical reduction of CO2 to formic acid derivatives, that can subsequently be converted into oxalic acid. Oxalic acid can be a monomer itself and it is a potential new platform chemical for material production, as useful monomers such as glycolic acid and ethylene glycol can be derived from it. Today the most common route from oxalic acid to glycolic acid requires multiple steps as it proceeds via oxalic acid di-esters as intermediates. In this work, we aim to avoid the extra reaction step of esterification. We explore the direct conversion of oxalic acid to glycolic acid in a two-step approach. In the first step, we define the ideal reaction conditions and test commercially available catalysts. We show that the reduction of oxalic acid can be performed at much lower temperatures and glycolic acid yields higher than those reported previously can be obtained. In the second step, we explore the design principles required for ideal catalysts which avoid the formation of acetic acid and ethylene glycol as side products. We show that ruthenium is the most active metal for the reaction and that carbon appears the most suitable support for these catalysts. By adding tin as a promotor, we could increase the selectivity and yield further whilst maintaining high activity of the resulting catalyst. This research lays the foundation for the efficient direct reduction of oxalic acid to glycolic acid and defines the design parameters for even better catalysts and the ideal process and conditions.</p

    Looking back at superfluid helium

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    A few years after the discovery of Bose Einstein condensation in several gases, it is interesting to look back at some properties of superfluid helium. After a short historical review, I comment shortly on boiling and evaporation, then on the role of rotons and vortices in the existence of a critical velocity in superfluid helium. I finally discuss the existence of a condensate in a liquid with strong interactions, and the pressure variation of its superfluid transition temperature.Comment: Conference "Bose Einstein Condensation", Institut henri Poincare, Paris, 29 march 200

    Condensation and interaction range in harmonic boson traps: a variational approach

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    For a gas of N bosons interacting through a two-body Morse potential a variational bound of the free energy of a confined system is obtained. The calculation method is based on the Feynman-Kac functional projected on the symmetric representation. Within the harmonic approximation a variational estimate of the effect of the interaction range on the existence of many-particle bound states, and on the N-T phase diagram is obtained.Comment: 14 pages+4 figures, submitted to phys.rev.

    On the Nature of the Phase Transition in SU(N), Sp(2) and E(7) Yang-Mills theory

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    We study the nature of the confinement phase transition in d=3+1 dimensions in various non-abelian gauge theories with the approach put forward in [1]. We compute an order-parameter potential associated with the Polyakov loop from the knowledge of full 2-point correlation functions. For SU(N) with N=3,...,12 and Sp(2) we find a first-order phase transition in agreement with general expectations. Moreover our study suggests that the phase transition in E(7) Yang-Mills theory also is of first order. We find that it is weaker than for SU(N). We show that this can be understood in terms of the eigenvalue distribution of the order parameter potential close to the phase transition.Comment: 15 page

    Mechanisms employed by retroviruses to exploit host factors for translational control of a complicated proteome

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    From the Cover: A morphologically specialized soldier caste improves colony defense in a neotropical eusocial bee

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    Division of labor among workers is common in insect societies and is thought to be important in their ecological success. In most species, division of labor is based on age (temporal castes), but workers in some ants and termites show morphological specialization for particular tasks (physical castes). Large-headed soldier ants and termites are well-known examples of this specialization. However, until now there has been no equivalent example of physical worker subcastes in social bees or wasps. Here we provide evidence for a physical soldier subcaste in a bee. In the neotropical stingless bee Tetragonisca angustula, nest defense is performed by two groups of guards, one hovering near the nest entrance and the other standing on the wax entrance tube. We show that both types of guards are 30% heavier than foragers and of different shape; foragers have relatively larger heads, whereas guards have larger legs. Low variation within each subcaste results in negligible size overlap between guards and foragers, further indicating that they are distinct physical castes. In addition, workers that remove garbage from the nest are of intermediate size, suggesting that they might represent another unrecognized caste. Guards or soldiers are reared in low but sufficient numbers (1–2% of emerging workers), considering that <1% usually perform this task. When challenged by the obligate robber bee Lestrimelitta limao, an important natural enemy, larger workers were able to fight for longer before being defeated by the much larger robber. This discovery opens up opportunities for the comparative study of physical castes in social insects, including the question of why soldiers appear to be so much rarer in bees than in ants or termites

    Herpes zoster of the larynx—how common?

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