458 research outputs found
Effect Of Deicing Chemicals And Fly Ash On Durability And Mechanical Properties Of Concrete
Deicing chemicals, such as Sodium Chloride (NaCl), lowers the freezing point of water, resulting in less skidding, less hydroplaning, and more friction on roadways. NaCl has limitations regarding its deicing capabilities; therefore, a supplement should be used to decrease corrosion and aid in lowering the freezing point of water. Incorporating AMP in NaCl brine aids in bonding to the roadâs surface and further lowers the waterâs freezing point. This study was conducted to explore the optimum solution of AMP and Sodium Nitrite (NaNO2) and the impact 20% fly ash has on durability. Hardened properties were used to compare the impact of AMP. Durability was determined following ASTM C-666 and BNQ-2621. Results indicated minimal losses in hardened properties or scaling resistance with up to 15% AMP. The freeze-and-thaw results indicated a decrease in resistance in the durability factor when the cement was replaced with fly ash according to ASTM C-666
Numerical Investigation of a Mesoscopic Vehicular Traffic Flow Model Based on a Stochastic Acceleration Process
In this paper a spatial homogeneous vehicular traffic flow model based on a
stochastic master equation of Boltzmann type in the acceleration variable is
solved numerically for a special driver interaction model. The solution is done
by a modified direct simulation Monte Carlo method (DSMC) well known in non
equilibrium gas kinetic. The velocity and acceleration distribution functions
in stochastic equilibrium, mean velocity, traffic density, ACN, velocity
scattering and correlations between some of these variables and their car
density dependences are discussed.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure
Isotopic analysis of faunal material from South Uist, Western Isles, Scotland
This paper reports on the results from stable isotope analysis of faunal bone collagen from a number of Iron Age
and later sites on the island of South Uist, in the Western Isles, Scotland. This preliminary investigation into the isotopic signatures of the fauna is part of a larger project to model the interaction between humans, animals, and the broader environment in the Western Isles. The results demonstrate that the island fauna data fall within the range of expected results for the UK, with the terrestrial herbivorous diets of cattle and sheep confi rmed. The isotopic composition for pigs suggests that some of these animals had an omnivorous diet, whilst a single red deer value might be suggestive of the consumption of marine foods, such as by grazing on seaweed. However, further analysis is needed in order to verify this anomalous isotopic ratio
Generalized Force Model of Traffic Dynamics
Floating car data of car-following behavior in cities were compared to
existing microsimulation models, after their parameters had been calibrated to
the experimental data. With these parameter values, additional simulations have
been carried out, e.g. of a moving car which approaches a stopped car. It
turned out that, in order to manage such kinds of situations without producing
accidents, improved traffic models are needed. Good results have been obtained
with the proposed generalized force model.Comment: For related work see
http://www.theo2.physik.uni-stuttgart.de/helbing.htm
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Carbon and nitrogen isotopic ratios of urine and faeces as novel nutritional biomarkers of meat and fish intake
Purpose
Meat and fish consumption are associated with changes in the risk of chronic diseases. Intake is mainly assessed using self-reporting, as no true quantitative nutritional biomarker is available. The measurement of plasma fatty acids, often used as an alternative, is expensive and time-consuming. As meat and fish differ in their stable isotope ratios, δ13C and δ15N have been proposed as biomarkers. However, they have never been investigated in controlled human dietary intervention studies.
Objective
In a short-term feeding study, we investigated the suitability of δ13C and δ15N in blood, urine and faeces as biomarkers of meat and fish intake.
Methods
The dietary intervention study (n = 14) followed a randomised cross-over design with three eight-day dietary periods (meat, fish and half-meatâhalf-fish). In addition, 4 participants completed a vegetarian control period. At the end of each period, 24-h urine, fasting venous blood and faeces were collected and their δ13C and δ15N analysed.
Results
There was a significant difference between diets in isotope ratios in faeces and urine samples, but not in blood samples (KruskalâWallis test, p < 0.0001). In pairwise comparisons, δ13C and δ15N were significantly higher in urine and faecal samples following a fish diet when compared with all other diets, and significantly lower following a vegetarian diet. There was no significant difference in isotope ratio between meat and half-meatâhalf-fish diets for blood, urine or faecal samples.
Conclusions
The results of this study show that urinary and faecal δ13C and δ15N are suitable candidate biomarkers for short-term meat and fish intake
Infiltration of meteoric water in the South Tibetan Detachment (Mount Everest, Himalaya): When and why?
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A Vehicular Traffic Flow Model Based on a Stochastic Acceleration Process
A new vehicular traffic flow model based on a stochastic jump process in
vehicle acceleration and braking is introduced. It is based on a master
equation for the single car probability density in space, velocity and
acceleration with an additional vehicular chaos assumption and is derived via a
Markovian ansatz for car pairs. This equation is analyzed using simple driver
interaction models in the spatial homogeneous case. Velocity distributions in
stochastic equilibrium, together with the car density dependence of their
moments, i.e. mean velocity and scattering and the fundamental diagram are
presented.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figure
Assessment of pollution risk ascribed to Santa Margarida Military Camp activities (Portugal)
Santa Margarida Military Camp (S.M.M.C.) is
the only one Portuguese military training area, including
firing ranges for tactical military manoeuvres of mechanised
divisions. For this reason, various negative effects on
the environment were expected due to the military activities,
as the Military Campâs area is classified as a high
vulnerability area to pollution of its multilayer porous
aquifers. The aim of this study was to identify and characterise
local/regional geochemical impacts caused by the
continuing military training activities performed at
S.M.M.C. in the course of 52 years. An overview of the
geochemical research issues as a basis for risk assessment
is presented. A special attention has been put on the
quality of local and regional surface waters, shallow
groundwaters and groundwaters. Local soils and sediments
as well as fragments of shells and bullets were sampled
and analysed. The results so far obtained, indicated that none pollution effects were a consequence of the military
training activities. Till now, the geochemical signatures
such as, high levels of K, Cl and NO3 in waters, detected
in particular sites, should be faced as tracers of diffuse
pollution ascribed to urban waste disposal and cattle
breading
Evolution of hepatic steatosis in patients with advanced hepatitis C: Results from the hepatitis C antiviral long-term treatment against cirrhosis (HALT-C) trial
Hepatic steatosis is a common histologic feature in patients with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) but there are no large longitudinal studies describing the progression of steatosis in CHC. We examined changes in steatosis on serial biopsies among CHC patients participating in the Hepatitis C Antiviral Long-term Treatment against Cirrhosis (HALT-C) Trial. All 1050 patients in the trial had advanced fibrosis at baseline biopsy and were documented not to have had a sustained virological response to peginterferon and ribavirin. Most (94%) patients had genotype 1 infection. At least one protocol follow-up biopsy was read on 892 patients, and 699 had the last biopsy performed 3.5 years after randomization. At enrollment, 39% had cirrhosis and 61% had bridging fibrosis; 18%, 41%, 31%, and 10% had steatosis scores of 0, 1, 2, and 3 or 4, respectively. The mean steatosis score decreased in the follow-up biopsies in both the interferon-treated patients and controls with no effect of treatment assignment ( P = 0.66). A decrease in steatosis score by âĽ1 point was observed in 30% of patients and was associated with both progression to cirrhosis and continued presence of cirrhosis ( P = 0.02). Compared to patients without a decrease in steatosis, those with a decrease in steatosis had worse metabolic parameters at enrollment, and were more likely to have a decrease in alcohol intake, improvement in metabolic parameters, and worsening liver disease (cirrhosis, esophageal varices, and deterioration in liver function). Conclusion: Serial biopsies demonstrated that in patients with CHC, steatosis recedes during progression from advanced fibrosis to cirrhosis. Decreased alcohol intake and improved metabolic parameters are associated with a decline in steatosis and may modulate hepatitis C progression. (H EPATOLOGY 2009.)Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63058/1/22865_ftp.pd
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