67 research outputs found

    Estimate of the height of molten metal reactors for methane cracking

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    Methane Cracking represents one of the most promising routes to CO2-free hydrogen production.The methane decomposition reaction is typically carried out in fixed or fluidized catalytic beds, where the metal catalyst is supported on porous ceramic particles. By proper choice of the metal catalyst, the catalytic reaction environment allows to obtain sizeable reaction rates at operating temperatures as low as 700°C. Besides, in solid catalytic beds, the catalyst is swiftly deactivated due to the massive (i.e. stoichiometric) deposition of the solid carbon product. One way to bypass carbon deposition is to use a molten metal bath (which may or may not contain catalytic metal components) as a reaction environment, where methane bubbles are introduced at the bottom of the bath and are progressively converted as they rise through the liquid metal. The key point of this process is that, owing to a large density difference between the solid carbon phase and the molten metal, the solid product of the reaction floats on top of the liquid metal and can be thus mechanically skimmed. In this article, we develop an analytical approach to the estimate of the bath height, which constitutes one of the most critical design parameters of the process. Specifically, based on the observation that in practical applications the reacting bubble is in the kinetics-controlled regime, we obtain the conversion vs time solution for a bubble of given initial size. On the assumption of ideal gaseous mixture behaviour, the knowledge of the conversion curves allows to estimate the bubble diameter as a function of time during the rise of the bubble through the molten metal. This piece of information is then post-processed to obtain the bubble motion as a function of time. The elimination of the time parameter between the two solutions allows to construct a conversion-height map for different diameters of the bubbles

    Solar Neutrino Detection Sensitivity in DARWIN via Electron Scattering

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    We detail the sensitivity of the proposed liquid xenon DARWIN observatory to solar neutrinos via elastic electron scattering. We find that DARWIN will have the potential to measure the fluxes of five solar neutrino components: pp, 7Be, 13N, 15O and pep. The precision of the 13N, 15O and pep components is hindered by the double-beta decay of 136Xe and, thus, would benefit from a depleted target. A high-statistics observation of pp neutrinos would allow us to infer the values of the electroweak mixing angle, sin2θw, and the electron-type neutrino survival probability, Pee, in the electron recoil energy region from a few keV up to 200 keV for the first time, with relative precision of 5% and 4%, respectively, with 10 live years of data and a 30 tonne fiducial volume. An observation of pp and 7Be neutrinos would constrain the neutrino-inferred solar luminosity down to 0.2%. A combination of all flux measurements would distinguish between the high- (GS98) and low-metallicity (AGS09) solar models with 2.1–2.5σ significance, independent of external measurements from other experiments or a measurement of 8B neutrinos through coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering in DARWIN. Finally, we demonstrate that with a depleted target DARWIN may be sensitive to the neutrino capture process of 131Xe

    Solar neutrino detection sensitivity in DARWIN via electron scattering

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    We detail the sensitivity of the proposed liquid xenon DARWIN observatory to solar neutrinos via elastic electron scattering. We find that DARWIN will have the potential to measure the fluxes of five solar neutrino components: pp, 7Be, 13N, 15O and pep. The precision of the 13N, 15O and pep components is hindered by the double-beta decay of 136Xe and, thus, would benefit from a depleted target. A high-statistics observation of pp neutrinos would allow us to infer the values of the electroweak mixing angle, sin 2θw, and the electron-type neutrino survival probability, Pee, in the electron recoil energy region from a few keV up to 200 keV for the first time, with relative precision of 5% and 4%, respectively, with 10 live years of data and a 30 tonne fiducial volume. An observation of pp and 7Be neutrinos would constrain the neutrino-inferred solar luminosity down to 0.2%. A combination of all flux measurements would distinguish between the high- (GS98) and low-metallicity (AGS09) solar models with 2.1–2.5σ significance, independent of external measurements from other experiments or a measurement of 8B neutrinos through coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering in DARWIN. Finally, we demonstrate that with a depleted target DARWIN may be sensitive to the neutrino capture process of 131Xe

    The XENONnT Dark Matter Experiment

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    The multi-staged XENON program at INFN Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso aims to detect dark matter with two-phase liquid xenon time projection chambers of increasing size and sensitivity. The XENONnT experiment is the latest detector in the program, planned to be an upgrade of its predecessor XENON1T. It features an active target of 5.9 tonnes of cryogenic liquid xenon (8.5 tonnes total mass in cryostat). The experiment is expected to extend the sensitivity to WIMP dark matter by more than an order of magnitude compared to XENON1T, thanks to the larger active mass and the significantly reduced background, improved by novel systems such as a radon removal plant and a neutron veto. This article describes the XENONnT experiment and its sub-systems in detail and reports on the detector performance during the first science run.Comment: 32 pages, 19 figure

    A Next-Generation Liquid Xenon Observatory for Dark Matter and Neutrino Physics

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    The nature of dark matter and properties of neutrinos are among the mostpressing issues in contemporary particle physics. The dual-phase xenontime-projection chamber is the leading technology to cover the availableparameter space for Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs), whilefeaturing extensive sensitivity to many alternative dark matter candidates.These detectors can also study neutrinos through neutrinoless double-beta decayand through a variety of astrophysical sources. A next-generation xenon-baseddetector will therefore be a true multi-purpose observatory to significantlyadvance particle physics, nuclear physics, astrophysics, solar physics, andcosmology. This review article presents the science cases for such a detector.<br

    Nurses' perceptions of aids and obstacles to the provision of optimal end of life care in ICU

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    Contains fulltext : 172380.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
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