1,216 research outputs found
Separation of the rare earths by anion-exchange in the presence of lactic acid
Investigation of adsorption of rare earths and a few other elements to an anion-exchange resin from mixed solvents containing lactic acid shows that the lanthanides are absorbed more strongly than from the alpha-hydroxyisobutryric acid system, but with less separation between adjacent members of the series
Nitric acid-organic mixtures surveyed for use in separation by anion exchange methods
Column elution-spectrographic analysis technique compares certain solvents directly to the methanol system, using inert rare earths instead of actinides. Distribution ratios for americium between 90 percent solvent, 10 percent 5 M nitric acid and Dowex 1 nitrate form resin for a large group of organics miscible in water was determined
Existence of the Bogoliubov S(g) operator for the quantum field theory
We prove the existence of the Bogoliubov S(g) operator for the
quantum field theory for coupling functions of compact support in space and
time. The construction is nonperturbative and relies on a theorem of
Kisy\'nski. It implies almost automatically the properties of unitarity and
causality for disjoint supports in the time variable.Comment: LaTeX, 24 pages, minor modifications, typos correcte
APPLICATION OF THE VACUUM-CUP TECHNIQUE TOWARD SPECTROCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF URANIUM-FISSIUM ALLOY
ANION EXCHANGE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ELEMENTS IN NITRIC ACID AND NITRATE SOLUTIONS AND APPLICATION IN TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS
On the distribution of the Wigner time delay in one-dimensional disordered systems
We consider the scattering by a one-dimensional random potential and derive
the probability distribution of the corresponding Wigner time delay. It is
shown that the limiting distribution is the same for two different models and
coincides with the one predicted by random matrix theory. It is also shown that
the corresponding stochastic process is given by an exponential functional of
the potential.Comment: 11 pages, four references adde
Staff perspectives on the feasibility of a clinical pathway for anxiety and depression in cancer care, and mid-implementation adaptations.
BACKGROUND: Clinical pathways (CPs) are intended to standardise and improve care but do not always produce positive outcomes, possibly because they were not adapted to suit the specific context in which they were enacted. This qualitative study aimed to explore staff perspectives of implementation of a CP for routine screening, assessment, referral and management of anxiety and depression (the ADAPT CP) for patients with cancer, focussing on perceived feasibility of the CP and negotiated adaptations made during the implementation phase. METHODS: The ADAPT CP was implemented in 12 urban and regional oncology services in Australia. Services were randomised to receive core versus enhanced implementation strategies. Core sites received support until implementation commencement and could access progress reports. Enhanced sites received proactive, ongoing support during the 12-month implementation. Purposively selected staff were interviewed prior to implementation (n = 88) and 6 months later, half-way through the implementation period (n = 89). Monthly meetings with lead multi-disciplinary teams at the eight enhanced sites were recorded. Data were thematically analysed. RESULTS: Six overarching themes were identified: ADAPT is of high value; timing for introducing the CP and screening is difficult; online screening is challenging; a burden too much; no-one to refer patients to; and micro-logistics are key. While early screening was deemed desirable, diverse barriers meant this was complex, with adaptations made to time and screening location. Online screening prompted by email, seen as time-saving and efficient, also proved unsuccessful in some services, with adaptations made to in-clinic or phone screening, or repeated email reminders. Staff negative attitudes to ADAPT, time constraints, and perceived poor fit of ADAPT to work roles and flows, all impacted implementation, with key tasks often devolving to a few key individuals. Nevertheless, services remained committed to the ADAPT CP, and worked hard to create, review and adapt strategies to address challenges to optimise success. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates the interactive nature of health service change, with staff actively engaging with, forming views on, and problem-solving adaptations of the ADAPT CP to overcome barriers. Obtaining staff feedback is critical to ensure health service change is sustainable, meaningful and achieves its promise of improving patient outcomes. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The study was registered prospectively with the ANZCTR on 22/3/2017. Trial ID ACTRN12617000411347
Resonant Inelastic X-Ray Scattering from Valence Excitations in Insulating Copper-Oxides
We report resonant inelastic x-ray measurements of insulating LaCuO
and SrCuOCl taken with the incident energy tuned near the Cu K
absorption edge. We show that the spectra are well described in a shakeup
picture in 3rd order perturbation theory which exhibits both incoming and
outgoing resonances, and demonstrate how to extract a spectral function from
the raw data. We conclude by showing {\bf q}-dependent measurements of the
charge transfer gap.Comment: minor notational changes, discussion of anderson impurity model
fixed, references added; accepted by PR
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