2,101 research outputs found

    An interdisciplinary project using recycled glass as an aesthetically pleasing architectural material

    Get PDF
    This paper is exploring how a waste material, in this case recycled glass, can be up-cycled and used as an aesthetically pleasing architectural material. The project has been undertaken as an interdisciplinary project between staff and students at University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Swansea in Wales UK. Sustainability is of a significant importance for the University with its multi-million pound development at Swansea Waterfront Innovation Quarter. The university is emphasising the use of locally sourced materials in the building to create a neighbourhood of academic activity at its core and to attract companies to co-locate with the University to exploit knowledge, develop skills, support existing companies and attract new investment into the region. The aim of the project is the use and application of fused recycled glass as a material in a wider context in the construction industry and the application to interior design. A reception desk for the new university campus at the SA1 Waterfront Innovation Quarter has been proposed as a test bed for the new low temperature fused recycled glass product. This is a research active field carried out by Dr Tyra Oseng-Rees at Swansea College of Art and who successfully developed and installed 100% recycled glass interior tiles in a new build in 2008 only a short distance from the new campus that are being built (Oseng, Donne, & Bender, 2009)). The added benefit of this project is cross disciplinary with staff and students from art, design, engineering, construction, architecture and environmental conservation involved in a live case study. And lastly; exploration and application of a commercially viable product both with material integrity and aesthetic attributes. The circular economy is very much at the heart of this project underpinned by the ‘five-ways-of-working’ from the ‘The Well-being of Future Generation (Wales) Act (2015)’. Involvement and integration with industry was also vital and in this instance with the ‘buy-in’ from the construction company KIER Group and the architect company Stride Treglown was instrumental for this development in the design and manufacture of the reception desk. Prevention and long-term thinking is at the heart of all decision making, enabling the consideration to both end-of-life of the product and demonstration how a waste material can be up-cycled and reintroduced into the circular economy for future design and purpose use of the material. This project also showcase how the university’s reputation on environmental and sustainability issues can go hand-in-hand with traditions from art and design, product technology and a makers artistic vision and mutually reinforce each other

    What colour is penguin guano?

    Get PDF
    The identification and quantification of Antarctic Pygoscelis penguin colonies depends increasingly on recognition of the characteristic optical properties of guano deposits, but almost all knowledge of these properties until now has been compromised by resolution and atmospheric propagation effects. Here we present hyperspectral reflectance data in the range 350–2500 nm, collected in situ from fresh guano deposits in Pygoscelis penguin colonies on Signy Island, South Orkney Islands. The period of data collection included the transition from predominantly white guano to the pink coloration characteristic of a krill-rich diet. The main identifiable features in the spectra are a broad absorption feature centred around 550 nm, responsible for the pink coloration and identified with the pigment astaxanthin, as well as several water absorption features. Variations in these features are responsible for differentiation between spectra. From these results we propose two spectral indices suitable for use with satellite data, one of which responds to the presence of astaxanthin in the guano and the other to water. Our results do not allow us to differentiate between penguin species from their guano, but do suggest that the breeding phenology of Pygoscelis penguins could be determined from a time series of multispectral imagery.The fieldwork necessary for this work was supported by BAS through a Collaborative Gearing Scheme award CGS-97 to W.G. Rees and P.N. Trathan, and the ASD FieldSpec Pro was made available through an award (ref. 696.0614) from the UK NERC Field Spectroscopy Facility. We acknowledge with gratitude the support and companionship of the entire staff of the BAS research station at Signy, and especially of M. Jobson, the Base Commander. J.A. Brown is supported by a NERC PhD studentship NE/L501633/1

    Using interdisciplinary research project collaborations as a pedagogic tool to enhance learning and teaching : a showcase with low temperature fused recycled glass for a reception desk in the new academic building at the Swansea Waterfront Innovation Quarter

    Get PDF
    This paper demonstrates how a collaboration between staff from differing subject areas within the University of Wales Trinity Saint David (UWTSD) at its Swansea Campus performed on a live project. The project was embedded in a research active field which investigated the feasibility of low temperature fused recycled glass as an architectural material, and invited undergraduate students to take part in the research within their discipline of study. The project’s initial intentions were aligned to the amendments, which occurred in June 2015, in the Sustainability Principles for the SA1 Waterfront Development also known as Swansea Waterfront Innovation Quarter (SWIQ). These amendments developed opportunities to use the creative design and environmental skills of staff and learners within UWTSD for the development of the new academic building at the Swansea Waterfront Innovation Quarter. The delivery of project outcomes cumulated with three main aims; enhanced learner experience, formation of a research active and cross-faculty group and the development of a commercially viable product. This project was bespoke as it considered the changing environment and tells a progressive story of learner engagement, a collaboration between staff and external stake holders and demonstrates the first goal and the five ways of working from the Wellbeing of Future Generation (Wales) Act

    Experimental characterization of the hypersonic flow around a cuboid

    Get PDF
    Understanding the hypersonic flow around faceted shapes is important in the context of the fragmentation and demise of satellites undergoing uncontrolled atmospheric entry. To better understand the physics of such flows, as well as the satellite demise process, we perform an experimental study of the Mach 5 flow around a cuboid geometry in the University of Manchester High SuperSonic Tunnel. Heat fluxes are measured using infrared thermography and a 3D inverse heat conduction solution, and flow features are imaged using schlieren photography. Measurements are taken at a range of Reynolds numbers from 40.0×103 to 549×103. The schlieren results suggest the presence of a separation bubble at the windward edge of the cube at high Reynolds numbers. High heat fluxes are observed near corners and edges, which are caused by boundary-layer thinning. Additionally, on the side (off-stagnation) faces of the cube, we observe wedge-shaped regions of high heat flux emanating from the windward corners of the cube. We attribute these to vortical structures being generated by the strong expansion around the cube’s corners. We also observe that the stagnation point of the cube is off-centre of the windward face, which we propose is due to sting flex under aerodynamic loading. Finally, we propose a simple method of calculating the stagnation point heat flux to a cube, as well as relations which can be used to predict hypersonic heat fluxes to cuboid geometries such as satellites during atmospheric re-entry

    Apparent diffusion coefficient for molecular subtyping of non-gadolinium-enhancing WHO grade II/III glioma: volumetric segmentation versus two-dimensional region of interest analysis

    Get PDF
    OBJECTIVES: To investigate if quantitative apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) measurements can predict genetic subtypes of non-gadolinium-enhancing gliomas, comparing whole tumour against single slice analysis. METHODS: Volumetric T2-derived masks of 44 gliomas were co-registered to ADC maps with ADC mean (ADCmean) calculated. For the slice analysis, two observers placed regions of interest in the largest tumour cross-section. The ratio (ADCratio) between ADCmeanin the tumour and normal appearing white matter was calculated for both methods. RESULTS: Isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) wild-type gliomas showed the lowest ADC values throughout (p < 0.001). ADCmeanin the IDH-mutant 1p19q intact group was significantly higher than in the IDH-mutant 1p19q co-deleted group (p < 0.01). A volumetric ADCmeanthreshold of 1201 × 10-6mm2/s identified IDH wild-type with a sensitivity of 83% and a specificity of 86%; a volumetric ADCratiocut-off value of 1.65 provided a sensitivity of 80% and a specificity of 92% (area under the curve (AUC) 0.9-0.94). A slice ADCratiothreshold for observer 1 (observer 2) of 1.76 (1.83) provided a sensitivity of 80% (86%), specificity of 91% (100%) and AUC of 0.95 (0.96). The intraclass correlation coefficient was excellent (0.98). CONCLUSIONS: ADC measurements can support the distinction of glioma subtypes. Volumetric and two-dimensional measurements yielded similar results in this study. KEY POINTS: • Diffusion-weighted MRI aids the identification of non-gadolinium-enhancing malignant gliomas • ADC measurements may permit non-gadolinium-enhancing glioma molecular subtyping • IDH wild-type gliomas have lower ADC values than IDH-mutant tumours • Single cross-section and volumetric ADC measurements yielded comparable results in this study

    Colorectal polyp outcomes after participation in the seAFOod polyp prevention trial: Evidence of rebound elevated colorectal polyp risk after short-term aspirin use

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: The seAFOod polyp prevention trial was a randomised, placebo-controlled, 2 × 2 factorial trial of aspirin 300 mg and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) 2000 mg daily in individuals who had a screening colonoscopy in the English Bowel Cancer Screening Programme (BCSP). Aspirin treatment was associated with a 20% reduction in colorectal polyp number at BCSP surveillance colonoscopy 12 months later. It is unclear what happens to colorectal polyp risk after short-term aspirin use. AIM: To investigate colorectal polyp risk according to the original trial treatment allocation, up to 6 years after trial participation. METHODS: All seAFOod trial participants were scheduled for further BCSP surveillance and provided informed consent for the collection of colonoscopy outcomes. We linked BCSP colonoscopy data to trial outcomes data. RESULTS: In total, 507 individuals underwent one or more colonoscopies after trial participation. Individuals grouped by treatment allocation were well matched for clinical characteristics, follow-up duration and number of surveillance colonoscopies. The polyp detection rate (PDR; the number of individuals who had ≥1 colorectal polyp detected) after randomization to placebo aspirin was 71.1%. The PDR was 80.1% for individuals who had received aspirin (odds ratio [OR] 1.13 [95% confidence interval 1.02, 1.24]; p = 0.02). There was no difference in colorectal polyp outcomes between individuals who had been allocated to EPA compared with its placebo (OR for PDR 1.00 [0.91, 1.10]; p = 0.92). CONCLUSION: Individuals who received aspirin in the seAFOod trial demonstrated increased colorectal polyp risk during post-trial surveillance. Rebound elevated neoplastic risk after short-term aspirin use has important implications for aspirin cessation driven by age-related bleeding risk. ISRCTN05926847

    Vacuum Ambiguity in de Sitter Space at Strong Coupling

    Full text link
    It is well known that in the weak coupling regime, quantum field theories in de Sitter space do not have a unique vacuum, but a class of vacua parametrized by a complex parameter α\alpha, i.e., the so-called α\alpha-vacua. In this article, using gauge/gravity duality, we calculate the symmetric two-point function of strongly coupled N=4{\cal N}=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory on dS3dS_3. We find that there is a class of de Sitter invariant vacua, parametrized by a set of complex parameters {αν}\{\alpha_{\nu}\}.Comment: 17 pages in JHEP style, references adde
    corecore