677 research outputs found
Glycerol confined in zeolitic imidazolate frameworks: The temperature-dependent cooperativity length scale of glassy freezing
In the present work, we employ broadband dielectric spectroscopy to study the
molecular dynamics of the prototypical glass former glycerol confined in two
microporous zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIF-8 and ZIF-11) with
well-defined pore diameters of 1.16 and 1.46 nm, respectively. The spectra
reveal information on the modified alpha relaxation of the confined supercooled
liquid, whose temperature dependence exhibits clear deviations from the typical
super-Arrhenius temperature dependence of the bulk material, depending on
temperature and pore size. This allows assigning well-defined cooperativity
length scales of molecular motion to certain temperatures above the glass
transition. We relate these and previous results on glycerol confined in other
host systems to the temperature-dependent length scale deduced from nonlinear
dielectric measurements. The combined experimental data can be consistently
described by a critical divergence of this correlation length as expected
within theoretical approaches assuming that the glass transition is due to an
underlying phase transition.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures + Supplemental Material (4 pages, 6 figures).
Final version as accepted for publicatio
Past warming trend constrains future warming in CMIP6 models
Future global warming estimates have been similar across past assessments, but several climate models of the latest Sixth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6) simulate much stronger warming, apparently inconsistent with past assessments. Here, we show that projected future warming is correlated with the simulated warming trend during recent decades across CMIP5 and CMIP6 models, enabling us to constrain future warming based on consistency with the observed warming. These findings carry important policy-relevant implications: The observationally constrained CMIP6 median warming in high emissions and ambitious mitigation scenarios is over 16 and 14% lower by 2050 compared to the raw CMIP6 median, respectively, and over 14 and 8% lower by 2090, relative to 1995–2014. Observationally constrained CMIP6 warming is consistent with previous assessments based on CMIP5 models, and in an ambitious mitigation scenario, the likely range is consistent with reaching the Paris Agreement target
Tetramethylbenzidine-TetrafluoroTCNQ: A narrow-gap semiconducting salt with room temperature relaxor ferroelectric behavior
We present an extension and revision of the spectroscopic and structural data
of the mixed stack charge transfer (CT) crystal
3,3,5,5-tetramethylbenzidine--tetrafluoro-tetracyanoquinodimethane
(TMB-TCNQF4), associated with new electric and dielectric measurements.
Refinement of syncrotron structural data at low temperature has led to revise
the previously reported [Phys. Rev. Mat. 2, 024602 (2018)] structure.
The revised structure is , with two dimerized stacks per unit cell, and
is consistent with the vibrational data. However, polarized Raman data in the
low-frequency region also indicate that by increasing temperature above 200 K
the structure presents an increasing degree of disorder mainly along the stack
axis. X-ray diffraction data at room temperature have confirmed that the
correct structure is -- no phase transitions -- but did not allow to
definitely substantiate the presence of disorder. On the other hand, dielectric
measurement have evidenced a typical relaxor ferroelectric behavior already at
room temperature, with a peak in real part of dielectric constant
around 200 K and 0.1 Hz. The relaxor behavior is explained
in terms of the presence of spin solitons separating domains of opposite
polarity that yield to ferroelectric nanodomains. TMB-TCNQF4 is confirmed to be
a narrow gap band semiconductor ( eV) with room temperature
conductivity of cm.Comment: 21 pages, including the Supporting Information in the same file.
Version 3 updates the x-ray structural data at room temperatur
Plane torsion waves in quadratic gravitational theories
The definition of the Riemann-Cartan space of the plane wave type is given.
The condition under which the torsion plane waves exist is found. It is
expressed in the form of the restriction imposed on the coupling constants of
the 10-parametric quadratic gravitational Lagrangian. In the mathematical
appendix the formula for commutator of the variation operator and Hodge
operator is proved. This formula is applied for the variational procedure when
the gravitational field equations are obtained in terms of the exterior
differential forms.Comment: 3 May 1998. - 11
Analyzing the discharge regime of a large tropical river through remote sensing, ground-based climatic data, and modeling
This study demonstrates the potential for applying passive microwave satellite sensor data to infer the discharge dynamics of large river systems using the main stem Amazon as a test case. The methodology combines (1) interpolated ground-based meteorological station data, (2) horizontally and vertically polarized temperature differences (HVPTD) from the 37-GHz scanning multichannel microwave radiometer (SMMR) aboard the Nimbus 7 satellite, and (3) a calibrated water balance/water transport model (WBM/WTM). Monthly HVPTD values at 0.25° (latitude by longitude) resolution were resampled spatially and temporally to produce an enhanced HVPTD time series at 0.5° resolution for the period May 1979 through February 1985. Enhanced HVPTD values were regressed against monthly discharge derived from the WBM/WTM for each of 40 grid cells along the main stem over a calibration period from May 1979 to February 1983 to provide a spatially contiguous estimate of time-varying discharge. HVPTD-estimated flows generated for a validation period from March 1983 to February 1985 were found to be in good agreement with both observed arid modeled discharges over a 1400-km section of the main stem Amazon. This span of river is bounded downstream by a region of tidal influence and upstream by low sensor response associated with dense forest canopy. Both the WBM/WTM and HVPTD-derived flow rates reflect the significant impact of the 1982–1983 El Niño-;Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event on water balances within the drainage basin
Severe thrombocytosis and anemia associated with celiac disease in a young female patient: a case report
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Platelet counts exceeding 1.000 × 10<sup>3</sup>/μl are usually considered secondary to another cause, particularly to chronic myeloproliferative disease (CMPD). Reactive thrombocytosis due to iron deficiency rarely exceeds platelet counts of 700 × 10<sup>3</sup>/μl.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>Here we report the case of a young woman presenting with clinical signs of severe anemia. Laboratory findings confirmed an iron-deficiency anemia associated with severe thrombocytosis of 1703 × 10<sup>3</sup>/μl. Macroscopic gastrointestinal and genitourinary tract bleeding was excluded. The excessive elevation of platelets, slightly elevated lactate dehydrogenase and slightly elevated leukocytes along with the absence of other inflammation parameters raised the suspicion of an underlying hematological disease. However, bone marrow evaluation could not prove the suspected diagnosis of a CMPD, especially essential thrombocythemia (ET). In the further clinical course the platelet count returned to normal after raising the hemoglobin to a level close to normal range with erythrocyte transfusion, and normalization of serum iron and decline of erythropoietin. Finally, following small bowel biopsy, despite the absence of typical clinical signs, celiac disease was diagnosed. After discharge from hospital the patient was commenced on a gluten-free diet and her hemoglobin almost completely normalized in the further follow-up period.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This case illustrates the rare constellation of an extreme thrombocytosis most likely secondary to iron deficiency due to celiac disease. This represents, to the best of the authors' knowledge, the highest reported platelet count coincident with iron deficiency. A potential mechanism for the association of iron-deficiency anemia and thrombocytosis is discussed. Even in the presence of 'atypically' high platelets one should consider the possibility of reactive thrombocytosis. Extreme thrombocytosis could emerge in the case of iron deficiency secondary to celiac disease.</p
The histochemistry of thiols and disulphides. II. Methodology of differential staining
The reduction of disulphide bonds by various mercaptans and tri- n -butylphosphine (TBP) has been examined in paraffin sections of rat tissues. A ‘re-reduction’ procedure demonstrating any residual disulphides shows that nearly equivalent endpoints are reached by all of the reagents at pH 8.5 and room temperature, though at greatly differing rates. TBP is the reductant of choice in that it acts rapidly, cannot cause the thiolation which is more or less pronounced with certain mercaptans and least reverses the prior alkylation of native thiol groups by iodoacetate or N-substituted malemides. Supporting studies establish that, except in highly compact structures, native as well as generated thiol groups can be visualized with satisfactory completeness and specificity by N-(4-aminophenyl)maleimide followed by a diazotization and coupling sequence. These findings provide the basis for the selective staining of disulphides, either alone or differentiated from native thiols in the same section.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/42844/1/10735_2005_Article_BF01003139.pd
Boosting cross-border regions through better cross-border transport services. The European case
Cross-border regions are the laboratories of European integration. Daily interactions across European borders let citizens experience the benefits of the European Union (EU) internal market. Still, many border barriers continue to prevent individuals and organisations from exploiting the full-potential of European border regions and the benefits of a more integrated European territory. Amongst these barriers are the absence or inappropriate supply of cross-border public transport services. In this context, this paper presents potential policy tools to increase border permeability related to cross-border public transport as well as practical results from a few case-studies implemented across Europe.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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