4,353 research outputs found
Experimental investigation of performance, emission and combustion characteristics of an indirect injection multi-cylinder CI engine fuelled by blends of de-inking sludge pyrolysis oil with biodiesel
De-inking sludge can be converted into useful forms of energy to provide economic and environmental benefits. In this study, pyrolysis oil produced from de-inking sludge through an intermediate pyrolysis technique was blended with biodiesel derived from waste cooking oil, and tested in a multi-cylinder indirect injection type CI engine. The physical and chemical properties of pyrolysis oil and its blends (20 and 30 vol.%) were measured and compared with those of fossil diesel and pure biodiesel (B100). Full engine power was achieved with both blends, and very little difference in engine performance and emission results were observed between 20% and 30% blends. At full engine load, the brake specific fuel consumption on a volume basis was around 6% higher for the blends when compared to fossil diesel. The brake thermal efficiencies were about 3-6% lower than biodiesel and were similar to fossil diesel. Exhaust gas emissions of the blends contained 4% higher CO2 and 6-12% lower NOx, as compared to fossil diesel. At full load, CO emissions of the blends were decreased by 5-10 times. The cylinder gas pressure diagram showed stable engine operation with the 20% blend, but indicated minor knocking with 30% blend. Peak cylinder pressure of the 30% blend was about 5-6% higher compared to fossil diesel. At full load, the peak burn rate of combustion from the 30% blend was about 26% and 12% higher than fossil diesel and biodiesel respectively. In comparison to fossil diesel the combustion duration was decreased for both blends; for 30% blend at full load, the duration was almost 12% lower. The study concludes that up to 20% blend of de-inking sludge pyrolysis oil with biodiesel can be used in an indirect injection CI engine without adding any ignition additives or surfactants
On the averaging of cardiac diffusion tensor MRI data: the effect of distance function selection
Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DT-MRI) allows a unique insight into the microstructure of highly-directional tissues. The selection of the most proper distance function for the space of diffusion tensors is crucial in enhancing the clinical application of this imaging modality. Both linear and nonlinear metrics have been proposed in the literature over the years. The debate on the most appropriate DT-MRI distance function is still ongoing. In this paper, we presented a framework to compare the Euclidean, affine-invariant Riemannian and log-Euclidean metrics using actual high-resolution DT-MRI rat heart data. We employed temporal averaging at the diffusion tensor level of three consecutive and identically-acquired DT-MRI datasets from each of five rat hearts as a means to rectify the background noise-induced loss of myocyte directional regularity. This procedure is applied here for the first time in the context of tensor distance function selection. When compared with previous studies that used a different concrete application to juxtapose the various DT-MRI distance functions, this work is unique in that it combined the following: (i) Metrics were judged by quantitative - rather than qualitative â criteria, (ii) the comparison tools were non-biased, (iii) a longitudinal comparison operation was used on a same-voxel basis. The statistical analyses of the comparison showed that the three DT-MRI distance functions tend to provide equivalent results. Hence, we came to the conclusion that the tensor manifold for cardiac DT-MRI studies is a curved space of almost zero curvature. The signal to noise ratio dependence of the operations was investigated through simulations. Finally, the âswelling effectâ occurrence following Euclidean averaging was found to be too unimportant to be worth consideration
Biological activity differences between TGF-ÎČ1 and TGF-ÎČ3 correlate with differences in the rigidity and arrangement of their component monomers
[Image: see text] TGF-ÎČ1, -ÎČ2, and -ÎČ3 are small, secreted signaling proteins. They share 71â80% sequence identity and signal through the same receptors, yet the isoform-specific null mice have distinctive phenotypes and are inviable. The replacement of the coding sequence of TGF-ÎČ1 with TGF-ÎČ3 and TGF-ÎČ3 with TGF-ÎČ1 led to only partial rescue of the mutant phenotypes, suggesting that intrinsic differences between them contribute to the requirement of each in vivo. Here, we investigated whether the previously reported differences in the flexibility of the interfacial helix and arrangement of monomers was responsible for the differences in activity by generating two chimeric proteins in which residues 54â75 in the homodimer interface were swapped. Structural analysis of these using NMR and functional analysis using a dermal fibroblast migration assay showed that swapping the interfacial region swapped both the conformational preferences and activity. Conformational and activity differences were also observed between TGF-ÎČ3 and a variant with four helix-stabilizing residues from TGF-ÎČ1, suggesting that the observed changes were due to increased helical stability and the altered conformation, as proposed. Surface plasmon resonance analysis showed that TGF-ÎČ1, TGF-ÎČ3, and variants bound the type II signaling receptor, TÎČRII, nearly identically, but had small differences in the dissociation rate constant for recruitment of the type I signaling receptor, TÎČRI. However, the latter did not correlate with conformational preference or activity. Hence, the difference in activity arises from differences in their conformations, not their manner of receptor binding, suggesting that a matrix protein that differentially binds them might determine their distinct activities
Quantum control of hybrid nuclear-electronic qubits
Pulsed magnetic resonance is a wide-reaching technology allowing the quantum
state of electronic and nuclear spins to be controlled on the timescale of
nanoseconds and microseconds respectively. The time required to flip either
dilute electronic or nuclear spins is orders of magnitude shorter than their
decoherence times, leading to several schemes for quantum information
processing with spin qubits. We investigate instead the novel regime where the
eigenstates approximate 50:50 superpositions of the electronic and nuclear spin
states forming "hybrid nuclear-electronic" qubits. Here we demonstrate quantum
control of these states for the first time, using bismuth-doped silicon, in
just 32 ns: this is orders of magnitude faster than previous experiments where
pure nuclear states were used. The coherence times of our states are five
orders of magnitude longer, reaching 4 ms, and are limited by the
naturally-occurring 29Si nuclear spin impurities. There is quantitative
agreement between our experiments and no-free-parameter analytical theory for
the resonance positions, as well as their relative intensities and relative
Rabi oscillation frequencies. In experiments where the slow manipulation of
some of the qubits is the rate limiting step, quantum computations would
benefit from faster operation in the hybrid regime.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, new data and simulation
Fock Representations of Quantum Fields with Generalized Statistic
We develop a rigorous framework for constructing Fock representations of
quantum fields obeying generalized statistics associated with certain solutions
of the spectral quantum Yang-Baxter equation. The main features of these
representations are investigated. Various aspects of the underlying
mathematical structure are illustrated by means of explicit examples.Comment: 26 pages, Te
1H, 13C and 15N assignment of the GNA1946 outer membrane lipoprotein from Neisseria meningitidis
GNA1946 (Genome-derived Neisseria Antigen 1946) is a highly conserved exposed outer membrane lipoprotein from Neisseria meningitidis bacteria of 287 amino acid length (31Â kDa). Although the structure of NMB1946 has been solved recently by X-Ray crystallography, understanding the behaviour of GNA1946 in aqueuos solution is highly relevant for the discovery of the antigenic determinants of the protein that will possibly lead to a more efficient vaccine development against virulent serogroup B strain of N.meningitidis. Here we report almost complete 1H, 13C and 15N resonance assignments of GNA1946 (residues 10â287) in aqueous buffer solution
Temperature Dependence of Backbone Dynamics in Human Ileal Bile Acid-Binding Protein: Implications for the Mechanism of Ligand Binding
Human ileal bile acid-binding protein (I-BABP), a member of the family of intracellular lipid binding proteins plays a key role in the cellular trafficking and metabolic regulation of bile salts. The protein has two internal and, according to a recent study, an additional superficial binding site and binds di- and trihydroxy bile salts with positive cooperativity and a high degree of site-selectivity. Previously, in the apo form, we have identified an extensive network of conformational fluctuations on the millisecond time scale, which cease upon ligation. Additionally, ligand binding at room temperature was found to be accompanied by a slight rigidification of picosecond-nanosecond (ps-ns) backbone flexibility. In the current study, temperature-dependent N-15 NMR spin relaxation measurements were used to gain more insight into the role of dynamics in human I-BABP-bile salt recognition. According to our analysis, residues sensing a conformational exchange in the apo state can be grouped into two clusters with slightly different exchange rates. The entropy-enthalpy compensation observed for both clusters suggests a disorder-order transition between a ground and a sparsely populated higher energy state in the absence of ligands. Analysis of the faster, ps-ns motion of N-15-H-1 bond vectors indicates an unusual nonlinear temperature-dependence for both ligation states. Intriguingly, while bile salt binding results in a more uniform response to temperature change throughout the protein, the temperature derivative of the generalized order parameter shows different responses to temperature increase for the two forms of the protein in the investigated temperature range. Analysis of both slow and fast motions in human I-BABP indicates largely different energy landscapes for the apo and halo states suggesting that optimization of binding interactions might be achieved by altering the dynamic behavior of specific segments in the protein
Endoscopic Management of Gastric Polyp with Outlet Obstruction without Polypectomy
Although gastric polyp is usually an incidental endoscopic finding, large-sized polyps can cause symptoms ranging from epigastralgia to bleeding from ulcerated polyps and gastric outlet obstruction. Although the gold standard of treatment is removal of the polyp either through endoscopic polypectomy or surgical excision, complications associated with these procedures cannot be ignored. The risk becomes a major concern for patients at high risk for surgery when complications arise. We describe a debilitated 74-year-old woman who presented with early satiety, intermittent postprandial nausea and vomiting for three months. Upper endoscopy revealed a 2.5 cm pedunculated polyp over the gastric antrum causing intermittent obstruction. Considering her high risk for polypectomy, detachable snaring was performed without polypectomy in an outpatient setting. The patient was complication-free with complete relief of obstructive symptoms one week after the procedure. Subsequent follow-ups showed satisfactory healing without signs of mucosal disruption or recurrence. The results suggest that detachable snaring without polypectomy may be a therapeutic option for high-risk patients with benign symptomatic gastric polyps
Weak Lensing by Galaxies in Groups and Clusters: I.--Theoretical Expectations
Galaxy-galaxy lensing is rapidly becoming one of the most promising means to
accurately measure the average relation between galaxy properties and halo
mass. In order to obtain a signal of sufficient signal-to-noise, one needs to
stack many lens galaxies according to their property of interest, such as
luminosity or stellar mass. Since such a stack consists of both central and
satellite galaxies, which contribute very different lensing signals, the
resulting shear measurements can be difficult to interpret. In the past,
galaxy-galaxy lensing studies have either completely ignored this problem, have
applied rough isolation criteria in an attempt to preferentially select
`central' galaxies, or have tried to model the contribution of satellites
explicitely. However, if one is able to {\it a priori} split the galaxy
population in central and satellite galaxies, one can measure their lensing
signals separately. This not only allows a much cleaner measurement of the
relation between halo mass and their galaxy populations, but also allows a
direct measurement of the sub-halo masses around satellite galaxies. In this
paper, we use a realistic mock galaxy redshift survey to show that galaxy
groups, properly selected from large galaxy surveys, can be used to accurately
split the galaxy population in centrals and satellites. Stacking the resulting
centrals according to their group mass, estimated from the total group
luminosity, allows a remarkably accurate recovery of the masses and density
profiles of their host haloes. In addition, stacking the corresponding
satellite galaxies according to their projected distance from the group center
yields a lensing signal that can be used to accurate measure the masses of both
sub-haloes and host haloes. (Abridged)Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Observation and resonant x-ray optical interpretation of multi-atom resonant photoemission effects in O 1s emission from NiO
We present experimental and theoretical results for the variation of the O 1s
intensity from a NiO(001) surface as the excitation energy is varied through
the Ni 2p1/2,3/2 absorption resonances, and as the incidence angle of the
radiation is varied from grazing to larger values. For grazing incidence, a
strong multi-atom resonant photoemission (MARPE) effect is seen on the O 1s
intensity as the Ni 2p resonances are crossed, but its magnitude decreases
rapidly as the incidence angle is increased. Resonant x-ray optical (RXRO)
calculations are found to predict these effects very well, although the
experimental effects are found to decrease at higher incidence angles faster
than those in theory. The potential influence of photoelectron diffraction
effects on such measurements are also considered, including experimental data
with azimuthal-angle variation and corresponding
multiple-scattering-diffraction calculations, but we conclude that they do not
vary beyond what is expected on the basis of the change in photoelectron
kinetic energy. Varying from linear polarization to circular polarization is
found to enhance these effects in NiO considerably, although the reasons are
not clear. We also discuss the relationship of these measurements to other
related interatomic resonance experiments and theoretical developments, and
make some suggestions for future studies in this area.Comment: Phys. Rev. B, in pres
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