1,497 research outputs found
Improved hydrogen gas production in microbial electrolysis cells using inexpensive recycled carbon fibre fabrics
Growing energy demands of wastewater treatment have made it vital for water companies to develop less energy intensive processes for treating wastewater if net zero emissions are to be achieved by 2050. Microbial electrolysis cells (MECs) have the potential to do this by treating water and producing renewable hydrogen gas as a product, but capital and operational costs have slowed their deployment. By using recycled carbon fibre mats, commercially viable MECs can brought closer to reality, where recycled carbon fibre anode MECs treating real wastewater (normalised ~3100 L dâ1) were producing 66.77 L H2 dâ1 while graphite felt anode MECs produced 3.65 L H2 dâ1 per 1 m3 reactor, anodes costing ÂŁ5.53 mâ2 and ÂŁ88.36 mâ2 respectively, resulting in a total anode cost saving of 93%. This could incentivise the development of larger pilot systems, opening the door for generating greater value and a more sustainable wastewater treatment industry
Metallochaperones Are Needed for Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Escherichia coli Nicotinamidase-Pyrazinamidase Activity.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis nicotinamidase-pyrazinamidase (PZAse) is a metalloenzyme that catalyzes conversion of nicotinamide-pyrazinamide to nicotinic acid-pyrazinoic acid. This study investigated whether a metallochaperone is required for optimal PZAse activity. M. tuberculosis and Escherichia coli PZAses (PZAse-MT and PZAse-EC, respectively) were inactivated by metal depletion (giving PZAse-MT-Apo and PZAse-EC-Apo). Reactivation with the E. coli metallochaperone ZnuA or Rv2059 (the M. tuberculosis analog) was measured. This was repeated following proteolytic and thermal treatment of ZnuA and Rv2059. The CDC1551 M. tuberculosis reference strain had the Rv2059 coding gene knocked out, and PZA susceptibility and the pyrazinoic acid (POA) efflux rate were measured. ZnuA (200âÎŒM) achieved 65% PZAse-EC-Apo reactivation. Rv2059 (1âÎŒM) and ZnuA (1âÎŒM) achieved 69% and 34.3% PZAse-MT-Apo reactivation, respectively. Proteolytic treatment of ZnuA and Rv2059 and application of three (but not one) thermal shocks to ZnuA significantly reduced the capacity to reactivate PZAse-MT-Apo. An M. tuberculosis Rv2059 knockout strain was Wayne positive and susceptible to PZA and did not have a significantly different POA efflux rate than the reference strain, although a trend toward a lower efflux rate was observed after knockout. The metallochaperone Rv2059 restored the activity of metal-depleted PZAse in vitro Although Rv2059 is important in vitro, it seems to have a smaller effect on PZA susceptibility in vivo. It may be important to mechanisms of action and resistance to pyrazinamide in M. tuberculosis Further studies are needed for confirmation.IMPORTANCE Tuberculosis is an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and remains one of the major causes of disease and death worldwide. Pyrazinamide is a key drug used in the treatment of tuberculosis, yet its mechanism of action is not fully understood, and testing strains of M. tuberculosis for pyrazinamide resistance is not easy with the tools that are presently available. The significance of the present research is that a metallochaperone-like protein may be crucial to pyrazinamide's mechanisms of action and of resistance. This may support the development of improved tools to detect pyrazinamide resistance, which would have significant implications for the clinical management of patients with tuberculosis: drug regimens that are appropriately tailored to the resistance profile of a patient's individual strain lead to better clinical outcomes, reduced onward transmission of infection, and reduction of the development of resistant strains that are more challenging and expensive to treat
Hodge polynomials of some moduli spaces of Coherent Systems
When , we study the coherent systems that come from a BGN extension in
which the quotient bundle is strictly semistable. In this case we describe a
stratification of the moduli space of coherent systems. We also describe the
strata as complements of determinantal varieties and we prove that these are
irreducible and smooth. These descriptions allow us to compute the Hodge
polynomials of this moduli space in some cases. In particular, we give explicit
computations for the cases in which and is even,
obtaining from them the usual Poincar\'e polynomials.Comment: Formerly entitled: "A stratification of some moduli spaces of
coherent systems on algebraic curves and their Hodge--Poincar\'e
polynomials". The paper has been substantially shorten. Theorem 8.20 has been
revised and corrected. Final version accepted for publication in
International Journal of Mathematics. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:math/0407523 by other author
Assessing Human Error Against a Benchmark of Perfection
An increasing number of domains are providing us with detailed trace data on
human decisions in settings where we can evaluate the quality of these
decisions via an algorithm. Motivated by this development, an emerging line of
work has begun to consider whether we can characterize and predict the kinds of
decisions where people are likely to make errors.
To investigate what a general framework for human error prediction might look
like, we focus on a model system with a rich history in the behavioral
sciences: the decisions made by chess players as they select moves in a game.
We carry out our analysis at a large scale, employing datasets with several
million recorded games, and using chess tablebases to acquire a form of ground
truth for a subset of chess positions that have been completely solved by
computers but remain challenging even for the best players in the world.
We organize our analysis around three categories of features that we argue
are present in most settings where the analysis of human error is applicable:
the skill of the decision-maker, the time available to make the decision, and
the inherent difficulty of the decision. We identify rich structure in all
three of these categories of features, and find strong evidence that in our
domain, features describing the inherent difficulty of an instance are
significantly more powerful than features based on skill or time.Comment: KDD 2016; 10 page
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Examining Visual Field Loss in Patients in Glaucoma Clinics During Their Predicted Remaining Lifetime
Purpose.: To evaluate the proportion of patients in glaucoma clinics progressing at rates that would result in visual disability within their expected lifetime.
Methods.: This retrospective study used visual field (VF) series of at least 3 yearsâ duration from 3790 UK patients in glaucoma clinics calculating rates of loss for each eye using linear regression of mean deviation (MD) over time. Residual life expectancies derived from the UK Office of National Statistics actuarial tables for each patient were combined with these rates to estimate predicted MDs at end of expected lifetime. The proportion of patients projected to progress to visual impairment (MD: â14 dB or worse) or statutory blindness (MD: â22 dB or worse) in both eyes before end of expected lifetime was calculated.
Results.: Only 3.0% (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.7%â3.4%) of patient eyes progressed at faster than â1.5 dB/year (n = 7149 eyes). Of those patients with both eyes followed, 5.2% (CI 4.5%â6.0%) were predicted to progress to statutory blindness, with a further 10.4% (CI 9.4%â11.4%) reaching visual impairment in their lifetime. More than 90% (CI 85.7%â94.3%) of patients predicted to progress to statutory blindness, had an MD worse than â6 dB in at least one eye at presentation.
Conclusions.: This modeling exercise indicates that most patients in glaucoma clinics are not at high risk of progressing to statutory blindness. The likelihood of patients suffering impairment in their lifetimes is linked to VF loss at presentation, which illuminates the importance of reliably detecting significant VF defects in primary care
Simulation of rear surface contamination for a simple bluff body
Predicting the accumulation of material on the rear surfaces of square-backed cars is important to vehicle manufacturers, as this progressively compromises rear vision, vehicle visibility and aesthetics. It also reduces the effectiveness of rear mounted cameras. Here, this problem is represented by a simple bluff body with a single sprayer mounted centrally under its rear trailing edge.
A Very Large Eddy Simulation (VLES) solver is used to simulate both the aerodynamics of the body and deposition of contaminant. Aerodynamic drag and lift coefficients were predicted to within +1.3% and â4.2% of their experimental values, respectively. Wake topology was also correctly captured, resulting in a credible prediction of the rear surface deposition pattern.
Contaminant deposition is mainly driven by the lower part of the wake ring vortex, which advects material back onto the rear surface. This leads to a maximum below the rear stagnation point and an association with regions of higher base pressure.
The accumulation of mass is linear with time; the relative distribution changing little as the simulation progresses, implying that shorter simulations can be compared to longer experiments. Further, the rate of accumulation quickly reaches a settled mean value, suggesting utility as a metric for assessing different vehicles
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How do different lighting conditions affect the vision and quality of life of people with glaucoma? A systematic review
This article is a systematic review of evidence regarding the impact of different lighting conditions on the vision and quality of life (QoL) of people with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG). A systematic literature search was carried out using CINAHL, MEDLINE, PsycARTICLES, PsycINFO, Embase, and Ovid Nursing Database for studies: published up to April 2019; including people diagnosed with POAG; and assessing visual function or QoL in response to changing lighting/luminance levels or glare. Two researchers independently screened studies for eligibility. Data were extracted from eligible studies regarding study design, participant characteristics, outcomes, and results. Quality of included studies was critically appraised. Of 8437 studies, 56 eligible studies were included. Studies investigated the effects of lighting on the following domains among people with POAG: QoL (18/56), psychophysical measures (16/56), functional vision (10/56), activities of daily living (10/56), and qualitative findings (2/56). POAG negatively affects low-luminance contrast sensitivity, glare symptoms, and dark adaptation time and extent. In vision-related QoL questionnaires, people with POAG report problems with lighting, glare, and dark adaptation more frequently than any other domain. These problems worsen with progressing visual field loss. Early-stage POAG patients experience significantly more difficulties in low-luminance or changing lighting conditions than age-matched controls (AMCs), challenging perceptions of early-stage POAG as asymptomatic. However, performance-based studies seldom show significant differences between POAG participants and AMCs on tasks simulating daily activities under non-optimal lighting conditions. Further research with larger samples is required to optimise ambient and task-oriented lighting that can support patientsâ adaptation to POAG
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