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Climate impact on interannual variability of Weddell Sea Bottom Water
Bottom water formed in the Weddell Sea plays a significant role in ventilating the global abyssal ocean, forming a central component of the global overturning circulation. To place Weddell Sea Bottom Water in the context of larger scale climate fluctuations, we analyze the temporal variability of an 8âyear (April 1999 through January 2007) time series of bottom water temperature relative to the El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO), Southern Annular Mode (SAM), and Antarctic Dipole (ADP). In addition to a pronounced seasonal cycle, the temperature record reveals clear interannual variability with anomalously cold pulses in 1999 and 2002 and no cold event in 2000. Correlations of the time series with ENSO, SAM, and ADP indices peak with the indices leading by 14â20 months. Secondary weaker correlations with the SAM index exist at 1â6 month lead time. A multivariate EOF analysis of surface variables shows that the leading mode represents characteristic traits of outâofâphase SAM and ENSO impact patterns and is well separated from other modes in terms of variance explained. The leading principal component correlates with the bottom water temperature at similar time scales as did the climate indices, implying impact from largeâscale climate. Two physical mechanisms could link the climate forcing to the bottom water variability. First, anomalous winds may alter production of dense shelf water by modulating openâwater area over the shelf. Second, surface winds may alter the volume of dense water exported from the shelf by governing the Weddell Gyreâs cyclonic vigor
Mechanical characteristics of groundnut shell particle reinforced polylactide nano fibre
ABSTRACT The PLA-groundnut shell solution is electrospun to produce nanocomposite fibre. The spinneret containing the composite solution was placed 24.7 cm away from the aluminium collector, tilted at an angle of 30 °, and the solution flow rate kept at 1 mL/min. Groundnut Shell particle (GSP) weight fraction used was varied from 3 - 8 wt. %. Particle reinforced nanofibres were formed on the collector from the composite solution at 26 kV. These nanofibres were subjected to tensile test and the result indicates that at 6 wt. % untreated GSP reinforced fibre possessed the best tensile stiffness of 24.62 MPa. This corresponds to 2.201 % increase in Modulus of Elasticity over the unreinforced PLA (1.07 MPa). The 7 wt. % treated GSP fibre showed the least stiffness (0.33 MPa), which is 69 % reduction over that of unreinforced fibre. PLA fibre reinforced with 5 wt. % untreated GSP displayed best blend of properties over the unreinforced with increase of 286 % (4.43 x 10-4 HB), 1,502 % (1.07 MPa), 286 % (0.22 MPa), 6.8 % (0.05 J) and 1,081 % (~ 0.15 MPa) in hardness, stiffness, UTS, energy at break and stress at break respectively. However, ductility decreased by ~33.3 % when compared to the unreinforced (18.27). The 5 wt. % untreated GSP PLA reinforced fibre showed the highest UTS (0.855 MPa). The micrographs showed beads on reinforced fibres, while the virgin PLA showed no beads
Driving ÎČâStrands into Fibrils
In this work we study contributions
of mainchain and side chain
atoms to fibrillization of polyalanine peptides using all-atom molecular
dynamics simulations. We show that the total number of hydrogen bonds
in the system does not change significantly during aggregation. This
emerges from a compensatory mechanism where the formation of one interpeptide
hydrogen bond requires rupture of two peptideâwater bonds,
leading to the formation of one extra waterâwater bond. Since
hydrogen bonds are mostly electrostatic in nature, this mechanism
implies that electrostatic energies related to these bonds are not
minimized during fibril formation. Therefore, hydrogen bonds do not
drive fibrillization in all-atom models. Nevertheless, they play an
important role in this process since aggregation without the formation
of interpeptide hydrogen bonds accounts for a prohibitively large
electrostatic penalty (âŒ9.4 kJ/mol). Our work also highlights
the importance of using accurate models to describe chemical bonds
since Lennard-Jones and electrostatic contributions of different chemical
groups of the protein and solvent are 1 order of magnitude larger
than the overall enthalpy of the system. Thus, small errors in modeling
these interactions can produce large errors in the total enthalpy
of the system
Effects of Trimethylamineâ<i>N</i>âoxide (TMAO) on Hydrophobic and Charged Interactions
Effects of trimethylamine-<i>N</i>-oxide (TMAO) on hydrophobic
and chargeâcharge interactions are investigated using molecular
dynamics simulations. Recently, these interactions in model peptides
and in the Trp-Cage miniprotein have been reported to be strongly
affected by TMAO. Neopentane dimers and Na<sup>+</sup>Cl<sup>â</sup> are used, here, as models for hydrophobic and chargeâcharge
interactions, respectively. Distance-dependent interactions, i.e.,
potential of mean force, are computed using an umbrella sampling protocol
at different temperatures which allows us to determine enthalpy and
entropic energies. We find that the large favorable entropic energy
and the unfavorable enthalpy, which are characteristic of hydrophobic
interactions, become smaller when TMAO is added to water. These changes
account for a negligible effect and a stabilizing effect on the strength
of hydrophobic interactions for simulations performed with Kast and
Netz models of TMAO, respectively. Effects of TMAO on the enthalpy
are mainly due to changes in terms of the potential energy involving
solventâsolvent molecules. At the molecular level, TMAO is
incorporated in the solvation shell of neopentane which may explain
its effect on the enthalpy and entropic energy. Chargeâcharge
interactions become stronger when TMAO is added to water because this
osmolyte decreases the enthalpic penalty of bringing Na<sup>+</sup> and Cl<sup>â</sup> close together mainly by affecting ionâsolvent
interactions. TMAO is attracted to Na<sup>+</sup>, becoming part of
its solvation shell, whereas it is excluded from the vicinity of Cl<sup>â</sup>. These results are more pronounced for simulation
performed with the Netz model which is more hydrophobic and has a
larger dipole moment compared to the Kast model of TMAO