8,734 research outputs found

    Electrodeposition of alloys or compounds in molten salts and applications

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    This article deals with the different modes of preparation of alloys or intermetallic compounds using the electrodeposition in molten salts, more particularly molten alkali fluorides. The interest in this process is to obtain new materials for high technology, particularly the compounds of reactive components such as actinides, rare earth and refractory metals. Two ways of preparation are considered: (i) electrocoating of the more reactive metal on a cathode made of the noble one and reaction between the two metals in contact, and (ii) electrocoating on an inert cathode of the intermetallic compound by coreduction of the ions of each elements. The kinetic is controlled by the reaction at the electrolyte interface. A wide bibliographic survey on the preparation of various compounds (intermetallic compounds, borides, carbides…) is given and a special attention is paid to the own experience of the authors in the preparation of these compounds and interpretation of their results

    Where should livestock graze? Integrated modeling and optimization to guide grazing management in the Cañete basin, Peru

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    Integrated watershed management allows decision-makers to balance competing objectives, for example agricultural production and protection of water resources. Here, we developed a spatially-explicit approach to support such management in the Cañete watershed, Peru. We modeled the effect of grazing management on three services – livestock production, erosion control, and baseflow provision – and used an optimization routine to simulate landscapes providing the highest level of services. Over the entire watershed, there was a trade-off between livestock productivity and hydrologic services and we identified locations that minimized this trade-off for a given set of preferences. Given the knowledge gaps in ecohydrology and practical constraints not represented in the optimizer, we assessed the robustness of spatial recommendations, i.e. revealing areas most often selected by the optimizer. We conclude with a discussion of the practical decisions involved in using optimization frameworks to inform watershed management programs, and the research needs to better inform the design of such programs

    Neodymium and gadolinium extraction from molten fluorides by reduction on a reactive electrode

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    This work describes the electrochemical extraction on a reactive cathode (Cu, Ni) of two lanthanides Ln (Ln = Nd and Gd) from molten LiF-CaF2 medium at 840 and 920°C for Nd and 940°C for Gd. Extraction runs have been performed and the operating conditions (cathodic material and temperature) optimised. The titration of the Nd and Gd concentrations in the melt during extraction used square wave voltammetry. At the end of each run, the residual Ln content was checked by ICP-AES; the extraction efficiencies of the two lanthanides were found to be more than 99.8% on both reactive substrates

    Progress in the study of CdZnTe strip detectors

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    We report new performance measurements and computer simulations of a sub-millimeter pitch CdZnTe strip detector under study as a prototype imaging spectrometer for astronomical x-ray and gamma-ray observations. The prototype is 1.5 mm thick with 375 micron strip pitch in both the x and y dimensions. Previously reported work included demonstrations of half-pitch spatial resolution (approximately 190 microns) and good energy resolution and spectral uniformity. Strip detector efficiency measurements have also been presented. A model that includes the photon interaction, carrier transport and the electronics was developed that qualitatively reproduced the measurements. The new studies include measurements of the CdZnTe transport properties for this prototype in an effort to resolve quantitative discrepancies between the measurements and the simulations. Measurements of charge signals produced by laser pulses and (alpha) -rays are used to determine these transport properties. These are then used in the model to predict gamma-ray efficiencies that are compared with the data. The imaging performance of the detector is studied by scanned laser and gamma beam spot measurements. The results support the model\u27s prediction of nearly linear sharing of the charge for interactions occurring in the region between electrodes. The potential for strip detectors with spatial resolution much finer than the strip pitch is demonstrated. A new design scheme for strip detectors is shortly discussed

    Scalar Representation and Conjugation of Set-Valued Functions

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    To a function with values in the power set of a pre-ordered, separated locally convex space a family of scalarizations is given which completely characterizes the original function. A concept of a Legendre-Fenchel conjugate for set-valued functions is introduced and identified with the conjugates of the scalarizations. Using this conjugate, weak and strong duality results are proven.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1012.435

    Hubungan Penerapan Metode Tim Dengan Kinerja Perawat Pelaksana Di Irina C Rsup Prof. Dr. R. D. Kandou Manado

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    : Performance nurse is a nurse acts committed within an organization in accordance with the powers and responsibilities of each, where a good performance can give satisfaction to the users of services and also improve the quality of nursing care. To improve and realize the quality of nursing service, hospitals should implement nursing care system process in the ward using the Professional Nursing Practice Model (PNPM). The team's method is a method in which the nursing care professional nurse led a group of nursing staff in providing nursing care to a group of clients through cooperative and collaborative efforts. The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between the application of the method performing team nurse in the department of Irina C RSUP Prof. Dr. R. D. Kandou Manado. The study design used is observational analytic with cross sectional approach. The sampling technique is by using Simple Random Sampling in accordance with the inclusion criteria with a total sample of 38 people. The results using chi-square statistic test obtained value ñ = 0,020 <á = 0,05. Conclusion the results of this study has shown there is a relationship between the application of the method performing team nurse of Irina C RSUP Prof. Dr. R. D. Kandou Manado

    Hubungan Komunikasi Terapeutik Perawat Dengan Kepuasan Pasien Di Ruang Rawat Inap Irina a Rsup Prof. Dr. R. D. Kandou Manado

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    : Background The nurse is a profession focused on the care of individuals families and communities to achieve optimal health conducted by nurses by increasing mutual trust and helping to solve problems with communication, where the nurse can listen the client's problems and explain the procedure of nursing actions, it would disturb therapeutic relation which impact patient dissatisfaction if it is unimplemented. Objective this study aims to analyze the relation of the nurse therapeutic communication with patient satisfaction in Inpatient Unit Irina A of RSUP Prof. Dr. R. D. Kandou Manado. Method of research is an analytic survey with cross sectional approach. The technique of collecting sampling was done through purposive sampling. There were 67 respondents, it indicated that 42 people (91,3%) were satisfied that the therapeutic communication skills both nurses and patients, and 4 people (8.7%) were less satisfied . For the therapeutic communication skills which were good enough and 5 patients (23.8%) felt satisfy and 16 patients (76.2%) felt less satisfy. Results of bivariate chi square obtained p value 0.000 (pv <0.05). Value of 0.000 is below the alpha value of 5% (0.05). Conclution there is a relation between the implementation of therapeutic communication with the patient's level of satisfaction in Inpatient Unit Irina A of RSUD Prof. Dr. R. D. Kandou Manado. Suggestion is expected that Kandou Manado hospital can improve and provide training on the implementation of therapeutic communication for nurses so that patients are satisfied with the optimum services

    Spatial and temporal dynamics of malaria transmission in rural western Kenya

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    ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Understanding the impact of reducing Plasmodium falciparum malaria transmission requires estimates of the relationship between health outcomes and exposure to infectious mosquitoes. However, measures of exposure such as mosquito density and entomological inoculation rate (EIR) are generally aggregated over large areas and time periods, biasing the outcome-exposure relationship. There are few studies examining the extent and drivers of local variation in malaria exposure in endemic areas. METHODS: We describe the spatio-temporal dynamics of malaria transmission intensity measured by mosquito density and EIR in the KEMRI/CDC health and demographic surveillance system using entomological data collected during 2002-2004. Geostatistical zero inflated binomial and negative binomial models were applied to obtain location specific (house) estimates of sporozoite rates and mosquito densities respectively. Model-based predictions were multiplied to estimate the spatial pattern of annual entomological inoculation rate, a measure of the number of infective bites a person receive per unit of time. The models included environmental and climatic predictors extracted from satellite data, harmonic seasonal trends and parameters describing space-time correlation. RESULTS: Anopheles gambiae s.l was the main vector species accounting for 86% (n=2309) of the total collected mosquitoes with the remainder being Anopheles funestus. Sixty eight percent (757/1110) of the surveyed houses had no mosquitoes. Distance to water bodies, vegetation and day temperature were significantly associated with mosquito density. Overall annual point estimates of EIR were 6.7, 9.3 and 9.6 infectious bites per annum for 2002, 2003 and 2004 respectively. Monthly mosquito density and EIR varied over the study period peaking in May during the wet season. The predicted and observed densities and EIR showed a strong seasonal and spatial pattern over the study area. CONCLUSIONS: Spatio-temporal maps of malaria transmission intensity obtained in this study are not only useful in understanding variability in malaria epidemiology over small areas but also provides a high resolution exposure surface that can be used to analyse the impact of malaria exposure on mortalit

    CdZnTe strip detectors as sub-millimeter resolution imaging gamma radiation spectrometers

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    We report γ-ray detection performance measurements and computer simulations of a sub-millimeter pitch CdZnTe strip detector. The detector is a prototype for γ-ray measurements in the range of 20-600 keV. The prototype is a 1.5 mm thick, 64×64 orthogonal stripe CdZnTe detector of 0.375 mm pitch in both dimensions, with approximately one square inch of sensitive area. Using discrete laboratory electronics to process signals from an 8×8 stripe region of the prototype we measured good spectroscopic uniformity and sub-pitch (~0.2 mm) spatial resolution in both x and y dimensions. We present below measurements of the spatial uniformity, relative timing and pulse height of the anode and cathode signals. We simulated the photon interactions and signal generation in the strip detector and the test electronics and we compare these results with the data. The data indicate that cathode signal-as well as the anode signal-arises more strongly from the conduction electrons rather than the holes

    Unsupervised Learning in Detection of Gene Transfer

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    The tree representation as a model for organismal evolution has been in use since before Darwin. However, with the recent unprecedented access to biomolecular data, it has been discovered that, especially in the microbial world, individual genes making up the genome of an organism give rise to different and sometimes conflicting evolutionary tree topologies. This discovery calls into question the notion of a single evolutionary tree for an organism and gives rise to the notion of an evolutionary consensus tree based on the evolutionary patterns of the majority of genes in a genome embedded in a network of gene histories. Here, we discuss an approach to the analysis of genomic data of multiple genomes using bipartition spectral analysis and unsupervised learning. An interesting observation is that genes within genomes that have evolutionary tree topologies, which are in substantial conflict with the evolutionary consensus tree of an organism, point to possible horizontal gene transfer events which often delineate significant evolutionary events
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