6 research outputs found
Characterization of Fuji Apples from Different Harvest Dates and Storage Conditions from Measurements of Volatiles by Gas Chromatography and Electronic Nose
Volatile compounds in Fuji apples harvested at two different maturities were measured at harvest
and after 5 and 7 months of cold storage (1 °C) in four different atmospheres. When the samples
were characterized by both chromatographic measurements of volatiles and responses of an electronic
nose, the analyses showed a clear separation between fruits from different storage conditions (a
normal cold atmosphere and three controlled atmospheres). During poststorage, the apples were
left to ripen for 1, 5, and 10 days at 20 °C before analytical measurements were done involving
headspace-gas chromatography methods and electronic nose type quartz crystal microbalances.
Electronic nose responses registered by seven different sensors were used to classify the apples
using principal component analysis. It was possible to identify the samples from different storage
periods, days of shelf life, and harvest dates, but it was not possible to differentiate the fruits
corresponding to different cold storage atmospheres
The Effects of Exposure Time on the Surface Microhardness of Three Dual-Cured Dental Resin Cements
This study evaluated the exposure time of light-curing of the polymers used for cementation on microhardness test in different storage times. The polymers (specifically called resin cements) were RelyX ARC, RelyX U100, and SET. Five specimens of each group were prepared and photo-polymerized with exposure times of 20 s and 180 s, using a LED polymerization unit with wavelength of 440 ~ 480 nm and light output was consistently 1,500 mW/cm<sup>2</sup>. The Vickers hardness test was performed in a MMT-3 Microhardness Tester. Data were submitted to ANOVA and Tukey's test (α = 0.05). The values of RelyX ARC showed statistically significant difference to groups with light exposure when considering only chemical cure (p < 0.05). The groups with light exposure (20 s and 180 s) showed no significant difference between them (p > 0.05). The RelyX U100 cured only chemically showed statistically significant difference between 48 h and 7 days (p < 0.05). The SET resin cement showed no significant difference to groups without light exposure for all storage times (p > 0.05). The values of hardening of the dual-cured resin cements improved after setting by light and chemical activation demonstrating the importance of light curing