2,561 research outputs found
In Silico Determination of Gas Permeabilities by Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics: CO2 and He through PIM-1.
© 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.We study the permeation dynamics of helium and carbon dioxide through an atomistically detailed model of a polymer of intrinsic microporosity, PIM-1, via non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (NEMD) simulations. This work presents the first explicit molecular modeling of gas permeation through a high free-volume polymer sample, and it demonstrates how permeability and solubility can be obtained coherently from a single simulation. Solubilities in particular can be obtained to a very high degree of confidence and within experimental inaccuracies. Furthermore, the simulations make it possible to obtain very specific information on the diffusion dynamics of penetrant molecules and yield detailed maps of gas occupancy, which are akin to a digital tomographic scan of the polymer network. In addition to determining permeability and solubility directly from NEMD simulations, the results shed light on the permeation mechanism of the penetrant gases, suggesting that the relative openness of the microporous topology promotes the anomalous diffusion of penetrant gases, which entails a deviation from the pore hopping mechanism usually observed in gas diffusion in polymers
Targeted Micro-Phase separation – A generic design concept to control the elasticity of extrudable hydrogels
Hydrogels are ubiquitous in nature and technology. Controlling their mechanical properties and under-standing their complex microstructure is critical e.g. for 3D bioprinting or tissue engineering applications. Here a generic design concept for tuning the elasticity of extrudable gels at given polymer or particle concentration is presented. Targeted micro-phase separation leading to micro-heterogeneities (1–100 µm) yields high gel strength allowing for extrusion of uniform filaments with high shape accuracy as long as the heterogeneity length scale is small compared to the extruded filament diameter (>500 μm). Micro-mechanical and structural heterogeneity was enhanced in alginate hydrogels by accelerating crosslinking kinetics, corresponding to gel elasticity variation of more than two orders of magnitude (17 Pa to 2300 Pa), enabling filament extrusion (1046 µm) with high shape fidelity. Introducing poly(vinylalcohol) into gelatin gels resulted in more heterogeneous materials with a 2-fold increase in elasticity (951 Pa to 1993 Pa) and thinner filaments (908 µm to 590 µm). Higher ionic strength in Laponite-based hydrogels induced nanoparticle aggregation, leading to higher elasticity (857 Pa to 2316 Pa) enabling smooth filament extrusion. Eliminating the often tacitly assumed hydrogel uniformity on the microscale provides additional degrees of freedom to achieve high gel strength without increasing polymer, particle or crosslinker concentration
Coupled Boltzmann Transport Equations of Heavy Quarks and Quarkonia in Quark-Gluon Plasma
We develop a framework of coupled transport equations for open heavy flavor
and quarkonium states, in order to describe their transport inside the
quark-gluon plasma. Our framework is capable of studying simultaneously both
open and hidden heavy flavor observables in heavy-ion collision experiments and
can account for both, uncorrelated and correlated recombination. Our
recombination implementation depends on real-time open heavy quark and
antiquark distributions. We carry out consistency tests to show how the
interplay among open heavy flavor transport, quarkonium dissociation and
recombination drives the system to equilibrium. We then apply our framework to
study bottomonium production in heavy-ion collisions. We include
, , , and
in the framework and take feed-down contributions during the hadronic gas stage
into account. Cold nuclear matter effects are included by using nuclear parton
distribution functions for the initial primordial heavy flavor production. A
calibrated dimensional viscous hydrodynamics is used to describe the bulk
QCD medium. We calculate both the nuclear modification factor
of all bottomonia states and the azimuthal angular anisotropy coefficient
of the state and find that our results agree reasonably with
experimental measurements. Our calculations indicate that correlated cross-talk
recombination is an important production mechanism of bottomonium in current
heavy-ion experiments. The importance of correlated recombination can be tested
experimentally by measuring the ratio of and
.Comment: 36 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables; v2: changed to JHEP format, added a
few references; v3: uncertainty analysis added, new measurement proposal to
test correlated recombination; v4: minor change in Fig.7c and relevant
discussions; v5: published version; link to the major part of the code:
https://github.com/4KColo/Quarkonium_cytho
Quarkonium Production in Heavy Ion Collisions: From Open Quantum System to Transport Equation
Using the open quantum system formalism and effective field theory of QCD, we
derive the Boltzmann transport equation of quarkonium inside the quark-gluon
plasma. Our derivation illuminates that the success of transport equations in
quarkonium phenomenology is closely related to the separation of scales in the
problem.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; contribution to the proceedings of XXVIIIth
International Conference on Ultrarelativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions
(Quark Matter 2019); updated a few reference
Use of long-term microdialysis subcutaneous glucose monitoring in the management of neonatal diabetes - A first case report
In neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM), a rare genetic disorder, insulin therapy is required but the management is difficult. Frequent blood glucose determinations are necessary in most cases. Microdialysis subcutaneous glucose monitoring (MSGM) is feasible in neonates and has been proposed to reduce painful blood sampling and blood loss. We have applied long-term MSGM to a small-fordate female newborn with transient NDM. We found a good correlation of subcutaneous and blood glucose concentration over a wide range of values. MSGM enabled a reduction in blood glucose determinations during optimization of intravenous insulin treatment and initiation of continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion. We conclude that long-term MSGM is feasible and may reduce painful blood sampling and blood loss in NDM. Furthermore, long-term MSGM may hold a potential for avoiding hypoglycemic episodes and earlier discharge. Copyright (C) 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel
(Micro)evolutionary changes and the evolutionary potential of bird migration
Seasonal migration is the yearly long-distance movement of individuals between their breeding and wintering grounds. Individuals from nearly every animal group exhibit this behavior, but probably the most iconic migration is carried out by birds, from the classic V-shape formation of geese on migration to the amazing nonstop long-distance flights undertaken by Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea. In this chapter, we discuss how seasonal migration has shaped the field of evolution. First, this behavior is known to turn on and off quite rapidly, but controversy remains concerning where this behavior first evolved geographically and whether the ancestral state was sedentary or migratory (Fig. 7.1d, e). We review recent work using new analytical techniques to provide insight into this topic. Second, it is widely accepted that there is a large genetic basis to this trait, especially in groups like songbirds that migrate alone and at night precluding any opportunity for learning. Key hypotheses on this topic include shared genetic variation used by different populations to migrate and only few genes being involved in its control. We summarize recent work using new techniques for both phenotype and genotype characterization to evaluate and challenge these hypotheses. Finally, one topic that has received less attention is the role these differences in migratory phenotype could play in the process of speciation. Specifically, many populations breed next to one another but take drastically different routes on migration (Fig. 7.2). This difference could play an important role in reducing gene flow between populations, but our inability to track most birds on migration has so far precluded evaluations of this hypothesis. The advent of new tracking techniques means we can track many more birds with increasing accuracy on migration, and this work has provided important insight into migration's role in speciation that we will review here
TCT-499 Prediction of lesion type related MACE by sFLT-1 and GDF-15. Results from The PROSPECT study
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