323 research outputs found
Assessment of construction cost reduction of nearly zero energy dwellings in a life cycle perspective
Concerning Nearly Zero Energy Buildings, it is important to guarantee energy efficiency, thermal comfort and indoor environmental quality, while keeping construction and operational costs low. In this framework, this paper explores the efficacy of applying different scenarios, for reducing construction costs of new nearly zero energy multi-family houses in a life cycle perspective. Conversely to the standard cost-optimal approach, a real Italian case study building was chosen. Alternative and unconventional combinations of solutions for envelope and technical systems were adopted. Calculations were performed in two Italian cities (Rome and Turin). Three types of analysis were developed thermal comfort, energy performance and financial calculation. Results of the thermal analysis show that the installation of active cooling to prevent summer overheating can be avoided by applying low-cost passive strategies. All the proposed low-cost scenarios (4 alternative scenarios in Rome and 5 in Turin)reached the highest grade of energy performance, with a reduction of the non-renewable primary energy consumption up to 46% compared to the base case in Rome and 18% in Turin. From the economic perspective, all the scenarios in the two climate zones allow both reductions in the construction costs, up to 26% in Rome and 15% in Turin, and a Net Present Value after 50 years up to 163 €/m2 in Rome and 158 €/m2 in Turin
Atomistic Simulations of P(NDI2OD-T2) Morphologies: From Single Chain to Condensed Phases
We investigate theoretically the structure, crystallinity, and solubility of a high-mobility n-type semiconducting copolymer, P(NDI2OD-T2), and we propose a set of new force field parameters. The force field is reparametrized against density functional theory (DFT) calculations, with the aim to reproduce the correct torsional angles that govern the polymer chain flexibility and morphology. We simulate P(NDI2OD-T2) oligomers in different environments, namely, in vacuo, in the bulk phase, and in liquid toluene and chloronaphthalene solution. The choice of these solvents is motivated by the fact that they induce different kinds of molecular preaggregates during the casting procedures, resulting in variable device performances. Our results are in good agreement with the available experimental data; the polymer bulk structure, in which the chains are quite planar, is correcly reproduced, yet the isolated chains are flexible enough to fold in vacuo. We also calculate the solubility of P(NDI2OD-T2) in toluene and chloronaphthalene, predicting a much better solubility of the polymer in the latter, also in accordance to experimental observations. Different morphologies and dynamics of the oligomers in the two solvents have been observed. The proposed parameters make it possible to obtain the description of P(NDI2OD-T2) in different environments and can serve as a basis for extensive studies of this polymer semiconductor, such as, for example, the dynamics of aggregation in solvent
The effect of anticoagulant, storage time and temperature, and sodium azide on blood progesterone concentrations
Determines the effects of anticoagulant, storage time, storage temperature and sodium azide on blood progesterone concentrations in order to develop practical guidelines for the collection of Zebu blood under tropical conditions
Assessment of Structural Traits and Management Related to Dairy Herds in the Peri-urban Area of Bobo Dioulasso (South West of Burkina Faso)
To define mean herd size, structural traits, animal sourcing and use, management and aspects related to the milk production, 118 dairy herds, involved in a FAO dairy development project were studied. The mean herd size after allocation to clusters: Small (≤38 heads), Medium (>38, ≤61 heads) and Large (>61 heads) was 52.8±25.8, ranging from 7 to 134 heads of cattle. The following genotypes: Cross bred (CR) 58.8%, Zebu (ZB) 23.2% and Taurine cattle (TA) 18.0% which were not uniformly distributed neither across nor within herds were identified. Sex ratio was two thirds of females (70.6%), one third of males (28.1%) and a low proportion (1.3%) of castrated males. No mature TA males compared to 53.3% of the male ZB and 31.4% of the male CR, were indicated as potential sires. Investments in purchase of animals were higher in Small than in Medium and Large herds; of all purchased sires 53.8% were found in Small herds vs. 28.2% and 18.0% in Medium and Large. Herd property was equally distributed between single (56.8%) and multi property (43.2%). There was more manpower available per 100 cows in Small, being almost double and triple than in Medium and Large herds. Although milk extracted, was similar in all clusters averaging 2.4±0.5 litres/day/cow, milk off take rate, due to higher proportion of lactating cows, appeared higher in Small herds
Balanced electron-hole transport in spin-orbit semimetal SrIrO3 heterostructures
Relating the band structure of correlated semimetals to their transport
properties is a complex and often open issue. The partial occupation of
numerous electron and hole bands can result in properties that are seemingly in
contrast with one another, complicating the extraction of the transport
coefficients of different bands. The 5d oxide SrIrO3 hosts parabolic bands of
heavy holes and light electrons in gapped Dirac cones due to the interplay
between electron-electron interactions and spin-orbit coupling. We present a
multifold approach relying on different experimental techniques and theoretical
calculations to disentangle its complex electronic properties. By combining
magnetotransport and thermoelectric measurements in a field-effect geometry
with first-principles calculations, we quantitatively determine the transport
coefficients of different conduction channels. Despite their different
dispersion relationships, electrons and holes are found to have strikingly
similar transport coefficients, yielding a holelike response under field-effect
and thermoelectric measurements and a linear, electronlike Hall effect up to 33
T.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Ultracold-neutron infrastructure for the gravitational spectrometer GRANIT
The gravitational spectrometer GRANIT will be set up at the Institut Laue
Langevin. It will profit from the high ultracold neutron density produced by a
dedicated source. A monochromator made of crystals from graphite intercalated
with potassium will provide a neutron beam with 0.89 nm incident on the source.
The source employs superthermal conversion of cold neutrons in superfluid
helium, in a vessel made from BeO ceramics with Be windows. A special
extraction technique has been tested which feeds the spectrometer only with
neutrons with a vertical velocity component v < 20 cm/s, thus keeping the
density in the source high. This new source is expected to provide a density of
up to 800 1/cm3 for the spectrometer.Comment: accepted for publication in Proceedings International Workshop on
Particle Physics with Slow Neutron
Magnetic trapping of ultracold neutrons
Three-dimensional magnetic confinement of neutrons is reported. Neutrons are
loaded into an Ioffe-type superconducting magnetic trap through inelastic
scattering of cold neutrons with 4He. Scattered neutrons with sufficiently low
energy and in the appropriate spin state are confined by the magnetic field
until they decay. The electron resulting from neutron decay produces
scintillations in the liquid helium bath that results in a pulse of extreme
ultraviolet light. This light is frequency downconverted to the visible and
detected. Results are presented in which 500 +/- 155 neutrons are magnetically
trapped in each loading cycle, consistent with theoretical predictions. The
lifetime of the observed signal, 660 s +290/-170 s, is consistent with the
neutron beta-decay lifetime.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Mean Field Theory of Josephson Junction Arrays with Charge Frustration
Using the path integral approach, we provide an explicit derivation of the
equation for the phase boundary for quantum Josephson junction arrays with
offset charges and non-diagonal capacitance matrix. For the model with nearest
neighbor capacitance matrix and uniform offset charge , we determine,
in the low critical temperature expansion, the most relevant contributions to
the equation for the phase boundary. We explicitly construct the charge
distributions on the lattice corresponding to the lowest energies. We find a
reentrant behavior even with a short ranged interaction. A merit of the path
integral approach is that it allows to provide an elegant derivation of the
Ginzburg-Landau free energy for a general model with charge frustration and
non-diagonal capacitance matrix. The partition function factorizes as a product
of a topological term, depending only on a set of integers, and a
non-topological one, which is explicitly evaluated.Comment: LaTex, 24 pages, 8 figure
Identifying profiles of brain structure and associations with current and future psychopathology in youth
Brain structure is often studied as a marker of youth psychopathology by examining associations between volume or thickness of individual regions and specific diagnoses. However, these univariate approaches do not address whether the effect of a particular region may depend on the structure of other regions. Here, we identified subgroups of individuals with distinct profiles of brain structure and examined how these profiles were associated with concurrent and future youth psychopathology. We used latent profile analysis to identify distinct neuroanatomical profiles of subcortical region volume and orbitofrontal cortical thickness in the ABCD study (N = 9376, mean age = 9.91, SD = 0.62). We identified a five-profile solution consisting of a reduced subcortical volume profile, a reduced orbitofrontal thickness profile, a reduced limbic and elevated striatal volume profile, an elevated orbitofrontal thickness and reduced striatal volume profile, and an elevated orbitofrontal thickness and subcortical volume profile. While controlling for age, sex, and intracranial volume, profiles exhibited differences in concurrent psychopathology measured dimensionally and categorically and in psychopathology at 1-year follow-up measured dimensionally. Results show that profiles of brain structure have incremental validity for associations with youth psychopathology beyond intracranial volume.Temple University. College of Liberal ArtsPsychologyTemple University Libraries Open Access Publishing Fund, 2021-2022 (Philadelphia, Pa.
15 years of protest and media technologies scholarship: A sociotechnical timeline
This article investigates the relationship between the invention of new media technologies and scholarship concerning protest and political engagement. Building on an innovative approach that moves beyond a systematic literature review, this article contributes to our understanding of scholarship concerning digital communication technologies and how they may have been adopted and shaped protest movements and political engagement. Based on visualizations, we draw a sociotechnical timeline of protest and media technology scholarship within three dimensions: technological development, methods and techniques, and the social phenomena under investigation. The article concludes by identifying major trends in protest and media technologies scholarship over the past 15 years. The sociotechnical timeline enhances our understanding of academic discourse at the intersection of protest and media technologies by highlighting shortcomings and potential for future research
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