2,149 research outputs found
Sorption of sulfamethoxazole, sulfachloropyridazine and sulfamethazine onto six New Zealand dairy farm soils
We have investigated the sorption potential of three sulfonamides (SAs) in six New Zealand dairy farming soils using a modified batch equilibrium method employing 0.005 M CaCl₂ as background solution. Both liquid and solid phases were extracted to analyse for the antibiotic concentrations in order to avoid underestimation that may arise a result of photolysis or biotic degradation. The experimental data were later used to construct Freundlich isotherms to determine the effective distribution coefficients. Low log Koc value for all SAs suggests considerable leaching potential for SAs under conditions that are conducive for leaching. The sorption affinity for all soils followed the trend SCP>SMZ>SMO
Facilitation skills: the catalyst for increased effectiveness in consultant practice and clinical systems leadership
Consultant practitioner is the pinnacle of the clinical career ladder for all health care disciplines in the United Kingdom. Consultant nurse, midwife and health visitor roles build on the clinical credibility and expertise characteristic of advanced level practice, but also possess expertise in: clinical systems leadership and the facilitation of culture change, learning and development; advanced consultancy approaches, and research and evaluation to prioritise person-centred, safe and effective care across patient pathways.
This project aimed to help new and emerging consultants to become more effective in their role through a programme of support to develop their expertise.
Emancipatory action research, supported by claims, concerns and issues tool, derived from Stakeholder Evaluation, and other methods (active learning, action learning, collaborative workshops and individual tools e.g. qualitative 360 degree feedback and reflective reviews) comprised the supportive intervention which enabled participants to research their own practice.
The programme’s methodology and methods helped participants to: research their own practice; theorise from practice; grow the facilitation skills needed to develop and demonstrate their own effectiveness; foster the effectiveness of others and; transform practice culture. Greater effectiveness in their multiple roles was demonstrated, as was the impact of this on others, services and organisations.
The study concludes that the support programme augmented by the methodology, facilitation skills and the 10 principles derived from a concept analysis of work-based learning is central to achieving improved effectiveness and transformation of others, services and organisations. Theoretical insights at collective/community levels also resulted. Key recommendations are identified for commissioners, higher education and research
Glasslike Arrest in Spinodal Decomposition as a Route to Colloidal Gelation
Colloid-polymer mixtures can undergo spinodal decomposition into colloid-rich
and colloid-poor regions. Gelation results when interconnected colloid-rich
regions solidify. We show that this occurs when these regions undergo a glass
transition, leading to dynamic arrest of the spinodal decomposition. The
characteristic length scale of the gel decreases with increasing quench depth,
and the nonergodicity parameter exhibits a pronounced dependence on scattering
vector. Mode coupling theory gives a good description of the dynamics, provided
we use the full static structure as input.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures; replaced with published versio
Angle-resolved photoemission and first-principles electronic structure of single-crystalline -uranium (001)
Continuing the photoemission study begun with the work of Opeil et al. [Phys.
Rev. B \textbf{73}, 165109 (2006)], in this paper we report results of an
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study performed on a
high-quality single-crystal -uranium at 173 K. The absence of
surface-reconstruction effects is verified using X-ray Laue and low-energy
electron diffraction (LEED) patterns. We compare the ARPES intensity map with
first-principles band structure calculations using a generalized gradient
approximation (GGA) and we find good correlations with the calculated
dispersion of the electronic bands
Observation of a continuous phase transition in a shape-memory alloy
Elastic neutron-scattering, inelastic x-ray scattering, specific-heat, and
pressure-dependent electrical transport measurements have been made on single
crystals of AuZn and Au_{0.52}Zn_{0.48} above and below their martensitic
transition temperatures (T_M=64K and 45K, respectively). In each composition,
elastic neutron scattering detects new commensurate Bragg peaks (modulation)
appearing at Q = (1.33,0.67,0) at temperatures corresponding to each sample's
T_M. Although the new Bragg peaks appear in a discontinuous manner in the
Au_{0.52}Zn_{0.48} sample, they appear in a continuous manner in AuZn.
Surprising us, the temperature dependence of the AuZn Bragg peak intensity and
the specific-heat jump near the transition temperature are in favorable accord
with a mean-field approximation. A Landau-theory-based fit to the pressure
dependence of the transition temperature suggests the presence of a critical
endpoint in the AuZn phase diagram located at T_M*=2.7K and p*=3.1GPa, with a
quantum saturation temperature \theta_s=48.3 +/- 3.7K.Comment: 6 figure
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