3,773 research outputs found
Multiphysics Finite\u2013Element Modelling of an All\u2013Vanadium Redox Flow Battery for Stationary Energy Storage
All-Vanadium Redox Flow Batteries (VRFBs) are emerging as a novel technology for stationary energy storage. Numerical models are useful for exploring the potential performance of such devices, optimizing the structure and operating condition of cell stacks, and studying its interfacing to the electrical grid. A one-dimensional steady-state multiphysics model of a single VRFB, including mass, charge and momentum transport and conservation, and coupled to a kinetic model for electrochemical reactions, is first presented. This model is then extended, including reservoir equations, in order to simulate the VRFB charge and discharge dynamics. These multiphysics models are discretized by the finite element method in a commercial software package (COMSOL). Numerical results of both static and dynamic 1D models are compared to those from 2D models, with the same parameters, showing good agreement. This motivates the use of reduced models for a more efficient system simulation
Scaling laws and universality in the choice of election candidates
Nowadays there is an increasing interest of physicists in finding
regularities related to social phenomena. This interest is clearly motivated by
applications that a statistical mechanical description of the human behavior
may have in our society. By using this framework, we address this work to cover
an open question related to elections: the choice of elections candidates
(candidature process). Our analysis reveals that, apart from the social
motivations, this system displays features of traditional out-of-equilibrium
physical phenomena such as scale-free statistics and universality. Basically,
we found a non-linear (power law) mean correspondence between the number of
candidates and the size of the electorate (number of voters), and also that
this choice has a multiplicative underlying process (lognormal behavior). The
universality of our findings is supported by data from 16 elections from 5
countries. In addition, we show that aspects of network scale-free can be
connected to this universal behavior.Comment: Accepted for publication in EP
Electric dipole moments of nitric acid-water complexes measured by cluster beam deflection
Water clusters embedding a nitric acid molecule HNO3(H2O)_{n=1-10} are
investigated via electrostatic deflection of a molecular beam. We observe large
paraelectric susceptibilities that greatly exceed the electronic
polarizability, revealing the contribution of permanent dipole moments. The
moments derived from the data are also significantly higher than those of pure
water clusters. An enhancement in the susceptibility for n=5,6 and a rise in
cluster abundances setting in at n=6 suggest that dissociation of the solvated
acid molecule into ions takes place in this size range.Comment: Proceedings of ISACC 2009, The Fourth International Symposium "Atomic
Cluster Collisions: structure and dynamics from the nuclear to the biological
scale" (AIP Conference Proceedings
A Proposal for Taxonomic Re-Evaluation of Vaccinites Species from the Santonian Limestones of Southern Istria (Croatia)
Rudists, especially members of the family Hippuritidae, were common dwellers on the Adriatic Carbonate Platform during the Late Cretaceous. Morphological elements (ligamental ridge, teeth, pillars, length of the contour around the inner margin of the outer shell layer and the ratio between this length and the distance between the sutures of the pillars) from the transverse shell sections permit different species to be defined within the family. Transverse sections of Vaccinites specimens from the Santonian limestones in southern Istria show different values of the angle between the teeth and the ligament ridge, between the ligamental ridge and the E pillar (P2), and of the ratio between the length of the contour and the pillar suture distance. Cluster analyses (Ward’s and Unweighted pair–group average methods) using measured elements, allowed the definition of three species groups from seventeen species at the beginning of study
Electrostatic deflection of the water molecule: A fundamental asymmetric rotor.
An inhomogeneous electric field is used to study the deflection of a supersonic beam of water molecules. The deflection profiles show strong broadening accompanied by a small net displacement towards higher electric fields. The profiles are in excellent agreement with a calculation of rotational Stark shifts. The molecular rotational temperature being the only adjustable parameter, beam deflection is found to offer an accurate and practical means of determining this quantity. A pair of especially strongly responding rotational sublevels, adding up to ≈25% of the total beam intensity, are readily separated by deflection, making them potentially useful for further electrostatic manipulation. © 2007 The American Physical Society
Trauma-related psychological disorders among Palestinian children and adults in Gaza and West Bank, 2005-2008
BACKGROUND: Trauma from war and violence has led to psychological disorders in individuals living in the Gaza strip and West Bank. Few reports are available on the psychiatric disorders seen in children and adolescents or the treatment of affected populations. This study was conducted in order to describe the occurrence and treatment of psychiatric disorders in the Palestinian populations of the Gaza strip and Nablus district in the West Bank. METHODS: From 2005 to 2008, 1369 patients aged more than 1 year were identified through a local mental health and counseling health network. All were clinically assessed using a semi-structured interview based on the DSM-IV-TR criteria. RESULTS: Among 1254 patients, 23.2% reported post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD], 17.3% anxiety disorder (other than PTSD or acute stress disorder), and 15.3% depression. PTSD was more frequently identified in children < or = 15 years old, while depression was the main symptom observed in adults. Among children < or = 15 years old, factors significantly associated with PTSD included being witness to murder or physical abuse, receiving threats, and property destruction or loss (p < 0.03). Psychological care, primarily in the form of individual, short-term psychotherapy, was provided to 65.1% of patients, with about 30.6% required psychotropic medication. Duration of therapy sessions was higher for children < or = 15 years old compared with adults (p = 0.05). Following psychotherapy, 79.0% had improved symptoms, and this improvement was significantly higher in children < or = 15 years old (82.8%) compared with adults (75.3%; p = 0.001). CONCLUSION: These observations suggest that short-term psychotherapy could be an effective treatment for specific psychiatric disorders occurring in vulnerable populations, including children, living in violent conflict zones, such as in Gaza strip and the West Bank
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