17 research outputs found
Suppression of Phase Separation in LiFePO4 Nanoparticles During Battery Discharge
Using a novel electrochemical phase-field model, we question the common
belief that LixFePO4 nanoparticles separate into Li-rich and Li-poor phases
during battery discharge. For small currents, spinodal decomposition or
nucleation leads to moving phase boundaries. Above a critical current density
(in the Tafel regime), the spinodal disappears, and particles fill
homogeneously, which may explain the superior rate capability and long cycle
life of nano-LiFePO4 cathodes.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figure
Height and timing of growth spurt during puberty in young people living with vertically acquired HIV in Europe and Thailand.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to describe growth during puberty in young people with vertically acquired HIV. DESIGN: Pooled data from 12 paediatric HIV cohorts in Europe and Thailand. METHODS: One thousand and ninety-four children initiating a nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor or boosted protease inhibitor based regimen aged 1-10 years were included. Super Imposition by Translation And Rotation (SITAR) models described growth from age 8 years using three parameters (average height, timing and shape of the growth spurt), dependent on age and height-for-age z-score (HAZ) (WHO references) at antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation. Multivariate regression explored characteristics associated with these three parameters. RESULTS: At ART initiation, median age and HAZ was 6.4 [interquartile range (IQR): 2.8, 9.0] years and -1.2 (IQR: -2.3 to -0.2), respectively. Median follow-up was 9.1 (IQR: 6.9, 11.4) years. In girls, older age and lower HAZ at ART initiation were independently associated with a growth spurt which occurred 0.41 (95% confidence interval 0.20-0.62) years later in children starting ART age 6 to 10 years compared with 1 to 2 years and 1.50 (1.21-1.78) years later in those starting with HAZ less than -3 compared with HAZ at least -1. Later growth spurts in girls resulted in continued height growth into later adolescence. In boys starting ART with HAZ less than -1, growth spurts were later in children starting ART in the oldest age group, but for HAZ at least -1, there was no association with age. Girls and boys who initiated ART with HAZ at least -1 maintained a similar height to the WHO reference mean. CONCLUSION: Stunting at ART initiation was associated with later growth spurts in girls. Children with HAZ at least -1 at ART initiation grew in height at the level expected in HIV negative children of a comparable age
Theory of Chemical Kinetics and Charge Transfer based on Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics
Classical theories of chemical kinetics assume independent reactions in
dilute solutions, whose rates are determined by mean concentrations. In
condensed matter, strong interactions alter chemical activities and create
inhomogeneities that can dramatically affect the reaction rate. The extreme
case is that of a reaction coupled to a phase transformation, whose kinetics
must depend on the order parameter -- and its gradients, at phase boundaries.
This Account presents a general theory of chemical kinetics based on
nonequilibrium thermodynamics. The reaction rate is a nonlinear function of the
thermodynamic driving force (free energy of reaction) expressed in terms of
variational chemical potentials. The Cahn-Hilliard and Allen-Cahn equations are
unified and extended via a master equation for non-equilibrium chemical
thermodynamics. For electrochemistry, both Marcus and Butler-Volmer kinetics
are generalized for concentrated solutions and ionic solids. The theory is
applied to intercalation dynamics in the phase separating Li-ion battery
material LiFePO.Comment: research account, 17 two-column pages, 12 figs, 78 refs - some typos
corrected Accounts of Chemical Research (2013
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Shadow money and the public money supply: the impact of the 2007-2009 financial crisis on the monetary system
This article explores the effects of the political reactions to the 2007–2009 financial crisis on the monetary system. It chimes in with the view that shadow banks create ‘shadow money’, i.e. private substitutes for bank deposits. The article analyses how the three main forms of shadow money – money market fund shares, overnight repurchase agreements and asset-backed commercial papers – were affected by the short-term government intervention and medium-term regulation during and after the 2007–2009 financial crisis in the United States. The analysis reveals that the measures taken between 2007 and 2014 integrated some shadow money forms in the public money supply. In the year after the Lehman collapse, the initially private shadow money supply was either publicly backstopped or de-monetised as it had broken par to bank deposits. The public backstops took on the form of emergency facilities established by the Federal Reserve and guarantees proclaimed by the Treasury. Those backstops imply that the public institutional framework to protect bank deposits was extended to some forms of shadow money during the crisis. This tendency has continued in post-crisis regulation. Accordingly, the 2007–2009 financial crisis has triggered a paradigmatic change in the monetary system, attributable to the political decisions of US authorities