3,116 research outputs found

    Port systems and territorial articulation in Mexico : ¿complementarity or competition?

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    A dos décadas del inicio de la reestructuración portuaria en México, que propició una creciente inversión privada en terminales, tecnología y gestión, con mejoras notables en la capacidad instalada y en la productividad de las operaciones, pero careció de una perspectiva de desarrollo portuario nacional, el Gobierno Federal ha planteado la necesidad de realizar ajustes al modelo actual, mediante el impulso de una política basada en la formación de sistemas portuarios en ambos litorales nacionales (Pacífico y Golfo de México) con enfoque en la complementariedad de los puertos para atender los distintos segmentos de mercado y regiones del país. En este sentido, el presente trabajo tiene por objeto aportar elementos empíricos y conceptuales para el análisis de los factores que afectan la complementariedad entre los principales puertos del Pacífico mexicano de carga contenerizada, basándose en los atributos de las redes de transporte, el tipo de infraestructura, las distancias, los costos de la cadena y la disponibilidad de servicios intermodales, a fin de contribuir a la planeación y desarrollo de políticas públicas enfocadas a consolidar un sistema de transporte mejor integrado logística, modal y territorialmente en México.Two decades from the beginning of the port restructuring in Mexico, which promoted a growing private investment in terminals, technology and management, with remarkable improvements in the installed capacity and productivity of the operations, but that lacked a national port development perspective, the Federal Government has posed the need to adjust the current model, through a policy based on the formation of port systems in both national coasts (Pacific and the Gulf of Mexico). It focuses on the ports’complementarity to deal with the different segments of market and regions of the country. In this context, this paper has as its objective to contribute with empirical and conceptual elements useful to analyze the factors that affect the complementarity a mong the main cargo container ports in the Mexican Pacific, based in the transport network attributes, the type of infrastructure, the distances, the chain’s cost, and the intermodal services availability. The aim is to contribute to the planning and development of public policies to consolidate a better-integrated transport system in the logistics, modal and territorialaspects in MexicoFil: Martner Peyrelongue, Carlos.Fil: García Ortega, M. Gabriela

    PUK13 LOWER MENTAL HEALTH SCORES MEASURED USING THE SF-36 HEALTH SURVEY IS AN INDEPENDENT PREDICTOR OF MORTALITY IN YOUNGER PATIENTS RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY

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    Integral Field Spectroscopy based H\alpha\ sizes of local Luminous and Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies. A Direct Comparison with high-z Massive Star Forming Galaxies

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    Aims. We study the analogy between local U/LIRGs and high-z massive SFGs by comparing basic H{\alpha} structural characteristics, such as size, and luminosity (and SFR) surface density, in an homogeneous way (i.e. same tracer and size definition, similar physical scales). Methods. We use Integral Field Spectroscopy based H{\alpha} emission maps for a representative sample of 54 local U/LIRGs (66 galaxies). From this initial sample we select 26 objects with H{\alpha} luminosities (L(H{\alpha})) similar to those of massive (i.e. M\ast \sim 10^10 M\odot or larger) SFGs at z \sim 2, and observed on similar physical scales. Results. The sizes of the H{\alpha} emitting region in the sample of local U/LIRGs span a large range, with r1/2(H{\alpha}) from 0.2 to 7 kpc. However, about 2/3 of local U/LIRGs with Lir > 10^11.4 L\odot have compact H{\alpha} emission (i.e. r1/2 < 2 kpc). The comparison sample of local U/LIRGs also shows a higher fraction (59%) of objects with compact H{\alpha} emission than the high-z sample (25%). This gives further support to the idea that for this luminosity range the size of the star forming region is a distinctive factor between local and distant galaxies of similar SF rates. However, when using H{\alpha} as a tracer for both local and high-z samples, the differences are smaller than the ones recently reported using a variety of other tracers. Despite of the higher fraction of galaxies with compact H{\alpha} emission, a sizable group (\sim 1/3) of local U/LIRGs are large (i.e. r1/2 > 2 kpc). These are systems showing pre-coalescence merger activity and they are indistinguishable from the massive high-z SFGs galaxies in terms of their H{\alpha} sizes, and luminosity and SFR surface densities.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. (!5 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables

    Electron refraction at lateral atomic interfaces

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    We present theoretical simulations of electron refraction at the lateral atomic interface between a “homogeneous” Cu(111) surface and the “nanostructured” one-monolayer (ML) Ag/Cu(111) dislocation lattice. Calculations are performed for electron binding energies barely below the 1 ML Ag/ Cu(111) M-point gap (binding energy EB ¼53 meV, below the Fermi level) and slightly above its C -point energy (EB ¼160 meV), both characterized by isotropic/circular constant energy surfaces. Using plane-wave-expansion and boundary-element methods, we show that electron refraction occurs at the interface, the Snell law is obeyed, and a total internal reflection occurs beyond the critical angle. Additionally, a weak negative refraction is observed for EB ¼53 meV electron energy at beam incidence higher than the critical angle. Such an interesting observation stems from the interface phase-matching and momentum conservation with the umklapp bands at the second Brillouin zone of the dislocation lattice. The present analysis is not restricted to our Cu-Ag/Cu model system but can be readily extended to technologically relevant interfaces with spinpolarized, highly featured, and anisotropic constant energy contours, such as those characteristic for Rashba systems and topological insulators. Published by AIP Publishing.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    El plancton de las lagunas de gravera y el fósforo : el enriquecimiento de las paradojas

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    Durante las últimas décadas se han formulado explícitamente varias hipótesis sobre el funcionamiento de las comunidades pelágicas lacustres en relación con el enriquecimiento en fósforo. Entre ellas, se cuentan: 1ª) la relación directa entre fósforo y biomasa planctónica, 2ª) los máximos de la riqueza específica planctónica a niveles intermedios de fósforo, 3ª) la desestabilización de los grupos funcionales de la red trófica debida al enriquecimiento en fósforo (ó "paradoja del enriquecimiento"), 4ª) el hecho de que la biomasa planctónica en todos los niveles sea el resultado de la interacción entre el recurso limitante (el fósforo, en este caso) y la red trófica encabezada por los peces ictiófagos, y 5ª) la marcada influencia del enriquecimiento y de los peces ictiófagos sobre el espectro de tamaños planctónicos. Con objeto de comprobar estas hipótesis, realizamos un estudio estacional durante año y medio sobre el plancton de 16 lagunas de gravera situadas en el valle del río Jarama (Madrid), las cuales presentan un gradiente claro de fósforo total promedio (36-2500 μg P/L) y pueden o no albergar peces ictiófagos, aunque casi todas tengan ciprínidos. La 1ª hipótesis sólo se cumplió para bacterias, fitoplancton y rotíferos, pero no para las restantes comunidades planctónicas. La 2ª hipótesis se refutó, pues los máximos de riqueza específica se presentaron en las lagunas hipertróficas. La 3ª hipótesis no se comprobó y, en el caso de bacterias y fitoplancton consumible por herbívoros, tuvo lugar una estabilización de los mismos con el aumento de fósforo; probablemente, el efecto estabilizador de la omnivoría debida a copépodos y a ciprínidos fuera el responsable de este resultado. Los peces ictiófagos afectaron favorablemente a la biomasa de cladóceros, no alcanzando su efecto a los niveles inferiores de la red, controlados claramente por el fósforo, lo cual prestó apoyo a la idea de la interacción entre fuerzas ascendentes y descendentes de la red trófica, pero refutó la idea de la cascada trófica. Tanto el fósforo como los peces ictiófagos influyeron sobre el espectro de tamaños de modo antagónico, lo cual complicó la 5ª hipótesis. La conclusión general de este ejercicio de contraste de hipótesis es -además de la obvia de continuar investigando las redes tróficas planctónicas- que necesitamos hipótesis más globales en apoyo epistemológico de este enriquecimiento de las paradojas que hemos observado.Several hypotheses have been outlined on the relationship of lake communities and phosphorus enrichment in recent years. Some of them are the following: i) a positive relationship between phosphorus and planktonic biomass, ii) species richness peaks at intermediate phosphorus concentrations, iii) the destabilisation of food web functional groups arising from phosphorus enrichment (called the paradox of enrichment), iv) the plankton biomass as the outcome of interactions between the limiting resource (phosphorus in most lakes) and the food web, and v) the remarkable influence of phosphorus enrichment and piscivorous fish on planktonic size spectra. To test these hypotheses, we carried out a seasonal study on plankton communities of sixteen gravel-pit lakes for fifteen months in the river Jarama plain (Madrid, Central Spain). These lakes showed a wide range of average phosphorus contents (36-2500 μg P/L), piscivorous fish lived in some of them and most harbour benthic, omnivorous ciprinids. Hypothesis i was only demonstrated for bacteria, phytoplankton and rotifers. Hypothesis ii was refuted since species richness peaks occurred in hypertrophic lakes. Hypothesis iii was not supported by our data, and we even found a stabilisation of bacterial and edible phytoplankton populations along with phosphorus enrichment, such a stabilisation being a likely result of omnivory by copepods and ciprinids. As expected, piscivorous fish influenced cladoceran and bacterial density whereas phosphorus enrichment increased phytoplankton biomass, but the top-down effect did not affect phytoplankton, rotifers and copepods, thus supporting the bottom-up:top-down model against the trophic cascade model. Both phosphorus and piscivorous fish impinged on planktonic size spectra, albeit in an antagonistic way, and hence hypothesis v must be made more comprehensive. In addition to the obvious necessity of further studies on planktonic food webs, this exercise of hypothesis testing suggests that more comprehensive hypotheses should be built to support epistemologically the enrichment of paradox observed

    Life-cycle assessment of the thermal and catalytic pyrolysis over sepiolite of face masks

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    Since the start of the global COVID-19 pandemic, extensive quantities of face masks have been used and discarded. Most of these masks end up in landfills, causing a high environmental impact and no benefits. However, there are alternative ways to deal with this waste in a more sustainable way. For example, valorisation of face masks through pyrolysis has received special attention because it offers efficient application to produce a liquid oil that can be used as a diesel substitute and a solid char that can be used as an activated carbon substitute after activation. In this context, this study applies the Life-Cycle Assessment methodology to quantify and analyse the environmental impacts of different treatment scenarios based on the pyrolysis of surgical masks and FFP2 masks. It also compares their environmental performance with the conventional practice of landfilling. The scenarios studied include both thermal and catalytic pyrolysis by using sepiolite, a low-cost material abundant in Spain. Data on the pyrolysis process were obtained from laboratory experiments. It was found that the use of the produced oil as a diesel substitute very significantly reduces the environmental impact in all pyrolysis scenarios. Consequently, the pyrolysis of face masks can reduce the environmental impact caused by the treatment of this waste material. Furthermore, the thermal pyrolysis performs environmentally better than the catalytic pyrolysis. In all scenarios, freshwater ecotoxicity and marine ecotoxicity are the environmental impact categories that cause the highest environmental impact overall

    Applying MILP-based algorithms to automated job-shop scheduling problems in aircraft-part manufacturing

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    This work presents efficient algorithms based on Mixed-Integer Linear Programming (MILP) for complex job-shop scheduling problems raised in Automated Manufacturing Systems. The aim of this work is to find alternative solution approaches of production and transportation operations in a multi-product multistage production process that can be used to solve industrial-scale problems with reasonable computational effort. The MILP model developed must take into account; dissimilar recipes, single unit per production stage, re-entrant flows, sequence- dependent free transferring times and load transfer movements in a single automated material-handling device. In addition, logical-based strategies are proposed to iteratively find and improve the solutions generated over time. These approaches were tested in different real-world problems appeared in the surfacetreatment process of metal components in aircraft manufacturing industry.Sociedad Argentina de Informática e Investigación Operativ
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