1,447 research outputs found
Kinetics of photoinduced matter transport driven by intensity and polarization in thin films containing azobenzene
We investigate the kinetics of photoinduced deformation phenomena in azobenzene-containing thin solid films. We show that a light intensity pattern and a light polarization pattern produce two distinct material transport processes whose direction and kinetics can be independently controlled. The kinetics of the intensity-driven deformation scales with the incoming light power while the kinetics of the polarization-driven mass transport scales with the amplitude of the electromagnetic field pattern. We conclude that these two processes are fully independent one from the other and originate from two different microscopic mechanisms
Modeling electrodialysis and a photochemical process for their integration in saline wastewater treatment.
Oxidation processes can be used to treat industrial wastewater containing non-biodegradable organic compounds. However, the presence of dissolved salts may inhibit or retard the treatment process. In this study, wastewater desalination by electrodialysis (ED) associated with an advanced oxidation process (photo-Fenton) was applied to an aqueous NaCl solution containing phenol. The influence of process variables on the demineralization factor was investigated for ED in pilot scale and a correlation was obtained between the phenol, salt and water fluxes with the driving force. The oxidation process was investigated in a laboratory batch reactor and a model based on artificial neural networks was developed by fitting the experimental data describing the reaction rate as a function of the input variables. With the experimental parameters of both processes, a dynamic model was developed for ED and a continuous model, using a plug flow reactor approach, for the oxidation process. Finally, the hybrid model simulation could validate different scenarios of the integrated system and can be used for process optimization
Non-thermal emission from star-forming galaxies detected in gamma rays
Star-forming galaxies (SFGs) emit non-thermal radiation from radio to
gamma-rays. We aim to investigate the main mechanisms of global CR transport
and cooling in SFGs. The way they contribute in shaping the relations between
non-thermal luminosities and SFR could shed light onto their nature. We develop
a model to compute the CR populations of SFGs, taking into account their
production, transport, and cooling. The model is parameterised only through
global galaxy properties, and describes the non-thermal emission in both radio
and gamma-rays. We focus on the role of diffusive and advective transport by
galactic winds, either driven by turbulent or thermal instabilities. We compare
model predictions to observations, for which we compile a homogeneous set of
luminosities in these radio bands, and update those available in gamma-rays.
Our model reproduces reasonably well the observed relations between the
gamma-ray or 1.4 GHz radio luminosities and the SFR, assuming a single
power-law scaling of the magnetic field with the latter with index beta=0.3,
and winds blowing either at Alfvenic speeds or typical starburst wind
velocities. Escape of CR is negligible for > 30 Mo/yr. A constant ionisation
fraction of the interstellar medium fails to reproduce the 150 MHz radio
luminosity throughout the whole SFR range. Our results reinforce the idea that
galaxies with high SFR are CR calorimeters, and that the main mechanism driving
proton escape is diffusion, whereas electron escape also proceeds via wind
advection. They also suggest that these winds should be CR or thermally-driven
at low and intermediate SFR, respectively. Our results globally support that
magnetohydrodynamic turbulence is responsible for the dependence of the
magnetic field strength on the SFR and that the ionisation fraction is strongly
disfavoured to be constant throughout the whole SFR range.Comment: Submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics (on 12/05/2021
Vaccine hesitancy: clarifying a theoretical framework for an ambiguous notion.
Today, according to many public health experts, public confidence in vaccines is waning. The term "vaccine hesitancy" (VH) is increasingly used to describe the spread of such vaccine reluctance. But VH is an ambiguous notion and its theoretical background appears uncertain. To clarify this concept, we first review the current definitions of VH in the public health literature and examine its most prominent characteristics. VH has been defined as a set of beliefs, attitudes, or behaviours, or some combination of them, shared by a large and heterogeneous portion of the population and including people who exhibit reluctant conformism (they may either decline a vaccine, delay it or accept it despite their doubts) and vaccine-specific behaviours. Secondly, we underline some of the ambiguities of this notion and argue that it is more a catchall category than a real concept. We also call into question the usefulness of understanding VH as an intermediate position along a continuum ranging from anti-vaccine to pro-vaccine attitudes, and we discuss its qualification as a belief, attitude or behaviour. Thirdly, we propose a theoretical framework, based on previous literature and taking into account some major structural features of contemporary societies, that considers VH as a kind of decision-making process that depends on people's level of commitment to healthism/risk culture and on their level of confidence in the health authorities and mainstream medicine
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