2,695 research outputs found

    Development of Clay Plasters Containing Thermoregulating Microcapsules for Indoor Walls

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    This work shows the technical feasibility of incorporating phase change materials (PCMs) into clay plastering mortars to improve the thermal properties of the building envelopes. Due to the absence of regulated and internationally agreed-upon norms for clay mortars containing thermoregulating microcapsules (MPCMs), two tests following UNE-EN-998-1:2010 and UNE-EN-1015, were designed to provide the greatest similarity to its final application. Three different dosages 5, 10, and 15 wt% of MPCM relative to the dried mortar weight were used. Fresh mortars were physically characterized to determine its consistency, apparent density, period of workability and open time, and occluded air content. Physical and mechanical characteristics were determined for hardened mortar. The thermal characteristics of the specimens were analysed by using a differential scanning calorimetry, obtaining their apparent specific heat capacities and the enthalpy curves. Building simulation software is a fundamental tool for designing buildings with almost zero energy consumption. In this study, three identical architectural models were simulated. The reference building had inner coatings of clay-based mortar, mortar with 15% added material, and a conventional gypsum mortar. These buildings were subjected to the same exposure and radiation conditions, which allowed the result to be compared to evaluate the effect of incorporating the PCM

    Electronic structure of stoichiometric and Ar+-bombarded ZrO2 determined by resonant photoemission

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    The electronic properties of thermally grown ZrO2 thin films before and after Ar+ bombardment have been studied with resonant photoemission spectroscopy using synchrotron radiation. For stoichiometric ZrO2 thin films the experimental valence-band spectra are in good agreement with the calculated density of states for bulk ZrO2. For both stoichiometric and Ar+-bombarded ZrO2 thin films, resonant photoemission from the valence band was observed when the photon energy was swept through the Zr 4p→4d transition energy. The resonant profile was found to exhibit a maximum at hν=39 eV, followed by a second well-resolved broad maximum around 50 eV. The feature at 39 eV is consistent with resonant enhancement of the Zr 4d states and has been used to identify those regions of the valence band with an important Zr 4d admixture. The results are in good agreement with the calculated Zr 4d partial density of states. The intensity increase observed at hν∼45-50 eV is found to be associated with the nonbonding region of the valence band, although a proper interpretation is needed. In addition, it was found that Ar+ bombardment induces electronic states in the band-gap region and changes in the O 2p valence band. Three distinct emission bands were identified in the band gap as a function of the Ar+ dose. They are associated with the formation of oxygen vacancies and mixed oxidation states due to preferential sputtering of the oxygen atoms. Resonant photoemission of these Ar+-bombarded films demonstrates both the cationic character of the band-gap states and the increase of the cationic contribution to the O 2p valence band.Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología MAT93/0805, MAT94/1039 y PB93-0240Unión Europea ERBCHRXCT 930358 y BESSY-CHGECT93- 002

    Diagnóstico citológico de las recidivas tumorales de ameloblastoma: presentación de dos casos clínicos

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    Introducción: Los ameloblastomas son los tumores odontogénicos más frecuentes del maxilar. A pesar de su aspecto citohistológico de benignidad, se comportan como tumores invasivos, recidivantes y con posibilidad de metastatizar. La P.A.A.F. es una prueba rápida e incruenta que proporciona un diagnóstico prequirúrgico evitando, en ocasiones, tomas biópsicas destinadas al diagnóstico. Presentamos las características citológicas de dos casos de recidiva yugal de ameloblastoma de rama mandibular diagnosticados por PAAF, así como su correlación citohistológica. Casos clínicos: Dos pacientes, una mujer de 36 años y un varón de 62 años, que acuden por tumoración mandibular de escasos meses de evolución. En ambos casos, la primera aproximación diagnóstica fue junto a los estudios radiológicos el estudio histológico de la masa tumoral. Tras la extirpación terapeútica, ambos casos recidivaron. El diagnóstico de las recidivas fue establecido citológicamente mediante PAAF. Las extensiones citológicas mostraron un fondo granular con aislados macrófagos y células multinucleadas gigantes y una abundante celularidad epitelial de aspecto basaloide dispuesta en grupos cohesivos configurando imágenes de empalizada periférica, así como pequeños grupos de células de metaplasia escamosa. Discusión: La PAAF se considera como un método diagnóstico rápido, incruento y fiable en el diagnóstico del ameloblastoma. La citología de estos tumores revela los componentes de la lesión que, en general, son suficientes para llegar al diagnóstico de ameloblastoma, especialmente en casos de recidiva.Introduction: Ameloblastomas are the most frequent odontogenic tumors of the maxilla. In spite of their benign cytohistological appearance, they behave as invasive recurring tumors, with the possibility of metastasis. FNAB is a rapid, bloodless test that provides a pre-surgical diagnosis, thus, on occasions avoiding the need for diagnostic biopsies. We present the cytological characteristics of two cases of jugal recurrences of mandibular ameloblastomas diagnosed by FNAB, as well as their cytohistological correlation. Clinical cases: Two patients, a 36-year-old woman, and a 62- year-old male who both attended with mandibular swelling of a few months evolution. In both cases the first diagnostic approximation was the histological study of the tumoral mass, together with the radiological studies. Following therapeutic extirpation both cases recurred. The diagnosis of the recurrences was established cytologically by means of FNAB. The cytologic smears revealed a granular background with isolated macrophages and giant multinucleate cells and an abundant epithelial cellularity of basaloid appearance arranged in cohesive groups forming images of peripheral palidasing, as well as small groups of squamous metaplastic cells. Discussion: FNAB is considered to be a rapid, bloodless and reliable method for the diagnosis of ameloblastoma. The cytology of these tumors reveals components of the lesion that, in general, are sufficient for the diagnosis of ameloblastoma, especially in cases of recurrence

    Origin of the (2)E <->(4)T(2) Fano resonance in Cr(3+)-doped LiCaAlF(6): Pressure-induced excited-state crossover.

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    This work investigates pressure-induced phase transition (PT) and excited-state-crossover effects on the photoluminescence (PL) properties of LiCaAlF(6):Cr(3+). We report a PL study by means of time-resolved emission, excitation, and lifetime measurements as a function of pressure. We focus on Cr(3+) PL variations around pressure-induced trigonal-to-monoclinic first-order PT in LiCaAlF6 at 7 GPa. Moreover, the structural requirements for changing Cr(3+) PL from a broadband emission at 1.59 eV (781 nm) at ambient conditions, to a rubylike narrow-line emission at 1.87 eV (663 nm) are analyzed in the 0-35 GPa range. We show how pressure progressively transforms Cr(3+) broadband PL into a rubylike emission that becomes the dominant feature of the room-temperature emission spectrum at 28 GPa. This behavior, together with the pressure dependences of the (2)E and (4)T(2) excited-states energy and PL lifetime, are explained on the basis of the electron-phonon coupling associated with the (4)T(2) and (2)E states. We demonstrate that both excited states interact through spin-orbit coupling yielding Fano resonance rather than antiresonance as is frequently assumed

    New Vaccine Design Based on Defective Genomes That Combines Features of Attenuated and Inactivated Vaccines

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    [Background] New vaccine designs are needed to control diseases associated with antigenically variable RNA viruses. Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a highly contagious disease of livestock that inflicts severe economic losses. Although the current whole-virus chemically inactivated vaccine has proven effective, it has led to new outbreaks of FMD because of incomplete inactivation of the virus or the escape of infectious virus from vaccine production premises. We have previously shown that serial passages of FMD virus (FMDV) C-S8c1 at high multiplicity of infection in cell culture resulted in virus populations consisting of defective genomes that are infectious by complementation (termed C-S8p260).[Principal Finding] Here we evaluate the immunogenicity of C-S8p260, first in a mouse model system to establish a proof of principle, and second, in swine, the natural host of FMDV C-S8c1. Mice were completely protected against a lethal challenge with FMDV C-S8c1, after vaccination with a single dose of C-S8p260. Pigs immunized with different C-S8p260 doses and challenged with FMDV C-S8c1 either did not develop any clinical signs or showed delayed and mild disease symptoms. C-S8p260 induced high titers of both FMDV-specific, neutralizing antibodies and activated FMDV-specific T cells in swine, that correlated with solid protection against FMDV.[Conclusions] The defective virus-based vaccine did not produce detectable levels of transmissible FMDV. Therefore, a segmented, replication-competent form of a virus, such as FMDV C-S8p260, can provide the basis of a new generation of attenuated antiviral vaccines with two safety barriers. The design can be extended to any viral pathogen that encodes trans-acting gene products, allowing complementation between replication-competent, defective forms.This research was supported by grants AGL2004-0049, AGL2007-61374, CSD2006-07 and BFU2008-02816/BMC from Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Spain, and European Union, Network of Excellence, EPIZONE (Contract # FOOD-CT-2006-016236). CIBERehd (Centro de Investigacio´n Biome´dica en Red de Enfermedades Hepa´ticas y Digestivas) is funded by Instituto de Salud Carlos III. Work at Centro de Biologı´a Molecular ‘‘Severo Ochoa’’ (CISC-UAM) was supported by an institutional grant from Fundacio´n Ramo´n Areces. T.R-C. was supported by a contract from Comunidad Auto´noma de Madrid; S.O. and M.S-R were supported by a predoctoral fellowship from the Ministerio de Educacio´n y Ciencia. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Peer reviewe

    Gut microbiome diversity detected by high-coverage 16S and shotgun sequencing of paired stool and colon sample

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    The gut microbiome has a fundamental role in human health and disease. However, studying the complex structure and function of the gut microbiome using next generation sequencing is challenging and prone to reproducibility problems. Here, we obtained cross-sectional colon biopsies and faecal samples from nine participants in our COLSCREEN study and sequenced them in high coverage using Illumina pair-end shotgun (for faecal samples) and IonTorrent 16S (for paired feces and colon biopsies) technologies. The metagenomes consisted of between 47 and 92 million reads per sample and the targeted sequencing covered more than 300 k reads per sample across seven hypervariable regions of the 16S gene. Our data is freely available and coupled with code for the presented metagenomic analysis using up-to-date bioinformatics algorithms. These results will add up to the informed insights into designing comprehensive microbiome analysis and also provide data for further testing for unambiguous gut microbiome analysis

    Quantum Zeno and anti-Zeno effects in surface diffusion of interacting adsorbates

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    Surface diffusion of interacting adsorbates is here analyzed within the context of two fundamental phenomena of quantum dynamics, namely the quantum Zeno effect and the anti-Zeno effect. The physical implications of these effects are introduced here in a rather simple and general manner within the framework of non-selective measurements and for two (surface) temperature regimes: high and very low (including zero temperature). The quantum intermediate scattering function describing the adsorbate diffusion process is then evaluated for flat surfaces, since it is fully analytical in this case. Finally, a generalization to corrugated surfaces is also discussed. In this regard, it is found that, considering a Markovian framework and high surface temperatures, the anti-Zeno effect has already been observed, though not recognized as such.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figur

    Fourier-space generalized magneto-optical ellipsometry

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    The magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) is widely exploited in laboratory-based setups for the study of thin films and nanostructures, providing magnetic characterization with good spatial and temporal resolutions. Due to the complex coupling of light with a magnetic sample, conventional MOKE magnetometers normally work by selecting a small range of incident wave-vector values, focusing the incident light beam to a small spot, and recording the reflected intensity at that angular range by means of photodetectors. Using this approach, additional methodologies and measurements are required for full vectorial magnetic characterization. Here, we computationally investigate a Fourier-space MOKE setup, where a focused beam ellipsometer using high numerical aperture optics and a camera detector is employed to simultaneously map the intensity distribution for a wide range of incident and reflected wave vectors. We employ circularly incident polarized light and no analyzing optics, in combination with a fitting procedure of the light intensity maps to the analytical expression of the Kerr effect under linear approximation. In this way, we are able to retrieve the three unknown components of the magnetization vector as well as the material' s optical and magneto-optical constants with high accuracy and short acquisition times, with the possibility of single-shot measurements. Fourier MOKE is thus proposed as a powerful method to perform generalized magneto-optical ellipsometry for a wide range of magnetic materials and devices

    Primary immune thrombocytopenia: Experience of a specialised clinic

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    Introduction: Although primary immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is rare in childhood, it is the most frequent cause of thrombocytopenia. There have been attempts to establish risk factors to predict the progression of the disease in order to optimise its management, which has changed in recent years due to, among other reasons, specialised care. Material and methods: A retrospective, observational and analytical study was conducted on patients diagnosed with ITP over a 3-year period in a Paediatric Haematology specialist clinic. Results: From the epidemiological, clinical and analytical point of view, the characteristics of this group are similar to others. Most of the patients (23/31, 74.2%) had ITP for less than 12 months, with there being no serious complications related to the disease or the treatment received. It was established that risk factors were related to being slowly evolving (lower event free survival (EFS)) with no statistical significance, female gender, age over 10 years, leukopenia absence of initial severe thrombocytopenia, and non-specialised care. The absence of a history of infection was significantly related to a lower EFS. Conclusions: The epidemiological and analytical risk factors for a slowly evolving ITP are the same that described in the literature. Patients treated before the beginning of specialised care also had a lower EFS. These data seem to support the current recommendation that rare diseases should be managed in specialised units. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Espana, S.L.U. on behalf of Asociaci6n Espanola de Pediatria. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
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