564 research outputs found
The selective reduction of NOx with NH3 over zirconia-supported vanadia catalysts
A series of sub-monolayer vanadia-on-zirconia catalysts have been prepared and the activities of these have been measured for the selective reduction of NO with NH3. It has been found that the activity per vanadium surface species depends on the square of the vanadium surface coverage. We therefore conclude that clusters of vanadia species on the surface of the catalysts are responsible for the de-NOx activity rather than isolated vanadia surface molecules
The selective reduction of NOx with NH3 over zirconia-supported vanadia catalysts
A series of sub-monolayer vanadia-on-zirconia catalysts have been prepared and the activities of these have been measured for the selective reduction of NO with NH3. It has been found that the activity per vanadium surface species depends on the square of the vanadium surface coverage. We therefore conclude that clusters of vanadia species on the surface of the catalysts are responsible for the de-NOx activity rather than isolated vanadia surface molecules
Gravity Dual of Gauge Theory on S^2 x S^1 x R
We (numerically) construct new static, asymptotically AdS solutions where the
conformal infinity is the product of time and S^2 x S^1. There always exist a
family of solutions in which the S^1 is not contractible and, for small S^1,
there are two additional families of solutions in which the S^1 smoothly
pinches off. This shows that (when fermions are antiperiodic around the S^1)
there is a quantum phase transition in the gauge theory as one decreases the
radius of the S^1 relative to the S^2. We also compare the masses of our
solutions and argue that the one with lowest mass should minimize the energy
among all solutions with conformal boundary S^2 x S^1 x R. This provides a new
positive energy conjecture for asymptotically locally AdS metrics. A simple
analytic continuation produces AdS black holes with topology S^2 x S^1.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, v2: minor changes, added reference
Arsenite sorption and co-precipitation with calcite
Sorption of As(III) by calcite was investigated as a function of As(III)
concentration, time and pH. The sorption isotherm, i.e. the log As(III) vs. log
[As(OH)3 degrees / Assat] plot is S-shaped and has been modelled on an extended
version of the surface precipitation model. At low concentrations, As(OH)3
degrees is adsorbed by complexation to surface Ca surface sites, as previously
described by the X-ray standing wave technique. The inflexion point of the
isotherm, where As(OH)3 degrees is limited by the amount of surface sites (ST),
yields 6 sites nm-2 in good agreement with crystallographic data. Beyond this
value, the amount of sorbed arsenic increases linearly with solution
concentration, up to the saturation of arsenic with respect to the
precipitation of CaHAsO3(s). The solid solutions formed in this concentration
range were examined by X-ray and neutron diffraction. The doped calcite lattice
parameters increase with arsenic content while c/a ratio remains constant. Our
results made on bulk calcite on the atomic displacement of As atoms along
[0001] direction extend those published by Cheng et al., (1999) on calcite
surface. This study provides a molecular-level explanation for why As(III) is
trapped by calcite in industrial treatments.Comment: 9 page
Solitons in Five Dimensional Minimal Supergravity: Local Charge, Exotic Ergoregions, and Violations of the BPS Bound
We describe a number of striking features of a class of smooth solitons in
gauged and ungauged minimal supergravity in five dimensions. The solitons are
globally asymptotically flat or asymptotically AdS without any Kaluza-Klein
directions but contain a minimal sphere formed when a cycle pinches off in the
interior of the spacetime. The solutions carry a local magnetic charge and many
have rather unusual ergosurfaces. Perhaps most strikingly, many of the solitons
have more electric charge or, in the asymptotically AdS case, more electric
charge and angular momentum than is allowed by the usual BPS bound. We comment
on, but do not resolve, the new puzzle this raises for AdS/CFT.Comment: 60 pages, 12 figures, 3 table
Continued reduction in HPV prevalence and early evidence of herd immunity following the human papillomavirus vaccination programme in Scotland
In 2008, a national human papillomavirus (HPV) immunization program using a bivalent vaccine against HPV types 16 and 18 was implemented in Scotland along with a national surveillance program designed to determine the longitudinal effects of vaccination on HPV infection at the population level. Each year during 2009–2013, the surveillance program conducted HPV testing on a proportion of liquid-based cytology samples from women undergoing their first cervical screening test for precancerous cervical disease. By linking vaccination, cervical screening, and HPV testing data, over the study period we found a decline in HPV types 16 and 18, significant decreases in HPV types 31, 33, and 45 (suggesting cross-protection), and a nonsignificant increase in HPV 51. In addition, among nonvaccinated women, HPV types 16 and 18 infections were significantly lower in 2013 than in 2009. Our results preliminarily indicate herd immunity and sustained effectiveness of the bivalent vaccine on virologic outcomes at the population level
EFFECTS OF CHANGE IN BODY POSTURE ON PLASMA AND SERUM ELECTROLYTES IN NORMAL SUBJECTS AND IN PRIMARY ALDOSTERONISM
We observed that change in body posture from the supine to the erect position in normal volunteers was associated with a rise in circulating potassium and a fall in sodium concentrations, irrespective of whether the electrolytes were measured in serum or plasma, or whether head-up tilt or ambulation was used. In patients with primary aldosteronism, the fall in serum sodium and rise in serum potassium with ambulation tended to obscure the characteristic electrolyte abnormalities of that syndrome. These changes in potassium and sodium could contribute to the rise in aldosterone secretion on orthostasis. The body posture of patients should be considered in the interpretation of plasma and serum electrolyte levels.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75439/1/j.1365-2265.1981.tb02972.x.pd
Entanglement of two-mode Bose-Einstein condensates
We investigate the entaglement characteristics of two general bimodal
Bose-Einstein condensates - a pair of tunnel-coupled Bose-Einstein condensates
and the atom-molecule Bose-Einstein condensate. We argue that the entanglement
is only physically meaningful if the system is viewed as a bipartite system,
where the subsystems are the two modes. The indistinguishibility of the
particles in the condensate means that the atomic constituents are physically
inaccessible and thus the degree of entanglement between individual particles,
unlike the entanglement between the modes, is not experimentally relevant so
long as the particles remain in the condensed state. We calculate the
entanglement between the modes for the exact ground state of the two bimodal
condensates and consider the dynamics of the entanglement in the tunnel-coupled
case.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Physical Review A, to be presented
at the third UQ Mathematical Physics workshop, Oct. 4-6; changes made in
response to referee comment
Acardiac twin pregnancies part V: Why does an acardiac twin with renal tissue produce polyhydramnios?
Background: Acardiac twinning is a complication of monochorionic twin pregnancies. From literature reports, 30 of 41 relatively large acardiac twins with renal tissue produced polyhydramnios within their amniotic compartment. We aim to investigate the underlying mechanisms that cause excess amniotic fluid using an established model of fetal fluid dynamics. Methods: We assumed that acardiac onset is before 13 weeks, acardiacs with renal tissue have normal kidney function and produce urine flow from 11 weeks on, and acardiac urine production requires a pressure of half the pump twin's mean arterial pressure. We apply a resistance network with the pump twin's arterio-venous pressure as source, pump umbilical arteries, placenta, placental arterio-arterial (AA) anastomoses and acardiac resistances. Acardiac amniotic fluid dynamics excluded acardiac lung fluid secretion, swallowing and the relatively small intramembranous flow. Results: In small acardiacs with sufficient urine production, polyhydramnios will occur due to the lack of amniotic fluid resorption. Urine production is dependent upon having sufficient mean arterial pressure, which requires nearly a two-fold larger resistance within the acardiac as compared to the placental AA resistance. Subphysiologic arterial pressure may result in renal dysgenesis. Conclusion: Our findings suggest the potential for prediction of which clinical acardiac cases may or may not develop polyhydramnios based upon noninvasive assessments of renal tissue, blood flow and urine production. This information would be of great value in determining early obstetric interventions as opposed to conservative management. These findings may also contribute to an improved knowledge of the fascinating pathophysiology that surrounds acardiac twinning
Acardiac twin pregnancies part VI: Why does acardiac twinning occur only in the first trimester?
Background: Clinical observation suggests that acardiac twinning occurs only in the first trimester. In part, this contradicts our previous analysis (part IV) of Benirschke's concept that unequal embryonic splitting causes unequal embryo/fetal blood volumes and pressures. Our aim is to explain why acardiac onset is restricted to the first trimester. Methods: We applied the vascular resistance scheme of two fetuses connected by arterio-arterial (AA) and veno-venous (VV) anastomoses, the small VV resistance approximated as zero. The smaller twin has volume fraction α 0.33 and rAA(40)=1.3 mm, modeled survival is >32 weeks. Conclusion: Before 13 weeks, embryos with α < 0.33 cannot survive and may result in the onset of acardia. Beyond 13 weeks, fetuses with α ≥ 0.33 survive because rAA(40) is too small for acardiac onset. Following fetal demise, exsanguination from the live twin increases its blood volume and, we assumed also, its vascular resistance. Perfusion then occurs through the lower resistance placenta
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