502 research outputs found
Influence of grain-refiner addition on the morphology of fe-bearing intermetallics in a semi-solid processed Al-Mg-Si alloy
© The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society and ASM International 2013The three-dimensional morphologies of the Fe-bearing intermetallics in a semisolid-processed Al-Mg-Si alloy were examined after extracting the intermetallics. α -AlFeSi and ÎČ-AlFeSi are the major Fe-bearing intermetallics. Addition of Al-Ti-B grain refiner typically promotes ÎČ-AlFeSi formation. ÎČ-AlFeSi was observed with a flat, plate-like morphology with angular edges in the alloy with and without grain refiner, whereas α -AlFeSi was observed as "flower"-like morphology in the alloy with grain refiner. © 2013 The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society and ASM International
Cu and Ni Co-Sputtered Heteroatomic Thin Film for Enhanced Nonenzymatic Glucose Detection
In this work, we report a wafer-scale and chemical-free fabrication of nickel (Ni) and copper (Cu) heteroatomic CuâNi thin films using RF magnetron sputtering technique for non-enzymatic glucose sensing application. The as-prepared wafer-scale CuâNi thin films exhibits excellent electrocatalytic activity toward glucose oxidation with a 1.86 ÎŒM detection limit in the range of 0.01 mM to 20 mM range. The CuâNi film shows 1.3- and 5.4-times higher glucose oxidation activity in comparison to the Cu and Ni electrodes, respectively. The improved electrocatalytic activity is attributed to the synergistic effect of the bimetallic catalyst and high density of grain boundaries. The CuâNi electrodes also possessed excellent anti-interference characteristics. These results indicate that CuâNi heteroatomic thin film can be a potential candidate for the development of non-enzymatic glucose biosensor because of its chemical free synthesis, excellent reproducibility, reusability, and long-term stability
Use of portable FTIR spectrometers for detecting greenhouse gas emissions of the megacity Berlin - Part 1: Instrumental line shape characterisation and calibration of a quintuple of spectrometers
Several low resolution spectrometers were used to investigate the CO2 and CH4 emissions of the megacity Berlin. Before and after the campaign the instruments were tested side-by-side. An excellent level of agreement and stability was found between the different spectrometers: the drifts in XCO2 and XCH4 are within 0.005 and 0.035%, respectively. The instrumental line shape characteristics of all spectrometers were found to be close to nominal. Cross-calibration factors for XCH4 and XCO2 were established for each spectrometer. An empirical airmass correction factor has been applied. As a last calibration step, using a co-located TCCON spectrometer as a reference, a common factor has been derived for the low-resolution campaign spectrometers, which ensures that the records are compatible to the WMO in-situ scale. Finally as a first result of the Berlin campaign we show the excellent agreement of ground pressure values obtained from total column measurements and in situ records
A Smart Colorimetric Platform for Detection of Methanol, Ethanol and Formic Acid
Carbon dioxide (CO2 ) is a greenhouse gas in the atmosphere and scientists are working on converting it to useful products, thereby reducing its quantity in the atmosphere. For converting CO2, different approaches are used, and among them, electrochemistry is found to be the most common and more efficient technique. Current methods for detecting the products of electrochemical CO2 conversion are time-consuming and complex. To combat this, a simple, cost-effective colorimetric method has been developed to detect methanol, ethanol, and formic acid, which are formed electrochemically from CO2 . In the present work, the highly efficient sensitive dyes were successfully established to detect these three compounds under optimized conditions. These dyes demonstrated excellent selectivity and showed no cross-reaction with other products generated in the CO2 conversion system. In the analysis using these three compounds, this strategy shows good specificity and limit of detection (LOD, ~0.03-0.06 ppm). A cost-effective and sensitive Internet of Things (IoT) colorimetric sensor prototype was developed to implement these dyes systems for practical and real-time application. Employing the dyes as sensing elements, the prototype exhibits unique red, green, and blue (RGB) values upon exposure to test solutions with a short response time of 2 s. Detection of these compounds via this new approach has been proven effective by comparing them with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). This novel approach can replace heavy-duty instruments such as high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC), gas chromatography (G.C.), and NMR due to its extraordinary selectivity and rapidity.Funding: This research was funded by Qatar National Research Fund (a member of the Qatar Foundation) grant number NPRP11S-1221-170116 and the APC was funded by Qatar National Research Fund.Scopu
Cu and Ni Co-sputtered heteroatomic thin film for enhanced nonenzymatic glucose detection
In this work, we report a wafer-scale and chemical-free fabrication of nickel (Ni) and copper (Cu) heteroatomic CuâNi thin films using RF magnetron sputtering technique for non-enzymatic glucose sensing application. The as-prepared wafer-scale CuâNi thin films exhibits excellent electrocatalytic activity toward glucose oxidation with a 1.86Â ÎŒM detection limit in the range of 0.01Â mM to 20Â mM range. The CuâNi film shows 1.3- and 5.4-times higher glucose oxidation activity in comparison to the Cu and Ni electrodes, respectively. The improved electrocatalytic activity is attributed to the synergistic effect of the bimetallic catalyst and high density of grain boundaries. The CuâNi electrodes also possessed excellent anti-interference characteristics. These results indicate that CuâNi heteroatomic thin film can be a potential candidate for the development of non-enzymatic glucose biosensor because of its chemical free synthesis, excellent reproducibility, reusability, and long-term stability
Mapping carbon monoxide pollution from space down to city scales with daily global coverage
On 13Â October 2017, the European Space Agency (ESA) successfully
launched the Sentinel-5 Precursor satellite with the Tropospheric
Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) as its single payload. TROPOMI is
the first of ESA's atmospheric composition Sentinel missions, which
will provide complete long-term records of atmospheric trace gases
for the coming 30 years as a contribution to the European Union's
Earth Observing program Copernicus. One of TROPOMI's primary
products is atmospheric carbon monoxide (CO). It is observed with daily global
coverage and a high spatial resolution of 7Ă7 km2.
The moderate atmospheric resistance time and the low background
concentration leads to localized pollution hotspots of CO and allows
the tracking of the atmospheric transport of pollution on regional to global
scales. In this contribution, we
demonstrate the groundbreaking performance of the TROPOMI CO product, sensing
CO enhancements above cities and industrial areas and tracking, with
daily coverage, the atmospheric transport of pollution from biomass
burning regions. The CO data product is validated with two months
of Fourier-transform spectroscopy (FTS) measurements at nine
ground-based stations operated by the Total Carbon Column Observing
Network (TCCON). We found a good agreement between both datasets with a mean bias
of 6 ppb (average of individual station biases) for both clear-sky and
cloudy TROPOMI CO retrievals. Together with the corresponding
standard deviation of the individual station biases of 3.8 ppb for
clear-sky and 4.0 ppb for cloudy sky, it indicates that the CO data
product is already well within the mission requirement.</p
Update on the GOSAT TANSOâFTS SWIR Level 2 retrieval algorithm
The National Institute for Environmental Studies has provided the column-averaged dry-air mole fraction of carbon dioxide and methane (XCO and XCH) products (L2 products) obtained from the Greenhouse gases Observing SATellite (GOSAT) for more than a decade. Recently, we updated the retrieval algorithm used to produce the new L2 product, V03.00. The main changes from the previous version (V02) of the retrieval algorithm are the treatment of cirrus clouds, the degradation model of the Thermal And Near-infrared Spectrometer for carbon ObservationâFourier Transform Spectrometer (TANSOâFTS), solar irradiance spectra, and gas absorption coefficient tables. The retrieval results from the updated algorithm showed improvements in fitting accuracies in the O A, weak CO, and CH bands of TANSOâFTS, although the residuals increase in the strong CO band over the ocean. The direct comparison of the new product obtained from the updated (V03) algorithm with the previous version V02.90/91 and the validations using the Total Carbon Column Observing Network revealed that the V03 algorithm increases the amount of data without diminishing the data qualities of XCO and XCH over land. However, the negative bias of XCO is larger than that of the previous version over the ocean, and bias correction is still necessary. Additionally, the V03 algorithm resolves the underestimation of the XCO growth rate compared with the in situ measurements over the ocean recently found using V02.90/91 and V02.95/96
Improved Constraints on Northern Extratropical CO2 Fluxes Obtained by Combining Surface-Based and Space-Based Atmospheric CO2 Measurements
© 2020. The Authors. Top-down estimates of CO2 fluxes are typically constrained by either surface-based or space-based CO2 observations. Both of these measurement types have spatial and temporal gaps in observational coverage that can lead to differences in inferred fluxes. Assimilating both surface-based and space-based measurements concurrently in a flux inversion framework improves observational coverage and reduces sampling related artifacts. This study examines the consistency of flux constraints provided by these different observations and the potential to combine them by performing a series of 6-year (2010â2015) CO2 flux inversions. Flux inversions are performed assimilating surface-based measurements from the in situ and flask network, measurements from the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON), and space-based measurements from the Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite (GOSAT), or all three data sets combined. Combining the data sets results in more precise flux estimates for subcontinental regions relative to any of the data sets alone. Combining the data sets also improves the accuracy of the posterior fluxes, based on reduced root-mean-square differences between posterior flux-simulated CO2 and aircraft-based CO2 over midlatitude regions (0.33â0.56 ppm) in comparison to GOSAT (0.37â0.61 ppm), TCCON (0.50â0.68 ppm), or in situ and flask measurements (0.46â0.56 ppm) alone. These results suggest that surface-based and GOSAT measurements give complementary constraints on CO2 fluxes in the northern extratropics and can be combined in flux inversions to improve constraints on regional fluxes. This stands in contrast with many earlier attempts to combine these data sets and suggests that improvements in the NASA Atmospheric CO2 Observations from Space (ACOS) retrieval algorithm have significantly improved the consistency of space-based and surface-based flux constraints
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