7,143 research outputs found
Extracción de aceite, carotenos y tococromanoles del fruto de palma aceitera (Elaeis guineensis) con propano subcrítico
This work aims to screen the extraction of oil and bioactive compounds including carotenes and tocochromanols from oil palm fruit with subcritical propane and without using a cosolvent. The overall extraction curves of palm oil with subcritical propane were studied and compared to those extracted with supercritical carbon dioxide. Carotenes and tocochromanols were evaluated not only in the extracted oil, but also in the oil of residual fiber in order to calculate the efficiency to recover these valuable compounds. The experimental results showed that oil yield of up to 70 % could be obtained within 120 minutes with subcritical propane at 50 bar and a flow rate of 35 kg·h−1·kg−1. It was also shown that compressed propane is an excellent solvent for the extraction of oil enriched in carotenes and tocochromanols. Subcritical propane extraction can be used as an alternative process for the simultaneous recovery of these valuable minor components from palm fruit.Este trabajo tiene como objetivo evaluar la extracción de aceite y compuestos bioactivos, incluidos los carotenos y tococromanoles, del fruto de la palma aceitera mediante propano subcrítico sin usar codisolventes. Se estudiaron las curvas generales de extracción de aceite de palma con propano subcrítico y se compararon con las extraídas con dióxido de carbono supercrítico. Se evaluaron carotenos y tococromanoles no solo en el aceite extraído, sino también en el aceite de fibra residual para calcular la eficiencia de recuperación de estos valiosos compuestos. Los resultados experimentales mostraron que se podía obtener un rendimiento de aceite de hasta el 70 % en 120 minutos con propano subcrítico a 50 bares y un caudal de 35 kg·h−1·kg−1. También se demostró que el propano comprimido es un excelente solvente para la extracción de aceite enriquecido en carotenos y tococromanoles. La extracción con propano subcrítico se puede utilizar como un proceso alternativo para la recuperación simultánea de estos valiosos componentes menores del fruto de la palma
Minimal ureagenesis is necessary for survival in the murine model of hyperargininemia treated by AAV-based gene therapy.
Hyperammonemia is less severe in arginase 1 deficiency compared with other urea cycle defects. Affected patients manifest hyperargininemia and infrequent episodes of hyperammonemia. Patients typically suffer from neurological impairment with cortical and pyramidal tract deterioration, spasticity, loss of ambulation, seizures and intellectual disability; death is less common than with other urea cycle disorders. In a mouse model of arginase I deficiency, the onset of symptoms begins with weight loss and gait instability, which progresses toward development of tail tremor with seizure-like activity; death typically occurs at about 2 weeks of life. Adeno-associated viral vector gene replacement strategies result in long-term survival of mice with this disorder. With neonatal administration of vector, the viral copy number in the liver greatly declines with hepatocyte proliferation in the first 5 weeks of life. Although the animals do survive, it is not known from a functional standpoint how well the urea cycle is functioning in the adult animals that receive adeno-associated virus. In these studies, we administered [1-13C] acetate to both littermate controls and adeno-associated virus-treated arginase 1 knockout animals and examined flux through the urea cycle. Circulating ammonia levels were mildly elevated in treated animals. Arginine and glutamine also had perturbations. Assessment 30 min after acetate administration demonstrated that ureagenesis was present in the treated knockout liver at levels as low at 3.3% of control animals. These studies demonstrate that only minimal levels of hepatic arginase activity are necessary for survival and ureagenesis in arginase-deficient mice and that this level of activity results in control of circulating ammonia. These results may have implications for potential therapy in humans with arginase deficiency
Electromagnetic modes of Maxwell fisheye lens
We provide an analysis of the radial structure of TE and TM modes of the
Maxwell fisheye lens, by means of Maxwell equations as applied to the fisheye
case. Choosing a lens of size R = 1 cm, we plot some of the modes in the
infrared range.Comment: 2+6 pages in Latex, 3 figures to be found in the published referenc
Verification of a localization criterion for several disordered media
We analytically compute a localization criterion in double scattering
approximation for a set of dielectric spheres or perfectly conducting disks
uniformly distributed in a spatial volume which can be either spherical or
layered. For every disordered medium, we numerically investigate a localization
criterion, and examine the influence of the system parameters on the wavelength
localization domains.Comment: 30 pages, LateX, amstex, revtex styles, 20 figure
Dijet Cross Section and Longitudinal Double Spin Asymmetry Measurements in Polarized Proton-proton Collisions at \sqrt{s}=200 GeV at STAR
These proceedings show the preliminary results of the dijet cross sections
and the dijet longitudinal double spin asymmetries A_LL in polarized
proton-proton collisions at \sqrt{s} = 200 GeV at the mid-rapidity |eta| < 0.8.
The integrated luminosity of 5.39 pb^{-1} collected during RHIC Run-6 was used
in the measurements. The preliminary results are presented as functions of the
dijet invariant mass M_jj. The dijet cross sections are in agreement with
next-to-leading-order pQCD predictions. The A_LL is compared with theoretical
predictions based on various parameterizations of polarized parton
distributions of the proton. Projected precision of data analyzed to date from
Run-9 are shown.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the SPIN2010 conference (Juelich,
Germany, 2010
High resolution 10 mu spectrometry at different planetary latitudes. A practical Hadamard transform spectrometer for astronomical application
Infrared observations at different latitudes were studied in order to obtain spectra in the 10 micrometers region to understand differences in chemical composition or physical structure of the optical features. In order to receive such spectra of a rotating planet, simultaneous observations at different latitudes were made. A Hadamard transform spectrometer with 15 entrance slits was used to obtain 15 simultaneous spectra, at a resolution of 0.01 micrometers. The spectral band covered contained 255 spectral elements
Casimir Forces and Graphene Sheets
The Casimir force between two infinitely thin parallel sheets in a setting of
such sheets is found. The finite two-dimensional conductivities, which
describe the dispersive and absorptive properties of each sheet, are taken into
account, whereupon the theory is applied to interacting graphenes. By exploring
similarities with in-plane optical spectra for graphite, the conductivity of
graphene is modeled as a combination of Lorentz type oscillators. We find that
the graphene transparency and the existence of a universal constant
conductivity result in graphene/graphene Casimir interaction at
large separations to have the same distance dependence as the one for perfect
conductors but with much smaller magnitude
-scaling and heat capacity in relativistic ion collisions
The -scaling method has been applied to the total multiplicity
distribution of the relativistic ion collisions of p+p, C+C and Pb+Pb which
were simulated by a Monte Carlo package, LUCIAE 3.0. It is found that the
-scaling parameter decreases with the increasing of the system size.
Moreover, the heat capacities of different mesons and baryons have been
extracted from the event-by-event temperature fluctuation in the region of low
transverse mass and they show the dropping trend with the increasing of impact
parameter.Comment: version 2: major change: 4 pages, 3 figures; Proceeding of
International Conference on "Strangeness in Quark Matter" (SQM2004), Cape
Town, South Africa, Spet. 2004 (Submitted to J. Phys. G.
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