1,184 research outputs found
Reliability of a high-intensity endurance cycling test.
This study assessed the reproducibility of performance and selected metabolic variables during a variable high-intensity endurance cycling test. 8 trained male cyclists (age: 35.9 ± 7.7 years, maximal oxygen uptake: 54.3 ± 3.9 mL·kg - 1·min - 1) completed 4 high-intensity cycling tests, performed in consecutive weeks. The protocol comprised: 20 min of progressive incremental exercise, where the power output was increased by 5% maximal workload (Wmax) every 5 min from 70% Wmax to 85% Wmax; ten 90 s bouts at 90% Wmax, separated by 180 s at 55% Wmax; 90% Wmax until volitional exhaustion. Blood samples were drawn and heart rate was monitored throughout the protocol. There was no significant order effect between trials for time to exhaustion (mean: 4 113.0 ± 60.8 s) or total distance covered (mean: 4 6126.2 ± 1 968.7 m). Total time to exhaustion and total distance covered showed very high reliability with a mean coefficient of variation (CV) of 1.6% (95% Confidence Intervals (CI) 0.0 ± 124.3 s) and CV of 2.2% (95% CI 0.0 ± 1904.9 m), respectively. Variability in plasma glucose concentrations across the time points was very small (CV 0.46-4.3%, mean 95% CI 0.0 ± 0.33 to 0.0 ± 0.94 mmol·L - 1). Plasma lactate concentrations showed no test order effect. The reliability of performance and metabolic variables makes this protocol a valid test to evaluate nutritional interventions in endurance cycling
All-Optical Production of a Degenerate Fermi Gas
We achieve degeneracy in a mixture of the two lowest hyperfine states of
Li by direct evaporation in a CO laser trap, yielding the first
all-optically produced degenerate Fermi gas. More than atoms are
confined at temperatures below K at full trap depth, where the Fermi
temperature for each state is K. This degenerate two-component mixture
is ideal for exploring mechanisms of superconductivity ranging from Cooper
pairing to Bose condensation of strongly bound pairs.Comment: 4 pgs RevTeX with 2 eps figs, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Simulation of the Undiseased Human Cardiac Ventricular Action Potential: Model Formulation and Experimental Validation
Cellular electrophysiology experiments, important for understanding cardiac
arrhythmia mechanisms, are usually performed with channels expressed in non
myocytes, or with non-human myocytes. Differences between cell types and species
affect results. Thus, an accurate model for the undiseased human ventricular
action potential (AP) which reproduces a broad range of physiological behaviors
is needed. Such a model requires extensive experimental data, but essential
elements have been unavailable. Here, we develop a human ventricular AP model
using new undiseased human ventricular data: Ca2+ versus voltage
dependent inactivation of L-type Ca2+ current (ICaL);
kinetics for the transient outward, rapid delayed rectifier (IKr),
Na+/Ca2+ exchange (INaCa), and
inward rectifier currents; AP recordings at all physiological cycle lengths; and
rate dependence and restitution of AP duration (APD) with and without a variety
of specific channel blockers. Simulated APs reproduced the experimental AP
morphology, APD rate dependence, and restitution. Using undiseased human mRNA
and protein data, models for different transmural cell types were developed.
Experiments for rate dependence of Ca2+ (including peak and
decay) and intracellular sodium ([Na+]i) in
undiseased human myocytes were quantitatively reproduced by the model. Early
afterdepolarizations were induced by IKr block during slow pacing,
and AP and Ca2+ alternans appeared at rates >200 bpm, as
observed in the nonfailing human ventricle.
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMK) modulated
rate dependence of Ca2+ cycling. INaCa linked
Ca2+ alternation to AP alternans. CaMK suppression or SERCA
upregulation eliminated alternans. Steady state APD rate dependence was caused
primarily by changes in [Na+]i, via its
modulation of the electrogenic Na+/K+ ATPase
current. At fast pacing rates, late Na+ current and
ICaL were also contributors. APD shortening during restitution
was primarily dependent on reduced late Na+ and ICaL
currents due to inactivation at short diastolic intervals, with additional
contribution from elevated IKr due to incomplete deactivation
Morphology controls the thermoelectric power factor of a doped semiconducting polymer.
The electrical performance of doped semiconducting polymers is strongly governed by processing methods and underlying thin-film microstructure. We report on the influence of different doping methods (solution versus vapor) on the thermoelectric power factor (PF) of PBTTT molecularly p-doped with F n TCNQ (n = 2 or 4). The vapor-doped films have more than two orders of magnitude higher electronic conductivity (σ) relative to solution-doped films. On the basis of resonant soft x-ray scattering, vapor-doped samples are shown to have a large orientational correlation length (OCL) (that is, length scale of aligned backbones) that correlates to a high apparent charge carrier mobility (μ). The Seebeck coefficient (α) is largely independent of OCL. This reveals that, unlike σ, leveraging strategies to improve μ have a smaller impact on α. Our best-performing sample with the largest OCL, vapor-doped PBTTT:F4TCNQ thin film, has a σ of 670 S/cm and an α of 42 μV/K, which translates to a large PF of 120 μW m-1 K-2. In addition, despite the unfavorable offset for charge transfer, doping by F2TCNQ also leads to a large PF of 70 μW m-1 K-2, which reveals the potential utility of weak molecular dopants. Overall, our work introduces important general processing guidelines for the continued development of doped semiconducting polymers for thermoelectrics
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