441 research outputs found

    A SCIENTOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF LITERATURE GROWTH IN ANTHRAX

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    Anthrax is an infectious disease which occurs regularly in southern Europe. It is also used as a weapon by a number of countries. This study is an attempt to investigate and analyze about the literature output on Anthrax. The aim of the present study was to identify literature growth over the period, literature distribution and authorship pattern. The data was obtained from PubMed using the keywords Anthrax”. It was found that a total of 1,955 published literatures for the period 2011-2018 in the field of Anthrax were contributed by 8,185 unique authors in 11 languages in 694 journals in 12 publication types. Ten and above authorship pattern contributed a higher percentage of literature while comparing with other authorship patterns and the total degree of collaboration was 0.94. First authors from USA have contributed around 44.6% of the total literature. Most of the literatures published in these years have citation count between 1-10. The literature published in the year 2011 have the highest citation counts. “Humans” was the more popular MeSH/keyword

    Quantitative analysis of the residual stress and dislocation density distributions around indentations in alumina and zirconia toughened alumina (ZTA) ceramics

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    This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Elsevier under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Alumina, 10% and 20% ZTA with 1.5mol% yttria stabiliser were subjected to Vickers indentation testing with loads from 1 to 20kg. Cr fluorescence and Raman spectroscopy were applied to the indent centre and around the indentation in order to investigate the origin of the signal, the effect of indentation loads and zirconia phase transformation on the residual stress and plastic deformation in the plastic zone. The results suggested that with very strong laser scattering, the depth resolution of ZTA materials was very poor, which lead to a very significant amount of the signal being collected from the subsurface regions below the plastic zone. It was also found that zirconia phase transformation reduced the compressive residual stress in the alumina matrix within the plastic zone, except at the indentation centre, due to the tensile residual microstress generated by the zirconia phase transformation. In addition, the dislocation density on the indent surface of the ZTA samples was significantly reduced due to the restriction of crack propagation and energy absorption during the phase transformation process. At the indent centre, the zirconia phase transformation was suppressed by the high compressive stress, therefore, no significant difference between alumina and ZTA in terms of their residual stress and dislocation density were observed. Using TEM observation, it was found that the plastic zone microstructure of pure alumina is different from that of ZTA, which is consistent with the Cr fluorescence results

    Solvothermal nanoYAG synthesis: Mechanism and particle growth kinetics

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    This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Journal of Supercritical Fluids and the definitive published version is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.supflu.2015.09.031NanoYAG particles with spherical morphology have been synthesised using a solvothermal method; a structure sensitive reaction, where the chemical reaction and the particle growth kinetics are interdependent. It has been observed that the primary YAG particles agglomerated into ∼30 nm clusters via a self-assembled Ostwald ripening process along (2 1 1) planes, separated by a distance of ∼0.49 nm, at 270 °C and 2.0 MPa for 2 h. These nanoclusters coalesced into single nanoparticles of ∼30 nm in size and exhibited a smaller inter planar distance of ∼0.26 nm, corresponding to the (4 2 0) planes, when synthesized at 300 °C and 8.5 MPa for 2 h. in addition, the solvent 1,4-butanediol transformed into 1,4-diacetoxybutane, this will have undergone esterification by reacting with the terminal acetate groups cleaved from the precursor, yttrium acetate. The proposed mechanism based on the analytical evidence suggests that a complete dissolution of precursors facilitated the structural re-arrangement of atoms within the planes and lead to a significantly higher degree of crystallinity. Moreover, once the particles with (4 2 0) planes had formed, they were no longer involved in facile coalescence along their preferential planes due to their lower interfacial energy compared to the (2 1 1) planes. This led to control of the particle morphology and with little agglomeration occurring in the final nanopowder

    High pressure studies on AgI-Ag<SUB>2</SUB>O-MoO<SUB>3</SUB> glasses

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    The effect of pressure on the conductivity of AgI-Ag2O-MoO3 glasses has been reexamined. A conductivity maximum is observed around 0.7 GPa. No variation of the sample temperature is noted under pressure. The results are found to agree well with the cluster-tissue model

    Is copyright blind to the visual?

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    This article argues that, with respect to the copyright protection of works of visual art, the general uneasiness that has always pervaded the relationship between copyright law and concepts of creativity produces three anomalous results. One of these is that copyright lacks much in the way of a central concept of 'visual art' and, to the extent that it embraces any concept of the 'visual', it is rooted in the rhetorical discourse of the Renaissance. This means that copyright is poorly equipped to deal with modern developments in the visual arts. Secondly, the pervasive effect of rhetorical discourse appears to have made it particularly difficult for copyright law to strike a meaningful balance between protecting creativity and permitting its use in further creative works. Thirdly, just when rhetorical discourse might have been useful in identifying the significance and materiality of the unique one-off work of visual art, copyright law chooses to ignore its implications

    Anomalous Critical Field Dependence of Cr-Nb-Cr Trilayers on Niobium Thickness

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    198-203Cr-Nb-Cr trilayer thin films were deposited using DC/RF sputtering with Cr layer thickness maintained at 7.5 nm and Nb thickness varying from 30 nm to 229 nm, in order to study the interplay of antiferromagnetism and superconductivity. Various viewpoints have been expressed in the literature with respect to analyzing the anomalous properties that have been identified in superconductor/magnetic thin films. The study of Cr-Nb-Cr thin films were taken up to identify the existence of similar anomalous superconducting properties on account of antiferromagnetic-superconductor interfaces. X-ray reflectivity measurements showed high quality of thin film structure with minimum surface and interface roughness. Transport measurements down to 2K were carried out in the presence of magnetic fields up to 2 T applied perpendicular to the trilayers to deduce Tc. The suppression of Tc due to Cr layer is larger than proximity effect of similar metal films. It could be explained by proximity effect using antiferromagnetic Cr layer. Upper critical field measurements show a distinct non monotonic dependence of upper critical magnetic field and the slope on Nb layer thickness. The analysis due to WHH theory to deduce upper critical fields for the trilayer thin films studied did not match with experimental values. Although studies performed on Cr-Nb-Cr trilayers did not show any anomaly in Tc, it clearly showed a depression of Tc much larger than proximity effect, non monotonic behavior in Bc2(0) and dBc2/dTc behavior with Nb layer thickness

    Beyond mystery: Putting algorithmic accountability in context

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    Critical algorithm scholarship has demonstrated the difficulties of attributing accountability for the actions and effects of algorithmic systems. In this commentary, we argue that we cannot stop at denouncing the lack of accountability for algorithms and their effects but must engage the broader systems and distributed agencies that algorithmic systems exist within; including standards, regulations, technologies, and social relations. To this end, we explore accountability in “the Generated Detective,” an algorithmically generated comic. Taking up the mantle of detectives ourselves, we investigate accountability in relation to this piece of experimental fiction. We problematize efforts to effect accountability through transparency by undertaking a simple operation: asking for permission to re-publish a set of the algorithmically selected and modified words and images which make the frames of the comic. Recounting this process, we demonstrate slippage between the “complication” of the algorithm and the obscurity of the legal and institutional structures in which it exists
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