10,276 research outputs found
Sorption of apolar pesticides by units of benzoic acid propyl ester in cyclic phosphazene
Indexación: Scopus.The effects of temperature, pH and agitation time (equilibrium) on the adsorption process of different pesticides on N3P3(OC6H4COOCH2CH2CH3)6 was studied. With optimal conditions experimental, the adsorption isotherms have been realized with through Langmuir and Freundlich models. Pesticides are compounds used mainly in agriculture to control various species (plants, insects, worms, fungi). Due to their physicochemical properties, they can remain for a long time in the application sites, bioaccumulating and moving between environmental compartments which generate various environmental problems. The results obtained showed a physisorption mechanism for the fve pesticides studied, with higher sorption for: azinphos methyl (93,5 mg kg-1), carbaryl (290.5 mg kg-1) and carbofuran (580.5 mg kg-1) at 20 ° C, according to the models used. © 2018 Sociedad Chilena de Quimica. All rights reserved.https://scielo.conicyt.cl/pdf/jcchems/v62n4/0717-9324-jcchems-62-04-3783.pd
Conductivity anisotropy in the antiferromagnetic state of iron pnictides
Recent experiments on iron pnictides have uncovered a large in-plane
resistivity anisotropy with a surprising result: the system conducts better in
the antiferromagnetic x direction than in the ferromagnetic y direction. We
address this problem by calculating the ratio of the Drude weight along the x
and y directions, Dx/Dy, for the mean-field Q=(\pi,0) magnetic phase diagram of
a five-band model for the undoped pnictides. We find that Dx/Dy ranges between
0.3 < D_x/D_y < 1.4 for different interaction parameters. Large values of
orbital ordering favor an anisotropy opposite to the one found experimentally.
On the other hand D_x/D_y is strongly dependent on the topology and morfology
of the reconstructed Fermi surface. Our results points against orbital ordering
as the origin of the observed conductivity anisotropy, which may be ascribed to
the anisotropy of the Fermi velocity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 pdf figures. Fig 1(b) changed, one equation corrected,
minor changes in the text, references update
Tight binding model for iron pnictides
We propose a five-band tight-binding model for the Fe-As layers of iron
pnictides with the hopping amplitudes calculated within the Slater-Koster
framework. The band structure found in DFT, including the orbital content of
the bands, is well reproduced using only four fitting parameters to determine
all the hopping amplitudes. The model allows to study the changes in the
electronic structure caused by a modification of the angle formed by
the Fe-As bonds and the Fe-plane and recovers the phenomenology previously
discussed in the literature. We also find that changes in modify the
shape and orbital content of the Fermi surface sheets.Comment: 12 pages, 6 eps figures. Figs 1 and 2 modified, minor changes in the
text. A few references adde
Metal-to-glass ratio and the Magneto-Impedance of glass-covered CoFeBSi microwires at high frequencies
High frequency [1-500 MHz] measurements of the Magneto-Impedance (MI) of
glass-covered CoFeBSi microwires are carried
out with various metal-to-wire diameter ratios. A twin-peak, anhysteretic
behaviour is observed as a function of magnetic field. A maximum in appears at different values of the frequency , 125, 140 and 85 MHz with
the corresponding diameter ratio = 0.80, 0.55 and 0.32. We describe the
measurement technique and interpret our results with a thermodynamic model that
leads to a clearer view of the effects of on the maximum value of MI and
the anisotropy field.Comment: 5 pages and 6 figure
Clumpy Disc and Bulge Formation
We present a set of hydrodynamical/Nbody controlled simulations of isolated
gas rich galaxies that self-consistently include SN feedback and a detailed
chemical evolution model, both tested in cosmological simulations. The initial
conditions are motivated by the observed star forming galaxies at z ~ 2-3. We
find that the presence of a multiphase interstellar media in our models
promotes the growth of disc instability favouring the formation of clumps which
in general, are not easily disrupted on timescales compared to the migration
time. We show that stellar clumps migrate towards the central region and
contribute to form a classical-like bulge with a Sersic index, n > 2. Our
physically-motivated Supernova feedback has a mild influence on clump survival
and evolution, partially limiting the mass growth of clumps as the energy
released per Supernova event is increased, with the consequent flattening of
the bulge profile. This regulation does not prevent the building of a
classical-like bulge even for the most energetic feedback tested. Our Supernova
feedback model is able to establish a self-regulated star formation, producing
mass-loaded outflows and stellar age spreads comparable to observations. We
find that the bulge formation by clumps may coexit with other channels of bulge
assembly such as bar and mergers. Our results suggest that galactic bulges
could be interpreted as composite systems with structural components and
stellar populations storing archaeological information of the dynamical history
of their galaxy.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS - Aug. 20, 201
The Relative Importance of Global Agricultural Subsidies and Market Access
The claim by global trade modelers that the potential contribution to global economic welfare of removing agricultural subsidies is less than one-tenth of that from removing agricultural tariffs puzzles many observers. To help explain that result, this paper first compares the OECD and model-based estimates of the extent of the producer distortions (leaving aside consumer distortions), and shows that 75 percent of total support is provided by market access barriers when account is taken of all forms of support to farmers and to agricultural processors globally, and only 19 percent to domestic farm subsidies. We then provide a back-of-the-envelope (BOTE) calculation of the welfare cost of those distortions. Assuming unitary supply and demand elasticities, that BOTE analysis suggests 86 percent of the welfare cost is due to tariffs and only 6 percent to domestic farm subsidies. When the higher costs associated with the greater variability of trade measures relative to domestic support are accounted for, the BOTE estimate of the latter's share falls to 4 percent. This is close to the 5 percent generated by the most commonly used global model (GTAP) and reported in the paper's final section.International Relations/Trade,
Optical conductivity and Raman scattering of iron superconductors
We discuss how to analyze the optical conductivity and Raman spectra of
multi-orbital systems using the velocity and the Raman vertices in a similar
way Raman vertices were used to disentangle nodal and antinodal regions in
cuprates. We apply this method to iron superconductors in the magnetic and
non-magnetic states, studied at the mean field level. We find that the
anisotropy in the optical conductivity at low frequencies reflects the
difference between the magnetic gaps at the X and Y electron pockets. Both gaps
are sampled by Raman spectroscopy. We also show that the Drude weight
anisotropy in the magnetic state is sensitive to small changes in the lattice
structure.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, as accepted in Phys. Rev. B,
explanations/discussion added in Secs. II, III and V
INCORPORATING COMMODITY STOCKHOLDING BEHAVIOR INTO A SHORT-RUN GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
This paper incorporates commodity stockholding into a short run, stochastic global general equilibrium model. A mix of econometric and calibration techniques are used to reconcile model outcomes with historical stockholding and price behavior. The resulting framework is useful for analyzing policies in the short run or presence of production variability.Agribusiness,
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