63 research outputs found
Nonlinear Model Predictive Control for Uranium Extraction-Scrubbing Operation in Spent Nuclear Fuel Treatment Process
This paper addresses the particularities of the uranium extraction-scrubbing
operation in a spent nuclear fuel treatment process (PUREX-Plutonium Uranium
Refining by Extraction) through the use of set-point tracking MPC (Model
Predictive Control). The presented controller uses the feed solution flow rate
as the manipulated variable to control the saturation of the solvent at the
extraction step. In addition, it guarantees not to loose uranium in the
raffinates, and ensures equipment limitations during operation time. Simulation
results show that the tracking NMPC effectively ensures accurate set point
tracking and constraints guarantee. As a result, the system can be driven to
its optimal working condition, avoid and recover from constraint violations.
The control performance was compared with PID and openloop controllers
Slow nonequilibrium dynamics: parallels between classical and quantum glasses and gently driven systems
We review an scenario for the non-equilibrium dynamics of glassy systems that
has been motivated by the exact solution of simple models. This approach allows
one to set on firmer grounds well-known phenomenological theories. The old
ideas of entropy crisis, fictive temperatures, free-volume... have clear
definitions within these models. Aging effects in the glass phase are also
captured. One of the salient features of the analytic solution, the breakdown
of the fluctuation-dissipation relations, provides a definition of a bonafide
{\it effective temperature} that is measurable by a thermometer, controls heat
flows, partial equilibrations, and the reaction to the external injection of
heat. The effective temperature is an extremely robust concept that appears in
non-equilibrium systems in the limit of small entropy production as, for
instance, sheared fluids, glasses at low temperatures when quantum fluctuations
are relevant, tapped or vibrated granular matter, etc. The emerging scenario is
one of partial equilibrations, in which glassy systems arrange their internal
degrees of freedom so that the slow ones select their own effective
temperatures. It has been proven to be consistent within any perturbative
resummation scheme (mode coupling, etc) and it can be challenged by
experimental and numerical tests, some of which it has already passed.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Vaccine breakthrough hypoxemic COVID-19 pneumonia in patients with auto-Abs neutralizing type I IFNs
Life-threatening `breakthrough' cases of critical COVID-19 are attributed to poor or waning antibody response to the SARS- CoV-2 vaccine in individuals already at risk. Pre-existing autoantibodies (auto-Abs) neutralizing type I IFNs underlie at least 15% of critical COVID-19 pneumonia cases in unvaccinated individuals; however, their contribution to hypoxemic breakthrough cases in vaccinated people remains unknown. Here, we studied a cohort of 48 individuals ( age 20-86 years) who received 2 doses of an mRNA vaccine and developed a breakthrough infection with hypoxemic COVID-19 pneumonia 2 weeks to 4 months later. Antibody levels to the vaccine, neutralization of the virus, and auto- Abs to type I IFNs were measured in the plasma. Forty-two individuals had no known deficiency of B cell immunity and a normal antibody response to the vaccine. Among them, ten (24%) had auto-Abs neutralizing type I IFNs (aged 43-86 years). Eight of these ten patients had auto-Abs neutralizing both IFN-a2 and IFN-., while two neutralized IFN-omega only. No patient neutralized IFN-ss. Seven neutralized 10 ng/mL of type I IFNs, and three 100 pg/mL only. Seven patients neutralized SARS-CoV-2 D614G and the Delta variant (B.1.617.2) efficiently, while one patient neutralized Delta slightly less efficiently. Two of the three patients neutralizing only 100 pg/mL of type I IFNs neutralized both D61G and Delta less efficiently. Despite two mRNA vaccine inoculations and the presence of circulating antibodies capable of neutralizing SARS-CoV-2, auto-Abs neutralizing type I IFNs may underlie a significant proportion of hypoxemic COVID-19 pneumonia cases, highlighting the importance of this particularly vulnerable population
Autoantibodies against type I IFNs in patients with life-threatening COVID-19
Interindividual clinical variability in the course of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection is vast. We report that at least 101 of 987 patients with life-threatening coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pneumonia had neutralizing immunoglobulin G (IgG) autoantibodies (auto-Abs) against interferon-w (IFN-w) (13 patients), against the 13 types of IFN-a (36), or against both (52) at the onset of critical disease; a few also had auto-Abs against the other three type I IFNs. The auto-Abs neutralize the ability of the corresponding type I IFNs to block SARS-CoV-2 infection in vitro. These auto-Abs were not found in 663 individuals with asymptomatic or mild SARS-CoV-2 infection and were present in only 4 of 1227 healthy individuals. Patients with auto-Abs were aged 25 to 87 years and 95 of the 101 were men. A B cell autoimmune phenocopy of inborn errors of type I IFN immunity accounts for life-threatening COVID-19 pneumonia in at least 2.6% of women and 12.5% of men
COVID-19 symptoms at hospital admission vary with age and sex: results from the ISARIC prospective multinational observational study
Background:
The ISARIC prospective multinational observational study is the largest cohort of hospitalized patients with COVID-19. We present relationships of age, sex, and nationality to presenting symptoms.
Methods:
International, prospective observational study of 60 109 hospitalized symptomatic patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 recruited from 43 countries between 30 January and 3 August 2020. Logistic regression was performed to evaluate relationships of age and sex to published COVID-19 case definitions and the most commonly reported symptoms.
Results:
‘Typical’ symptoms of fever (69%), cough (68%) and shortness of breath (66%) were the most commonly reported. 92% of patients experienced at least one of these. Prevalence of typical symptoms was greatest in 30- to 60-year-olds (respectively 80, 79, 69%; at least one 95%). They were reported less frequently in children (≤ 18 years: 69, 48, 23; 85%), older adults (≥ 70 years: 61, 62, 65; 90%), and women (66, 66, 64; 90%; vs. men 71, 70, 67; 93%, each P < 0.001). The most common atypical presentations under 60 years of age were nausea and vomiting and abdominal pain, and over 60 years was confusion. Regression models showed significant differences in symptoms with sex, age and country.
Interpretation:
This international collaboration has allowed us to report reliable symptom data from the largest cohort of patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19. Adults over 60 and children admitted to hospital with COVID-19 are less likely to present with typical symptoms. Nausea and vomiting are common atypical presentations under 30 years. Confusion is a frequent atypical presentation of COVID-19 in adults over 60 years. Women are less likely to experience typical symptoms than men
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Research and Design of a Routing Protocol in Large-Scale Wireless Sensor Networks
无线传感器网络,作为全球未来十大技术之一,集成了传感器技术、嵌入式计算技术、分布式信息处理和自组织网技术,可实时感知、采集、处理、传输网络分布区域内的各种信息数据,在军事国防、生物医疗、环境监测、抢险救灾、防恐反恐、危险区域远程控制等领域具有十分广阔的应用前景。 本文研究分析了无线传感器网络的已有路由协议,并针对大规模的无线传感器网络设计了一种树状路由协议,它根据节点地址信息来形成路由,从而简化了复杂繁冗的路由表查找和维护,节省了不必要的开销,提高了路由效率,实现了快速有效的数据传输。 为支持此路由协议本文提出了一种自适应动态地址分配算——ADAR(AdaptiveDynamicAddre...As one of the ten high technologies in the future, wireless sensor network, which is the integration of micro-sensors, embedded computing, modern network and Ad Hoc technologies, can apperceive, collect, process and transmit various information data within the region. It can be used in military defense, biomedical, environmental monitoring, disaster relief, counter-terrorism, remote control of haz...学位:工学硕士院系专业:信息科学与技术学院通信工程系_通信与信息系统学号:2332007115216
Religions et frontières
Longtemps, les religions ont été confinées à des espaces géographiques particuliers : christianisme en Occident, islam en Afrique du Nord et au Moyen Orient, bouddhisme en Asie, chamanisme chez les peuples dits « primitifs ». À l’heure de la mondialisation, les religions, comme les ressources marchandes et humaines, traversent les frontières. Ainsi, le bouddhisme s’exporte en France, le protestantisme évangélique est présent en Afrique du Nord et au Moyen Orient, des mormonismes se déploient de plus en plus en dehors des États-Unis d’Amérique. En dépassant les frontières géographiques, les religions renversent aussi les frontières de nos assignations identitaires et culturelles : ainsi, on peut se dire musulman et occidental, juif et noir, français et néo-chamane. Traversant les frontières temporelles et géographiques, mais aussi symboliques, les analyses de cet ouvrage nous transportent aux quatre coins du monde et nous font visiter des périodes et des croyances anciennes, comme actuelles. Leurs auteurs se défient également des bornes disciplinaires et recourent dans leurs études à des outils d’analyse scientifiques variés, empruntant aussi bien à l’histoire, à la géographie, à la sociologie, qu’à l’anthropologie
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