186 research outputs found
Effect of chemical treatments on flax fibre reinforced polypropylene composites on tensile and dome forming behaviour
Tensile tests were performed on two different natural fibre composites (same constituent material, similar fibre fraction and thickness but different weave structure) to determine changes in mechanical properties caused by various aqueous chemical treatments and whether any permanent changes remain on drying. Scanning electronic microscopic examinations suggested that flax fibres and the flax/polypropylene interface were affected by the treatments resulting in tensile property variations. The ductility of natural fibre composites was improved significantly under wet condition and mechanical properties (elongation-to-failure, stiffness and strength) can almost retain back to pre-treated levels when dried from wet condition. Preheating is usually required to improve the formability of material in rapid forming, and the chemical treatments performed in this study were far more effective than preheating. The major breakthrough in improving the formability of natural fibre composites can aid in rapid forming of this class of material system.We wish to acknowledge financial support from the Australian National University
Asymmetric Syntheses of Analogs of Kainic Acid
Kainic acid has been used for nearly 50 years as a tool in neuroscience due to its pronounced neuroexcitatory properties. However, the significant price increase of kainic acid resulting from the disruption in the supply from its natural source, the alga Digenea Simplex, as well as inefficient synthesis of kainic acid, call for the exploration of functional mimics of kainic acid that can be synthesized in a simpler way.
Aza kainoids analog could be one of them. The unsubstituted aza analog of kainoids has demonstrates its ability as an ionotropic glutamate receptor agonist and showed affinity in the chloride dependent glutamate (GluCl) binding site. This opened a question of the importance of the presence of one nitrogen or both nitrogens in the aza kainoid analogs for binding to glutamate receptors. Therefore, two different pyrrolidine analogs of kainic acid, trans-4-(carboxymethyl)pyrrolidine-3-carboxylic acid and trans-2-carboxy-3-pyrrolidineacetic acid, were synthesized through multi-step sequences. The lack of the affinity of both pyrrolidine analogs in GluCl binding site indicated that both nitrogens in aza kainoid analogs are involved in hydrogen bonding with receptors, significantly enhancing their affinity in GluCl binding site.
Another potential functional mimic of kainic acid is isoxazolidine analogs of kainoids whose skeleton can be constituted directly via a 1, 3 dipolar cycloaddition as the key step. The difficulty in synthesizing N-unsubstituted isoxazolidines when applying such common protecting groups as alkyl, phenyl and benzyl groups, and the requirement of a desired enantioselectivity due to the three chiral ceneters in kainic acid, pose great challenges. Hence, several different protected nitrones were studied to establish that diphenylmethine nitrone may be a good candidate as the dipole in that the generated isoxazolidines can be deprotected in mild conditions with high yields. Our investigations also indicated that the exo/endo selectivity of the 1, 3 dipolar cycloaddition can be controlled by Lewis acids, and that the application of a directing group in dipolarophiles can accomplish a satisfied enantioselectivity. Those results demonstrated the synthesis of isoxazoldines analogs of kainic acid is very promising
Partial correlation analysis indicates causal relationships between GC-content, exon density and recombination rate in the human genome
{\bf Background}: Several features are known to correlate with the GC-content
in the human genome, including recombination rate, gene density and distance to
telomere. However, by testing for pairwise correlation only, it is impossible
to distinguish direct associations from indirect ones and to distinguish
between causes and effects. {\bf Results}: We use partial correlations to
construct partially directed graphs for the following four variables:
GC-content, recombination rate, exon density and distance-to-telomere.
Recombination rate and exon density are unconditionally uncorrelated, but
become inversely correlated by conditioning on GC-content. This pattern
indicates a model where recombination rate and exon density are two independent
causes of GC-content variation. {\bf Conclusions}: Causal inference and
graphical models are useful methods to understand genome evolution and the
mechanisms of isochore evolution in the human genome
Forming Analysis of Natural Fibre Composites
Weight reduction can significantly contribute to reducing Green
House Gas (GHG) emissions from vehicles. In addition to the
significant increase in the demand on transportation due to the
increase in global population, there is an urgent need to reduce
the weight of vehicles to increase their fuel efficiency and
therefore to reduce global GHG emissions. Driven by ecological
and economic interests, there has been an increasing use of plant
based material systems in various applications over the past
decade. Currently, one of the main challenges in using these
material systems for use in automotive components is to
understand the forming behaviour of this class of material
systems.
This work is designed to answer two key questions regarding the
forming of natural fibre composites. The first one is when does
failure initiate in this class of material systems, and what is
the most effective measure for predicting it? To answer this
question, hourglass samples with varying sample widths are
stretched and then formed through the stamping press machine. The
ARAMIS. system beneath the press machine provides displacement
and strain deformation which could be used to determine the
failure behaviour of the composites. This study proposes a new
FLC for woven composites, which is more effectively in predicting
the failure behaviour of the natural fibre composite than the
conventional method as it can successfully eliminate the path
dependency effect. This innovative failure criterion has been
proven to be more effective than the existing failure criterion
through FEA simulations. The second question that the current
work tries to answer is how to improve the formability of natural
fibre composites. The approach here is to perform dome forming
tests in different treatment conditions, namely preheating, water
treatment, and tailored blanks. It is found that, among all
treatment, the water treatment works the best, and is more
effective than the conventional treatment of preheating. Woven
composite with a tailored shape becomes much more formable due to
its woven nature of fibre reinforcement, while such improvement
is insignificant in nonwoven composites. This study lays a
foundation for rapid forming of this class of material system,
and will in turn lead to possible weight savings in future
vehicles
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