2,030 research outputs found
Frequency instability in Er/Yb fiber grating lasers due to heating by nonradiative transitions
Author name used in this publication: Demokan, M. S.Version of RecordPublishe
Inhibitory mechanism of 3-hydroxypropionaldehyde accumulation in 1,3-propanediol synthesis with Klebsiella pneumoniae
3-Hydroxypropionaldehyde accumulation may cause the cessation of 1,3-propanediol sustained production with glycerol by Klebsiella pneumoniae. The impeller tip speed shift from higher to lower speed at glycerol excess or the pulsed glycerol feeding could lead to an abrupt increase of the 3- hydroxypropionaldehyde concentration (up to 10 mmol/l) in 10 min. The intracellular consequence of the 3-hydroxypropionaldehyde accumulation has not yet been elucidated. The rapid accumulation of 3- hydroxypropionaldehyde relying on the impeller tip speed shift was employed to investigate the influences of 3-hydroxypropionaldehyde to the activities of nine key enzymes related to glycerol metabolism, CO2 and O2 levels in off-gas, cell growth and 1,3-propanediol synthesis. Compared with that at 1.19 mmol/l 3-hydroxypropionaldehyde in broth, the residual enzymatic activities of the nine key enzymes ranged from 9.44 to 74.68% in the cultures at 7.5 mmol/l 3-hydroxypropionaldehyde in broth. The inhibitions of cell growth and the 1,3-propanediol synthesis were unnoticeable at the low level of 3- hydroxypropionaldehyde. By contrast, the CO2 and O2 levels changes in off-gas response to the 3- hydroxypropionaldehyde accumulation were less than 15 min. These results suggest that 3- hydroxypropionaldehyde inhibited the growth and metabolism of K. pneumoniae in a more complicated manner.Keywords: Fermentation, glycerol, 3-hydroxypropionaldehyde, Klebsiella pneumoniae, 1,3-propanediol
Penetration Enhancement Effect of Turpentine Oil on Transdermal Film of Ketorolac
Purpose: To prepare transdermal films of ketorolac tromethamine (KT) and study the effect of turpentine oil as a penetration enhancer for the drug.Methods: Transdermal films of KT were prepared with Carbopol-934 and ethyl cellulose, with turpentine oil as the penetration enhancer, using solvent evaporation method. The films were characterized for physicochemical properties, ex vivo permeation, as well as in vivo anti-inflammatory and analgesic activities in Wistar rats. Results: The transdermal films were uniform in weight and thickness, flat, with high drug content (93.9 to 98.5 %) and of high folding endurance (134.0 to 180.0). Drug permeation through excised rat abdominal skin was prolonged, with the total drug release ranging from 58.88 to 88.98 % in 24 h. The films containing penetration enhancer showed higher drug permeation than the one without the enhancer; furthermore, drug permeation increased with increase in the concentration of the enhancer. The films were non-irritant to the skin. The transdermal films prepared with permeation enhancers showed greater anti-inflammatory activity (87.55 ± 2.50 and 83.24 ± 2.29 % inhibition of rat paw edema at the end of 12 h for formulations F2 and F3, respectively, compared to that of the formulation without enhancer with 69.99 %) as well as greater analgesic activity (quicker onset of analgesia in 1.5 h with longer duration of 10 to 12 h).Conclusion: Transdermal films of ketorolac have a potential for use in the treatment of pain andinflammation. Incorporation of turpentine oil in the films enhances not only drug flux but also analgesic and anti-inflammatory activities in rats
Message Passing: Towards Low-Complexity, Global Optimal Routing and Wavelength Assignment Solutions for Optical Networks
We introduce a polynomial-time distributed message passing algorithm for routing and wavelength assignment. Exact global solutions are obtained for small-scale networks and improvements are demonstrated on network scales beyond the reach of established global algorithms
Investigation of interferometric noise in fiber-optic gas sensors with use of wavelength modulation spectroscopy
Author name used in this publication: W. JinAuthor name used in this publication: M. S. DemokanVersion of RecordPublishe
From a systematic literature review to integrated definition for sustainable supply chain innovation (SSCI)
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: From a systematic literature review to integrated definition for sustainable supply chain innovation (SSCI) journaltitle: Journal of Cleaner Production articlelink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2016.11.153 content_type: article copyright: © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Confinement-induced phonon softening and hardening in Sb2Te3 thin films
Scaling effects in Sesqui-chalcogenides are of major interest to understand and optimize their performance in heavily scaled applications, including topological insulators and phase-change devices. A combined experimental and theoretical study is presented for molecular beam epitaxy-grown films of antimony-telluride (Sb2Te3). Structural,vibrational, optical, and bonding properties upon varying confinement are studied for thicknesses ranging from 1.3 to 56 nm. In ultrathin films, the low-frequency coherent phonons of A(1g)(1) symmetry are softened compared to the bulk (64.5 cm(-1) at 1.3 nm compared to 68 cm(-1) at 55.8 nm). A concomitant increase of the high-frequency A(1g)(2) Raman mode is seen. X-ray diffraction analyses unravel an accompanying out of plane stretch by 5%, mainly stemming from an increase in the Te-Te gap. This conclusion is supported by density functional theory slab models, which reveal a significant dependency of chemical bonding on film thickness. Changes in atomic arrangement, vibrational frequencies, and bonding extend over a thickness range much larger than observed for other material classes. The finding of these unexpectedly pronounced thickness-dependent effects in quasi-2D material Sb2Te3 allows tuning of the film properties with thickness. The results are discussed in the context of a novel bond-type, characterized by a competition between electron localization and delocalization
Compensation defects in annealed undoped liquid encapsulated Czochralski InP
As-grown undoped n-type semiconducting and annealed undoped semi-insulating (SI) liquid encapsulated Czochralski (LEC) InP has been studied by temperature dependent Hall measurement, photoluminescence spectroscopy, infrared absorption, and photocurrent spectroscopy. P-type conduction SI InP can frequently be obtained by annealing undoped LEC InP. This is caused by a high concentration of thermally induced native acceptor defects. In some cases, it can be shown that the thermally induced n-type SI property of undoped LEC InP is caused by a midgap donor compensating for the net shallow acceptors. The midgap donor is proposed to be a phosphorus antisite related defect. Traps in annealed SI InP have been detected by photocurrent spectroscopy and have been compared with reported results. The mechanisms of defect formation are discussed. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.published_or_final_versio
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