394 research outputs found

    A Building Information Modeling (BIM)-Integrated System for Evaluating the Impact of Change Orders

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    Change orders are inevitable in most construction projects. The conventional change order practice is usually associated with 2D drawings and various paper-based documents, which cannot illustrate the existing and altered building conditions efficiently. This often leads to misinterpretation and miscommunication among project participants. In addition, cost and schedule information, which is basic inputs for analyzing the impact of change orders, is usually scattered and poorly organized resulting in difficulties in retrieving it. The evaluation of cost and schedule impacts is often subjective and unsystematic contributing to construction disputes. Building information modeling (BIM) is widely used in modern construction projects. BIM is a promising construction information management tool, which can address the aforementioned challenges. In this paper, we develop the BIM-Integrated System for Evaluating the Impacts of Construction Change Orders (BIM-ISICO), which can systematically analyze three main impacts of a change order: physical conditions, schedule, and cost. The BIM-ISICO assists users in observing and visualizing the effect of a change order on building conditions systematically via 3D BIM models. The system can also evaluate the impacts of such change order on project cost and schedule. It establishes a new paradigm of delay and cost analysis by minimizing subjectivity and providing the auditing trails of change orders. To demonstrate its efficacy and practicality, the system is applied to an actual 18-story building project for analyzing the impact of a construction change order. The system can successfully assess and report all three aspects of change order impacts. These results can mitigate the conflicts between the project owner and the contractor about the construction claims resulting from change orders

    Properties of aerosols and their wet deposition in the arctic spring during ASTAR2004 at Ny-Alesund, Svalbard

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    During the period of scientific campaign "Arctic Study of Tropospheric Aerosols, Clouds and Radiation 2004" (ASTAR2004), precipitation samples were collected in late spring at Ny-Alesund, Svalbard and their ionic components were analyzed in parallel with the measurement of properties of atmospheric aerosol particles at the same place. Backward trajectory analyses indicated that the air mass above the observatory initially dominated by air masses from the Arctic Ocean, then those from western Siberia and later those from Greenland and the Arctic Ocean. In the measurement period, six precipitation samples were obtained and five of them were analyzed their ionic components by ionchromatography. The concentrations of nss-sulphate in precipitations were between 1.8 and 24.6 ppm from which the scavenging ratio and scavenging coefficients were calculated using the data such as the concentrations of nss-sulphate in aerosol particles, amounts of precipitations, and the heights of precipitations obtained from radar echo data. The scavenging ratio ranged from 1.0×10<sup>6</sup> to 17×10<sup>6</sup> which are comparable values reported in other areas. A detailed comparison between precipitation events and the number concentration of aerosol particles obtained from optical particle counters suggests that the type of precipitations, i.e. rain or snow, significantly affects the number concentrations of aerosol particles

    Use of diffusive gradient in thin films for in situ measurements:a review on the progress in chemical fractionation, speciation and bioavailability of metals in waters

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    Chemical fractionation, speciation analysis and bioavailability of metals and metalloids in waters have received increased attention in recent years. However, this interest is not matched by progress in improving species integrity during standard ‘grab’ sample collection, processing and storage. Time-averaged, low disturbance sampling, in situ, of trace element species, in particular, is a more reliable approach for environmental chemical surveillance and methods based on the diffusive gradients in thin films (DGT) technique stand out as one of the most widely used of the passive sampler classes, and hence will be the primary focus of this review. The DGT technique was initially developed to sample metals and semi-metals in freshwaters, and later was extended to include marine settings as well as the measurement of metal fluxes in sediments/soils. Nowadays, DGT based technologies are used extensively in a variety of geochemical and environmental health research disciplines. This review specifically surveys the application of the DGT measurement for fractionation and speciation analysis (as defined by IUPAC) of metal or metalloids in aqua. Use of DGT in fresh, estuarine and marine waters, as well as effluents has improved the knowledge base of in situ data related to fractionation processes (e.g. labile and inert species; organic and inorganic species; dissolved and nanoparticles), and speciation analysis. This supports not only the calculations underpinning numerous software speciation models for cation and anion behavior, but also our understanding of the bioavailability and toxicity of these species. The measurement of metals by DGT are easy to obtain, which is core to its popular use, but often the results require sophisticated interpretation and a wide spectrum of chemical knowledge to really explain in full, which is why the method has and continues to capture the interest of researchers

    No Origin, No Problem for Yeast DNA Replication

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    Eukaryotic DNA replication initiates from multiple sites on each chromosome called replication origins (origins). In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, origins are defined at discrete sites. Regular spacing and diverse firing characteristics of origins are thought to be required for efficient completion of replication, especially in the presence of replication stress. However, a S. cerevisiae chromosome III harboring multiple origin deletions has been reported to replicate relatively normally, and yet how an origin-deficient chromosome could accomplish successful replication remains unknown. To address this issue, we deleted seven well-characterized origins from chromosome VI, and found that these deletions do not cause gross growth defects even in the presence of replication inhibitors. We demonstrated that the origin deletions do cause a strong decrease in the binding of the origin recognition complex. Unexpectedly, replication profiling of this chromosome showed that DNA replication initiates from non-canonical loci around deleted origins in yeast. These results suggest that replication initiation can be unexpectedly flexible in this organism

    Confining Properties of the Homogeneous Self-Dual Field and the Effective Potential in SU(2) Yang-Mills Theory

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    We examine in non-Abelian gauge theory the heavy quark limit in the presence of the (anti-)self-dual homogeneous background field and see that a confining potential emerges, consistent with the Wilson criterion, although the potential is quadratic and not linear in the quark separation. This builds upon the well-known feature that propagators in such a background field are entire functions. The way in which deconfinement can occur at finite temperature is then studied in the static temporal gauge by calculation of the effective potential at high temperature. Finally we discuss the problems to be surmounted in setting up the calculation of the effective potential nonperturbatively on the lattice.Comment: 31 pages, LaTeX, expanded discussion and derivations in Sections 2 and

    The Reform of Employee Compensation in China’s Industrial Enterprises

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    Although employee compensation reform in Chinese industrial sector has been discussed in the literature, the real changes in compensation system and pay practices have received insufficient attention and warrant further examination. This paper briefly reviews the pre- and post-reform compensation system, and reports the results of a survey of pay practices in the four major types of industrial enterprises in China. The research findings indicate that the type of enterprise ownership has little influence on general compensation practices, adoption of profit-sharing plans, and subsidy and allowance packages. In general, pay is linked more to individual performance and has become an important incentive to Chinese employees. However, differences are found across the enterprise types with regard to performance-related pay. Current pay practices are positively correlated to overall effectiveness of the enterprise

    Dissolution Control of Mg by Cellulose Acetate–Polyelectrolyte Membranes

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    Cellulose acetate (CA)-based membranes are used for Mg dissolution control: the permeability of the membrane is adjusted by additions of the polyelectrolyte, poly(N,N-dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate) (PDMAEMA). Spin-coated films were characterized with FT-IR, and once exposed to an aqueous solution the film distends and starts acting as a membrane which controls the flow of ions and H2 gas. Electrochemical measurements (linear sweep voltammograms, open-circuit potential, and polarization) show that by altering the CA:PDMAEMA ratio the dissolution rate of Mg can be controlled. Such a control over Mg dissolution is crucial if Mg is to be considered as a viable, temporary biomedical implant material. Furthermore, the accumulation of corrosion products between the membrane and the sample diminishes the undesirable effects of high local pH and H2 formation which takes place during the corrosion process.Peer reviewe
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