44 research outputs found
Magnetic-dipole induced appearance of vortices in a bilayered superconductor/soft-magnet heterostructure
The penetration of the magnetic field of an infinitesimal magnetic dipole
into a bilayered type-II superconductor/soft-magnet heterostructure is studied
on the basis of the classical London approach. The critical values of the
dipole moment for the first appearance of a single magnetic vortex and,
respectively, a magnetic vortex-antivortex pair in the superconductor
constituent are obtained, when the magnetic dipole faces the superconductor or
the soft-magnet constituent. This reveals that the soft-magnet constituent
inhibits penetration of vortices into the superconductor constituent, when the
dipole faces the soft-magnet constituent.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure; accepted in Physica C for the special issue of
Preceedings of the 8th Int. Conference on Materials and Mechanisms of
Superconductivity and High Temperature Superconductors (M2S-HTSC), Dresden,
Germany, July 9-14, 200
Insights on the mechanism of formation of protein microspheres in a biphasic system
Microspheres of bovine serum albumin (BSA) and silk fibroin are produced by applying ultrasound in a biphasic system consisting of an aqueous protein solution and an organic solvent. The protein microspheres are dispersed in an aqueous media where the protein remains at the interface covering the organic solvent. This only occurs when high shear forces are applied that induce changes to force the protein to the interface. Fourier transform infrared results indicate a large increase in the content of the β-sheet during the formation of silk fibroin microspheres. Molecular dynamics simulations show a clear adaption on the 3D structure of BSA when stabilized at the interface, without major changes in secondary structure. Further studies demonstrate that high water content, oil solvents, and larger peptides with separated and clear hydrophobic and hydrophilic areas lead to more stable and smaller spheres. This is the first time that these results are presented. We also present herein the rationale to produce tailored protein microspheres with a controlled size, controlled charge, and increased stability.This work was supported by Lidwine Project-Multifunctional medical textiles for wound (e.g., Decubitus) prevention and improved wound healing NMP2-CT-2006-026741. H.F. thanks POPH/FSE for cofinancing and FCT for Fellowship SFRH/BPD/38939/2007. We acknowledge Silvia Cappellozza from "Sezione Specializzata per la Bachicoltura" for the supply of silk cocoons
The needs of foster children and how to satisfy them:A systematic review of the literature
Family foster care deeply influences the needs of children and how these are satisfied. To increase our knowledge of foster children’s needs and how these are conceptualized, this paper presents a systematic literature review. Sixty- four empirical articles from six databases were reviewed and categorized (inter-rater agreement K = .78) into four categories: medical, belongingness, psychological and self-actualization needs. The results give a complete overview of needs that are specific to foster children, and what can be implemented to satisfy these needs. This study shows psychological needs are studied more often compared to the other categories, which specially relates to much attention for mental health problems. Furthermore, most articles focus on how to satisfy the needs of foster children and provide no definition or concrete conceptualization of needs. Strikingly, many articles focus on children’s problems instead of their needs, and some even use these terms interchangeably. This review illustrates that future research should employ a proper conceptualization of needs, which could also initiate a shift in thinking about needs instead of problems
Magnetic dipole–vortex interaction in a bilayered superconductor/soft-magnet heterostructure
The penetration of the magnetic field of an infinitesimal magnetic
dipole into a bilayered type-II superconductor/soft-magnet
heterostructure is studied on the basis of the classical London
approach. The energies associated with the presence of a straight
magnetic vortex in the superconductor layer are derived and the
critical dipole moment for the first vortex appearance is obtained
when the magnetic dipole faces the superconductor or the
soft-magnet constituent. This shows that the presence of the
latter constituent can lead to an improvement of the
superconducting properties of the heterostructure by either
inhibiting vortex penetration into the superconductor constituent
or enhancing vortex pinning in the superconductor constituent