137 research outputs found
Current and emerging strategies for biocompatible materials for implantable electronics
The application of electronics to biological systems has rapidly developed over the last century, facilitating significant advances in the diagnosis and therapy of a large range of conditions. The electrodes within these devices are a crucial component in enabling high-quality, low noise signal recordings to be achieved. However, most of the traditional materials used to maximize these electrical properties are often at odds with the need to integrate and interface successfully with biological tissue. This review provides an overview of the current considerations, challenges, and progress in bypassing these barriers in vivo through material selection and fabrication, by considering the performance requirements of an implantable electrode and practical limitations imposed by the current fabrication technologies. We then summarize with an overview of the current state-of-the-art and emerging materials for implantable electrodes
Surface Average Temperature Measurement of Cu-W Contact Material Burning in CO2: Preliminary Study
The surface average temperature and the electrode temperature distribution are key parameters to predict the electrode erosion. Experimental research on the arc erosion has been carried out in a model circuit breaker, in which CO2 is filled in the chamber and Cu-W is used as the contact material. The surface average temperatures of plug contact exposed to electric arc with sinusoidal currents of 5kA were determined by a high-speed pyroscope. In order to establish a relationship between the average temperature of the contact surface and current squared, the data statistics and fitting curves in the current-rising and current-falling stages were given. It has been found that there are two different types of arc erosion processes by comparing the temperature-current squared curves. In other words, the structure of contact surface and the electrode material change significantly after repeated arc erosions
Experimental Study of Arc Erosion in Gas-blasting and Free-burning Conditions in High-voltage Circuit Breakers
Arc erosion behavior depends on varieties of factors, such as the shape and material of contacts, the gas type and the pressure filled in the chamber. In this contribution, experimental research on the gas-blasting and free-burning conditions was carried out in a model circuit breaker to investigate the gas blowing effect on the mass loss of arcing contacts. SF6 was filled in the chamber and copper-tungsten was used as the contact material. Three different peak current amplitudes (5/20/35kA) were selected, and the average mass loss of plug contact was measured after five consecutive arcing tests. The erosion physical process between arc root and contact material is extremely complex. The mass loss was estimated with four different indexes, which include integral of current squared, thermal stress, transferred electric charge and arc energy. It has been found that the arc energy can be used to represent the degree of arc erosion to relate the gas-blasting and free-burning conditions
Arc Voltage as an Indicator of Nozzle Ablation Degradation in High-voltage CO2 Gas Circuit Breakers
Energy released by electric arc during short-circuit current interruption is mostly absorbed by the surrounding cold gas and partly transferred to the arcing contacts and nozzle. The radiation is the main mode of thermal energy transfer between the electric arc and nozzle surface. Experimental research on the nozzle ablation has been carried out at a model circuit breaker, in which CO2 is filled in the chamber and poly-tetrafluoro-ethylene (PTFE) is used as the nozzle material. It is found that the arc voltage can be as an indicator of nozzle ablation degradation by comparing the voltage at current peak and arc voltage extinction peak. Under 20kA and 35kA peak current interrupting conditions, the voltage at current peak decreases with the number of operations. There are two factors that affect the arc voltage at current peak. One is the size of the arc cross section, and the other is the content of PTFE entering the arc zone, which affects its conductivity
Event-driven Real-time Retrieval in Web Search
Information retrieval in real-time search presents unique challenges distinct
from those encountered in classical web search. These challenges are
particularly pronounced due to the rapid change of user search intent, which is
influenced by the occurrence and evolution of breaking news events, such as
earthquakes, elections, and wars. Previous dense retrieval methods, which
primarily focused on static semantic representation, lack the capacity to
capture immediate search intent, leading to inferior performance in retrieving
the most recent event-related documents in time-sensitive scenarios. To address
this issue, this paper expands the query with event information that represents
real-time search intent. The Event information is then integrated with the
query through a cross-attention mechanism, resulting in a time-context query
representation. We further enhance the model's capacity for event
representation through multi-task training. Since publicly available datasets
such as MS-MARCO do not contain any event information on the query side and
have few time-sensitive queries, we design an automatic data collection and
annotation pipeline to address this issue, which includes ModelZoo-based Coarse
Annotation and LLM-driven Fine Annotation processes. In addition, we share the
training tricks such as two-stage training and hard negative sampling. Finally,
we conduct a set of offline experiments on a million-scale production dataset
to evaluate our approach and deploy an A/B testing in a real online system to
verify the performance. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that our
proposed approach significantly outperforms existing state-of-the-art baseline
methods
Changes in global food consumption increase GHG emissions despite efficiency gains along global supply chains
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions related to food consumption complement production-based or territorial accounts by capturing carbon leaked through trade. Here we evaluate global consumption-based food emissions between 2000 and 2019 and underlying drivers using a physical trade flow approach and structural decomposition analysis. In 2019, emissions throughout global food supply chains reached 30 ±9% of anthropogenic GHG emissions, largely triggered by beef and dairy consumption in rapidly developing countries—while per capita emissions in developed countries with a high percentage of animal-based food declined. Emissions outsourced through international food trade dominated by beef and oil crops increased by ~1 Gt CO2 equivalent, mainly driven by increased imports by developing countries. Population growth and per capita demand increase were key drivers to the global emissions increase (+30% and +19%, respectively) while decreasing emissions intensity from land-use activities was the major factor to offset emissions growth (−39%). Climate change mitigation may depend on incentivizing consumer and producer choices to reduce emissions-intensive food products.</p
Fabrication of B doped g-C3N4/TiO2 heterojunction for efficient photoelectrochemical water oxidation
With the development of clean and renewable energy, hydrogen produced via photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting has attracted considerable attention. However, to develop the photoanodes with stable and excellent PEC ability is still a big challenge. In our work, TiO2 nanorods decorated with boron doped g-C3N4 (BCN/TiO2) is fabricated via thermal polymerization method to improve the PEC performance. The BCN/TiO2 displays 4-fold increase of the photocurrent density (1.01 mA cm−2) at 1.23 V vs. RHE under irradiation (100 mW cm−2, AM 1.5 G). And the onset potential of BCN/TiO2 exhibits a negative shift with 100 mV. Attributed to the broad light absorption of BCN and hetero-junction forming between BCN and TiO2, the IPCE value is increased to 87.8% in 380 nm, and the charge separation and transfer efficiency are both increased. Doping metal-free inorganic material with heteroatoms is a simple and efficient strategy to increase the light absorption within visible light and charge transfer efficiency in PEC and photocatalytic applications
Surface Average Temperature Measurement of Cu-W Contact Material Burning in CO2: Preliminary Study
The surface average temperature and the electrode temperature distribution are key parameters to predict the electrode erosion. Experimental research on the arc erosion has been carried out in a model circuit breaker, in which CO2 is filled in the chamber and Cu-W is used as the contact material. The surface average temperatures of plug contact exposed to electric arc with sinusoidal currents of 5kA were determined by a high-speed pyroscope. In order to establish a relationship between the average temperature of the contact surface and current squared, the data statistics and fitting curves in the current-rising and current-falling stages were given. It has been found that there are two different types of arc erosion processes by comparing the temperature-current squared curves. In other words, the structure of contact surface and the electrode material change significantly after repeated arc erosions.</jats:p
Experimental Study of Arc Erosion in Gas-blasting and Free-burning Conditions in High-voltage Circuit Breakers
Arc erosion behavior depends on varieties of factors, such as the shape and material of contacts, the gas type and the pressure filled in the chamber. In this contribution, experimental research on the gas-blasting and free-burning conditions was carried out in a model circuit breaker to investigate the gas blowing effect on the mass loss of arcing contacts. SF6 was filled in the chamber and copper-tungsten was used as the contact material. Three different peak current amplitudes (5/20/35kA) were selected, and the average mass loss of plug contact was measured after five consecutive arcing tests. The erosion physical process between arc root and contact material is extremely complex. The mass loss was estimated with four different indexes, which include integral of current squared, thermal stress, transferred electric charge and arc energy. It has been found that the arc energy can be used to represent the degree of arc erosion to relate the gas-blasting and free-burning conditions.</jats:p
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