7,493 research outputs found

    Application of silanes in leather tanning

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    Content: In order to develop a sustainable and low-cost route for tanning, the stabilization of the collagen fibers of the hides with silica compounds has been investigated for many years. In this context, silica nanoparticles have been studied for application in tanning due to their small size and ability to combine with polymeric substrates. This work investigates the potentialities and limitations of the use of alkoxysilanes in leather tanning, introducing silica nanoparticles in the hides, aim for process and product innovation in leather industry. The synthesis of silica nanoparticles was carried out by a typical sol-gel Stöber process. From the silica precursor tetraethoxysilane (TEOS), ammonium hydroxide as catalyst, ethanol and water, the formation of nanoparticles dispersion takes place. Vegetable tanning process was explored by introducing the silica nanoparticles in this stage starting from pickled cattle hide. Shrinkage temperature, tensile strength, softness and color fastness to light were evaluated in the leather samples. The results achieved show that the tanning experiment with only silica, without other tanning agent, did not reach the minimum shrinkage temperature required to be labeled as tanned leather. Conversely, in the presence of vegetable tannin, the shrinkage temperature reached 80°C. The physical-mechanical properties indicated that the enhanced on the tensile strength of vegetable leathers with nanosilica was about 50% and their softness was not affected by the introduction of silica. A lighter colored leather was generated with silica but less stable to light. The tanning chemistry involving silica nanoparticles and collagen is complex, therefore, more studies are needed to explore the influence of silanes on hide stabilization. Take-Away: The physical-mechanical properties indicated an increase on the tensile strength of vegetable leather. Silica did not affected the softness of the leather. A lighter colored leather was generated with the addition of the silica nanoparticles in vegetable tanning

    Comparison of total variation algorithms for electrical impedance tomography

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    The applications of total variation (TV) algorithms for electrical impedance tomography (EIT) have been investigated. The use of the TV regularisation technique helps to preserve discontinuities in reconstruction, such as the boundaries of perturbations and sharp changes in conductivity, which are unintentionally smoothed by traditional l2 norm regularisation. However, the non-differentiability of TV regularisation has led to the use of different algorithms. Recent advances in TV algorithms such as the primal dual interior point method (PDIPM), the linearised alternating direction method of multipliers (LADMM) and the spilt Bregman (SB) method have all been demonstrated successful EIT applications, but no direct comparison of the techniques has been made. Their noise performance, spatial resolution and convergence rate applied to time difference EIT were studied in simulations on 2D cylindrical meshes with different noise levels, 2D cylindrical tank and 3D anatomically head-shaped phantoms containing vegetable material with complex conductivity. LADMM had the fastest calculation speed but worst resolution due to the exclusion of the second-derivative; PDIPM reconstructed the sharpest change in conductivity but with lower contrast than SB; SB had a faster convergence rate than PDIPM and the lowest image errors

    Conservation of Orbital Angular Momentum in Stimulated Down-Conversion

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    We report on an experiment demonstrating the conservation of orbital angular momentum in stimulated down-conversion. The orbital angular momentum is not transferred to the individual beams of the spontaneous down-conversion, but it is conserved when twin photons are taken individually. We observe the conservation law for an individual beam of the down-conversion through cavity-free stimulated emission.Comment: Submitted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let

    Trends in cancer incidence and mortality in Scotland: description and possible explanations.

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    Secular and cohort trends in mortality from cancer in Scotland during 1953-93, and incidence during 1960-90, were analysed using individual records from the national mortality and registration files. For certain cancer sites, the secular analyses of mortality were extended back to 1911 by use of published data. Mortality from cancer at older ages in Scotland has increased over the last 40 years. In each sex, this trend has been dominated by the effects of smoking: all-cancer rates and rates of lung cancer, now the most common fatal cancer in men and in women in Scotland, reached a peak in the cohort of men born at the turn of the century and the cohort of women born in the 1920s. For much of the period, the Scottish all-age rates of lung cancer were the highest reported in the world; they are now decreasing on a secular basis in men, but are still increasing in women. There have also been large increases at older ages in the incidence and mortality rates for cancer of the prostate in recent years. bladder cancer, nervous system cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, myeloma and leukaemia; for each there is likely to be a considerable artefactual element to the increase, with differing degrees of possibility that there may in addition be an element of real increase. Substantial decreases in mortality at all ages have occurred for stomach and colorectal cancers and substantial increases at all ages for pleural cancer and melanoma. Rates of mortality from breast cancer, the most common cancer in women in Scotland, have generally increased over the past 80 years; a temporary cessation in this upward trend occurred in the years during and after the Second World War, and recently rates have turned downward, probably at least in part because of better treatment. Mortality from ovarian cancer, the second most common reproductive-related female tumour in Scotland, has also increased at older ages. At younger ages, mortality from cancer in Scotland has decreased, especially in men, whereas incidence has not. This divergence, which has been a consequence of better treatment, has occurred especially for cancers of the testis and ovary, Hodgkin's disease and leukaemia. There have been increases at young adult ages, however, in both mortality from and incidence of oral and pharyngeal, oesophageal and laryngeal cancers in men, and melanoma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in each sex. Cervical cancer rates at young ages also increased, but this trend has reversed for incidence in the most recent birth cohorts. Incidence rates have also increased for testicular cancer in young adults and leukaemia in children. With the possible exceptions of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and childhood leukaemia, the increasing rates are likely largely to reflect real rises in incidence, and they highlight the need for investigation of the causes of these cancers, and, when causes are known, for preventive action

    Caracterização química do óleo essencial em folhas de citrus Aurantium L. E C. Deliciosa Ten.

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    O óleo essencial das folhas de citros, conhecido como petitgrain, possui uma gama de compostos de interesse da indústria de fragrâncias e cosméticos. Este trabalho visou determinar o rendimento e caracterizar a composição do óleo essencial presente em folhas maduras de acessos de Citrus aurantium L. e C. deliciosa Ten. O material vegetal foi coletado no Banco Ativo de Germoplasma de Citros da Embrapa Mandioca e Fruticultura e seco em estufa a 38ºC por quatro dias. A extração foi realizada por hidrodestilação e a identificação dos compostos foi feita por cromatografia em fase gasosa (CG-DIC e CG-EM). O maior rendimento obtido foi de 0,6%, a partir dos genótipos BGC014 e BGC040. Dentre os constituintes majoritários do óleo essencial foram encontrados o limoneno nos genótipos BGC032 e BGC045, linalol em BGC036, BGC009 BGC010, BGC011, BGC012 e BGC014, ?-terpineno em BGC032, BGC033, BGC035, BGC040, BGC041, BGC043, BGC044, BGC045, BGC008 e acetato de linalila nos BGC009, BGC010, BGC011, BGC012 e BGC014. Os principais compostos majoritários presentes no óleo essencial de C. deliciosa foram o limoneno (20,2-23,7%), ?-terpineno (28,3-39,4%) e ?-bergamoteno (23,1-37,3%). Os genótipos de C. aurantium apresentaram linalol (38.2-48.8%) e acetato de linalila (23.7-30,2%) como majoritários

    Field-induced Ordering in Critical Antiferromagnets

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    Transfer-matrix scaling methods have been used to study critical properties of field-induced phase transitions of two distinct two-dimensional antiferromagnets with discrete-symmetry order parameters: triangular-lattice Ising systems (TIAF) and the square-lattice three-state Potts model (SPAF-3). Our main findings are summarised as follows. For TIAF, we have shown that the critical line leaves the zero-temperature, zero -field fixed point at a finite angle. Our best estimate of the slope at the origin is (dTc/dH)T=H=0=4.74±0.15(dT_c/dH)_{T=H=0} = 4.74 \pm 0.15. For SPAF-3 we provided evidence that the zero-field correlation length diverges as ξ(T0,H=0)exp(a/Tx)\xi(T \to 0, H=0) \simeq \exp (a/T^{x}), with x=1.08±0.13x=1.08 \pm 0.13, through analysis of the critical curve at H0H \neq 0 plus crossover arguments. For SPAF-3 we have also ascertained that the conformal anomaly and decay-of-correlations exponent behave as: (a) H=0: c=1,η=1/3c=1, \eta=1/3; (b) H0:c=1/2,η=1/4H \neq 0: c=1/2, \eta=1/4.Comment: RevTex, 7 pages, 4 eps figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Crop growth response and dynamics of inorganic phosphorus fractions after application of reactive Arad phosphate rock in Oxisol with different land use histories.

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    Adsorbed or precipitated phosphorus can be susceptible to dissolution depending upon environmental conditions. This work evaluated both the partitioning and availability of the inorganic forms of P bound to Al, Fe and Ca in samples of a clayey Dystrophic Red Latosol (Oxisol) (DRL) with different land use history, fertilized with Arad reactive natural phosphate in Goias State, Brazil. The inorganic fractions of Al- P, Fe-P and Ca-P and the contents of Mehlich-1, ion-exchange resin, citric acid and Olsen extracted available P were determined in DRL. Plants grown in soil previously cultivated produce more beans than plants grown in soil not previously cultivated. The fractions Al-P and Fe-P represent the main inorganic forms in clayey DRL, being phosphorus availability closely related with the fraction Al-P. The distributions of the inorganic fractions of P in the soil fertilized with reactive phosphate were Fe-P = 45%, Al-P = 40% and Ca-P = 15%. The phosphorus content determined by alkaline extraction (Olsen Method) was closely related to levels of Al-P and Fe-P. On other hand, the concentrations determined by extracting acids (Mehlich-1 and citric acid) were more related to the Ca-P fraction. Fe-P and Al-P inorganic forms stocked over time with successive fertilizations in Oxisol with a history of cultivation in no-tillage may return to soil solution and provide the nutrient demand of plants

    Resonance of Vector Vortex Beams in a Triangular Optical Cavity

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    We experimentally demonstrate resonance of first-order vector vortex beams (VVB) with a triangular optical cavity. We also show that, due to their symmetry properties, the so-called radial and azimuthal VVBs do not resonate at the same cavity length, which could be explored to use the triangular resonator as a mode sorter. In addition, an intracavity Pancharatnam phase shifter (PPS) is implemented in order to compensate for any birefringent phase that the cavity mirrors may introduce

    Pressure induced topological quantum phase transition in Weyl semimetal T_d-MoTe_2

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    We report the pressure (p_max = 1.5 GPa) evolution of the crystal structure of the Weyl semimetal T_d-MoTe_2 by means of neutron diffraction experiments. We find that the fundamental non-centrosymmetric structure T_d is fully suppressed and transforms into a centrosymmertic 1T' structure at a critical pressure of p_cr = 1.2 GPa. This is strong evidence for a pressure induced quantum phase transition (QPT) between topological to a trivial electronic state. Although the topological QPT has strong effect on magnetoresistance, it is interesting that the superconducting critical temperature T_c, the superfluid density, and the SC gap all change smoothly and continuously across p_cr and no sudden effects are seen concomitantly with the suppression of the T_d structure. This implies that the T_c, and thus the SC pairing strength, is unaffected by the topological QPT. However, the QPT requires the change in the SC gap symmetry from non-trivial s+- to a trivial s++ state, which we discuss in this work. Our systematic characterizations of the structure and superconducting properties associated with the topological QPT provide deep insight into the pressure induced phase diagram in this topological quantum material.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
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