1,663 research outputs found

    Assessing the potential contribution of excess heat from biogas plants towards decarbonising German residential heating

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    This paper analyses the current technical potential for utilising excess heat from German biogas plants, in order to supply local settlements through district heating. Based on a survey of around 600 biogas plant operators, the fractions of excess heat in these plants are analysed. A heuristic is developed to match biogas plants (heat sources) with local settlements (sinks) in order to determine a least-cost district heating supply for residential buildings. Two criteria are employed, namely the CO2 abatement costs and the payback period, which represent the macro- and microeconomic perspectives respectively. Based on the survey, a mean fraction of 40% excess heat is determined, which is in agreement with other empirical studies. Extrapolating this fraction to the German biogas plant stock leads to technically feasible CO2 savings of around 2.5 MtCO2/a. Employing the criteria of CO2 abatement costs and payback period yields about 2 MtCO2/a below CO2 abatement costs of 200 €/tCO2 and below a payback period of 9 years respectively. This represents about 0.25% of the total German CO2 emissions in 2016 or around 2.5% of all CO2 in residential buildings. If threshold values of 80 €/tCO2 and 5 years are employed, to reflect the German government’s suggested external cost of carbon and an expected payback period from an investor’s point of view respectively, the carbon reduction potential is about 0.5 MtCO2 and 0.75 MtCO2 respectively. These potentials are concentrated in around 3,500 of 11,400 municipalities, where district heating from biogas plants could reduce CO2 emissions per capita by an average of 250 kgCO_2/a and cover 12% of the total heating demand

    Altersarmut - heute und in der Zukunft

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    ALTERSARMUT - HEUTE UND IN DER ZUKUNFT Altersarmut - heute und in der Zukunft / Braun, Reiner (Rights reserved) ( -

    In-process evaluation of electrical properties of CIGS solar cells scribed with laser pulses of different pulse lengths

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    The optimization of laser scribing for the interconnection of CIGS solar cells is a current focus of laser process development. In addition to the geometry of the laser scribes the impact of the laser patterning to the electrical properties of the solar cells has to be optimized with regards to the scribing process and the laser sources. In-process measurements provide an approach for reliable evaluation of the electrical characteristics. In particular, the parallel resistance Rp that was calculated from the measured I-V curves was measured in dependence on the scribing parameters of a short-pulsed ns laser in comparison to a standard ps laser at a wavelength of 1.06 μm. With low pulse overlap of ∼ 20% a reduction of Rp to 2/3 of the initial value has been achieved for ns laser pulses. In comparison to ps laser slightly more defects were observed at the investigated parameter range

    The zero-dimensional O(N) vector model as a benchmark for perturbation theory, the large-N expansion and the functional renormalization group

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    We consider the zero-dimensional O(N) vector model as a simple example to calculate n-point correlation functions using perturbation theory, the large-N expansion, and the functional renormalization group (FRG). Comparing our findings with exact results, we show that perturbation theory breaks down for moderate interactions for all N, as one should expect. While the interaction-induced shift of the free energy and the self-energy are well described by the large-N expansion even for small N, this is not the case for higher-order correlation functions. However, using the FRG in its one-particle irreducible formalism, we see that very few running couplings suffice to get accurate results for arbitrary N in the strong coupling regime, outperforming the large-N expansion for small N. We further remark on how the derivative expansion, a well-known approximation strategy for the FRG, reduces to an exact method for the zero-dimensional O(N) vector model.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure

    Differential proteomics analysis of Frankliniella occidentalis immune response after infection with Tomato spotted wilt virus (Tospovirus)

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    Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) is mainly vectored by Frankliniella occidentalis Pergande, and it potentially activates the vector's immune response. However, molecular background of the altered immune response is not clearly understood. Therefore, using a proteomic approach, we investigated the immune pathways that are activated in F. occidentalis larvae after 24 h exposure to TSWV. Two-dimensional isoelectric focusing/sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-IEF/SDS/PAGE) combined with mass spectrometry (MS), were used to identify proteins that were differentially expressed upon viral infection. High numbers of proteins were abundantly expressed in F. occidentalis exposed to TSWV (73%) compared to the non-exposed (27%), with the majority functionally linked to the innate immune system such as: signaling, stress response, defense response, translation, cellular lipids and nucleotide metabolism. Key proteins included: 70 kDa heat shock proteins, Ubiquitin and Dermcidin, among others, indicative of a responsive pattern of the vector's innate immune system to viral infection. © 2016 Elsevier Lt

    Thermal Habitat for RNA Amplification and Accumulation

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    The RNA world scenario posits replication by RNA polymerases. On early Earth, a geophysical setting is required to separate hybridized strands after their replication and to localize them against diffusion. We present a pointed heat source that drives exponential, RNA-catalyzed amplification of short RNA with high efficiency in a confined chamber. While shorter strands were periodically melted by laminar convection, the temperature gradient caused aggregated polymerase molecules to accumulate, protecting them from degradation in hot regions of the chamber. These findings demonstrate a size-selective pathway for autonomous RNA-based replication in a natural non-equilibrium condition

    On the dc Magnetization, Spontaneous Vortex State and Specific Heat in the superconducting state of the weakly ferromagnetic superconductor RuSr2_{2}GdCu2_{2}O8_{8}

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    Magnetic-field changes << 0.2 Oe over the scan length in magnetometers that necessitate sample movement are enough to create artifacts in the dc magnetization measurements of the weakly ferromagnetic superconductor RuSr2_{2}GdCu2_{2}O8_{8} (Ru1212) below the superconducting transition temperature TcT_{c} \approx 30 K. The observed features depend on the specific magnetic-field profile in the sample chamber and this explains the variety of reported behaviors for this compound below TcT_{c}. An experimental procedure that combines improvement of the magnetic-field homogeneity with very small scan lengths and leads to artifact-free measurements similar to those on a stationary sample has been developed. This procedure was used to measure the mass magnetization of Ru1212 as a function of the applied magnetic field H (-20 Oe \le H \le 20 Oe) at T<TcT < T_{c} and discuss, in conjunction with resistance and ac susceptibility measurements, the possibility of a spontaneous vortex state (SVS) for this compound. Although the existence of a SVS can not be excluded, an alternative interpretation of the results based on the granular nature of the investigated sample is also possible. Specific-heat measurements of Sr2_{2}GdRuO6_{6} (Sr2116), the precursor for the preparation of Ru1212 and thus a possible impurity phase, show that it is unlikely that Sr2116 is responsible for the specific-heat features observed for Ru1212 at TcT_{c}.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure

    Long Tailed Maps as a Representation of Mixed Mode Oscillatory Systems

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    Mixed mode oscillatory (MMO) systems are known to exhibit some generic features such as the reversal of period doubling sequences and crossover to period adding sequences as bifurcation parameters are varied. In addition, they exhibit a nearly one dimensional unimodal Poincare map with a longtail. We recover these common features from a general class of two parameter family of one dimensional maps with a unique critical point that satisfy a few general constraints that determine the nature of the map. We derive scaling laws that determine the parameter widths of the dominant windows of periodic orbits sandwiched between two successive states of RL^k sequence. An example of a two parameter map with a unique critical point is introduced to verify the analytical results.Comment: 13 pages and 8 figure

    Fluctuations in the quark-meson model for QCD with isospin chemical potential

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    We study the two-flavor quark-meson (QM) model with the functional renormalization group (FRG) to describe the effects of collective mesonic fluctuations on the phase diagram of QCD at finite baryon and isospin chemical potentials, μB\mu_B and μI\mu_I. With only isospin chemical potential there is a precise equivalence between the competing dynamics of chiral versus pion condensation and that of collective mesonic and baryonic fluctuations in the quark-meson-diquark model for two-color QCD at finite baryon chemical potential. Here, finite μB=3μ\mu_B=3\mu introduces an additional dimension to the phase diagram as compared to two-color QCD, however. At zero temperature, the (μI,μ\mu_I,\mu)-plane of this phase diagram is strongly constrained by the "Silver Blaze problem." In particular, the onset of pion condensation must occur at μI=mπ/2\mu_I= m_{\pi}/2, independent of μ\mu as long as μ+μI\mu + \mu_I stays below the constituent quark mass of the QM model or the liquid-gas transition line of nuclear matter in QCD. In order to maintain this relation beyond mean field it is crucial to compute the pion mass from its timelike correlator with the FRG in a consistent way.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures; matches published versio
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