14,194 research outputs found
Effect of phytoremediated port sediment as an agricultural medium for pomegranate cultivation: Mobility of contaminants in the plant
Although the dredging of ports is a necessary management activity, it generates immense quantities of sediments, that are defined by the European Union as residues. On the other hand, the relevant peat demand for plant cultivation compromises its availability worldwide. In this context, the present work wanted to find an alternative substrate in order to replace and/or reduce the use of peat in agriculture, through the study of the suitability, concerning the exchange of substrateâplantâwater pollutants, of the dredged remediated sediments as a fruit-growing media. Forty-five pomegranate trees (Punica granatum L. cv âPurple Queenâ) were cultivated in three types of substrates (100% peat as a control, 100% dredged remediated sediments and 50% both mixed). The metal ion content and pesticide residues were analysed in the different plant parts (root, stem, leaves and fruits) and in drainage water. The results showed a limited transfer of pollutants. All the pollutants were below the legal limits, confirming that the dredged sediments could be used as a growing media, alone or mixed with other substrates. Thus, the results point out the need to open a European debate on the reuse and reconsideration of this residue from a circular economy point of view
Diel cycling of the cosmopolitan abundant Pelagibacter virus 37âF6: one of the most abundant viruses on earth
The spatiotemporal dynamics for marine viral populations has only recently been explored. However, nothing is known about temporal activities of the uncultured Pelagibacter virus vSAG 37âF6, which was discovered by singleâvirus genomics as potentially the most abundant marine virus. Here, we investigate the diel cycling of 37âF6 virus and the putative SAR11 host using coastal and oceanic transcriptomic and viromic timeâseries data from Osaka Bay and North Pacific Subtropical Gyre. Virus 37âF6 and relatives displayed diel cycling of transcriptional activities synchronized with its putative host. In both virus and host, the lowest transcription rates were observed at 14:00â15:00, coinciding roughly with maximum solar irradiance, while higher transcriptional rates were detected during the night/early morning and afternoon. Diel abundance of free viruses of 37âF6 in seawater roughly mirrored the transcriptional activities of both virus and host. In Osaka Bay, among viral relatives (genus level), virus 37âF6 specifically showed the highest ratio of transcriptional activity to virome abundance, a proxy for viral transcriptional activity relative to free viral particle abundance. This high ratio suggests high infection rate efficiencies in vSAG 37âF6 virus compared to viral relatives. Thus, timeâseries data revealed temporal transcript activities in one of the most abundant viruses in Earth.This work has been supported by Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness to MMG (Ref. RTI2018-094248-B-100), Generalitat Valenciana to FMH (ACIF/2015/332), and Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation to MMG (grant 5334). Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation to EFD (3777) and Simons Foundation Grant #329108 (to EFD)
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Microstructure Architecture Development in Metals and Alloys By Additive Manufacturing Using Electron Beam Melting
The concept of materials with controlled microstructural architecture (MCMA) to
develop and fabricate structural materials with novel and possibly superior properties and
performance characteristics is a new paradigm or paradigm extension for materials science and
engineering. In the conventional materials science and engineering paradigm, structure
(microstructure), properties, processing, and performance features are linked in the development
of desirable materials properties and performance through processing methodologies which
manipulate microstructures. For many metal or alloy systems, thermomechanical treatment
combining controlled amounts of plastic deformation with heat treatment or aging cycles can
achieve improved mechanical properties beyond those attainable by conventional processing
alone (such as rolling or forging for example) through controlled microstructure development. In
this paper we illustrate a new concept involving the fabrication of microstructural architectures
by the process development and selective manipulation of these microstructures ideally defining
material design space. This allows for the additional or independent manipulation of material
properties by additive manufacturing (AM) using electron beam melting (EBM). Specifically we
demonstrate the novel development of a carbide (M23C6) architecture in the AM of a Co-base
alloy and an oxide (Cu2O) precipitate-dislocation architecture in the AM of an oxygen-containing Cu. While more conventional processing can produce various precipitate
microstructures in these materials, EBM produces spatial arrays of precipitate columns or
columnar-like features often oriented in the build direction. These microstructural architectures
are observed by optical microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy.
Prospects for EBM architecture development in precipitation-hardenable Al alloys is also
discussed. In the EBM build process using precursor powders, the electron beam parameters
(including beam focus, scan speed and sequencing) produce localized, requisite thermodynamic
regimes which create or organize the precipitate-related spatial arrays. This feature demonstrates
the utility of AM not only in the fabrication of complex components, but also prospects for
selective property design using CAD for MCMA development: a new or extended processing-microstructure-property-performance paradigm for materials science and engineering in
advanced manufacturing involving solid free-form fabrication (SFF).Mechanical Engineerin
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Effect of Build Parameters and Build Geometries on Residual Microstructures and Mechanical Properties of Ti-6Al-4V Components Built by Electron Beam Melting (EBM)
In this study, involving additive manufacturing (AM) using electron beam melting (EBM), we
have examined build defects which result from beam tripping, porosities (including unmelted or
unsintered zones) due to excursions from optimal build parameters (especially variations in melt
scan beam current and scan speed), and gas bubbles trapped in atomized Ti-6Al-4V starting
powder as well as recycled powder, and retained in the build. At optimized build conditions we
have also examined microstructure-mechanical property (hardness, tensile strength, and
elongation) variations for multiple rake building and multiple melt scans using optical
metallography and scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM). These
build variances cause cooling rate variances which promote α-phase growth and variations in
dislocation density, as well as α-to-α' (martensite) phase changes, all of which produce some
degree of mechanical property variations. These features (especially α-to-α' phase changes) are
notable on comparing solid builds in comparison with a variety of mesh arrays where strut
dimension and build-element complexities alter the cooling rates in a significant way. We
illustrate these microstructure variations with corresponding variations in microindentation
hardness measurements made directly on fine mesh (strut) structures. Finally, we have examined
Ti-6Al-4V powder chemistries and solid build chemistries which for single-pass melt scans at
optimized build conditions are shown to be relatively constant up to 40 cycles of powder reuse
with the exception of Al content which was reduced by 10 to 15% in solid builds at optimized
conditions. However, Al loss in solid builds approached 25% for multiple (2 and 3) melt scans,
while no changes in Ar gas-bubble density were observed with changes in α-phase (grain) width
which increased from 3 ”m for a single melt scan to 4.5 and 6 ”m for 2 and 3 melt scans,
respectively. Corresponding Rockwell C-scale (HRC) hardness varied from 37, 36, and 35,
respectively; with ultimate tensile strengths exceeding 1.2 GPa at elongations of 12% or higher
for this melt scan sequence.Mechanical Engineerin
Application of lca methodology to the production of strawberry on substrates with peat and sediments from ports
The Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) methodology was applied to identify the potential environmental impact of dredged sediments used as growing media for food crops. The dredged sediments used came from Livorno port and were previously phytoremediated. For the assay, strawberry plants (Fragaria x ananassa Duch vr. âSan Andreasâ) were used. The plants were cultivated on three different substrates (100% peat, 100% dredged sediment and 50% mix peat/sediment) to identify the real impact of the culture media on the growing process. LCA was calculated and analyzed according to ISO 14040:2006 by SimaPro software. ReCipe Midpoint (E) V1.13/Europe Recipe E method was applied. One kilogram of produced strawberry, for each crop media tested, was defined as the functional unit. Eighteen impact categories were selected where Marine Eutrophication (ME), Human Toxicity (HT) and Freshwater Ecotoxicity (FET) were identified as relevant impact categories. The LCA results showed an increase in the environmental impact of strawberry cultivation using 100% sediment against 100% peat, due to the decrease in fruit production caused by the sediment. Nevertheless, the decrease in the environmental impact and the fruit production increase identified when the sediment is used mixed (<50%) with other substrates. The appropriate use of these substrates would be justified within the context of the circular economy
Energy conversion theorems for some linear steady-states
One of the main issues that real energy converters present, when they produce
effective work, is the inevitable entropy production. Within the context of
Non-equilibrium Thermodynamics, entropy production tends to energetically
degrade man-made or living systems. On the other hand, it is also not useful to
think about designing an energy converter that works in the so-called minimum
entropy production regime since the effective power output and efficiency are
zero. In this manuscript, we establish some \textit{Energy Conversion Theorems}
similar to Prigogine's one with constrained forces, their purpose is to reveal
trade-offs between design and the so-called operation modes for
--linear isothermal energy converters. The objective
functions that give rise to those thermodynamic constraints show stability. A
two--meshes electric circuit was built as an example to demonstrate the
Theorems' validity. Likewise, we reveal a type of energetic hierarchy for power
output, efficiency and dissipation function when the circuit is tuned to any of
the operating regimes studied here: maximum power output (), maximum
efficient power (), maximum omega function (), maximum
ecological function (), maximum efficiency () and minimum
dissipation function ().Comment: 33 pages, 15 figures, 2 table
Edge and plane classification with a biomimetic iCub fingertip sensor
The exploration and interaction of humanoid robots with the environment through tactile sensing is an important task for achieving truly autonomous agents. Recently much research has been focused on the development of new technologies for tactile sensors and new methods for tactile exploration. Edge detection is one of the tasks required in robots and humanoids to explore and recognise objects. In this work we propose a method for edge and plane classification with a biomimetic iCub fingertip using a probabilistic approach. The iCub fingertip mounted on an xy-table robot is able to tap and collect the data from the surface and edge of a plastic wall. Using a maximum likelihood classifier the xy-table knows when the iCub fingertip has reached the edge of the object. The study presented here is also biologically inspired by the tactile exploration performed in animals
Synthesis of a Se0/Calcite Composite Using Hydrothermal Carbonation of Ca(OH)2 Coupled to a Complex Selenocystine Fragmentation
International audienceElemental selenium (Se0)/calcite composites were synthesized in a batch system by hydrothermal carbonation of calcium hydroxide under high CO2âAr pressure (90 bar) and high temperature (90 °C) coupled to a complex selenocystine fragmentation. Under O2-poor conditions, the composite consisted predominantly of spherical, amorphous nanoparticles of elemental red selenium (<500 nm) deposited on the calcite matrix. Conversely, under O2-rich conditions, the composite consisted rod-shaped, well-crystallized microparticles of elemental gray selenium (<25 ”m) dispersed in the calcite matrix. The carbonate matrix was constituted by nano- to microrhombohedral crystals (<2 ”m) and micrometric agglomerates and/or aggregates (<5 ”m). Our results present a new synthesis path to Se0/calcite composites, with spherical or rod-shaped Se0 morphology with high potential for medical (e.g., dietary supplement) or industrial (e.g., pigments) applications. Furthermore, this study may have implications in the field of biomineralization
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