369 research outputs found
The effect of pre-oxidation parameters on the corrosion behavior of AISI 441 in dual atmosphere
Dual atmosphere conditions have been shown to be detrimental for the ferritic stainless steel interconnects used in solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) under certain conditions. In the present work, we analyze the influence of pre-oxidation on corrosion resistance in dual atmosphere with regard to two parameters: the pre-oxidation time and the pre-oxidation location (pre-oxidation layer on the air-facing side or the hydrogen-facing side). The steel AISI 441 is investigated and pre-oxidation is achieved in air at 800 \ub0C. To examine the influence of pre-oxidation time on corrosion behavior, five different pre-oxidation times are used: 0, 11, 45, 180, and 280 min. The samples are exposed discontinuously to dual atmosphere for 1000 h at 600 \ub0C. Photographs, taken throughout the exposure, show that the pre-oxidation time correlates with the onset of breakaway corrosion. To analyze the influence of pre-oxidation location on corrosion behavior, the samples are pre-oxidized for 180 min, and then a pre-oxidation layer is removed from one side of the sample. Subsequent dual atmosphere exposure at 600 \ub0C for 500 h shows that the pre-oxidation layer on the hydrogen-facing side is more important for corrosion resistance in dual atmosphere than the pre-oxidation layer on the air-facing side
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Thermo-Responsive Ultrafiltration Block Copolymer Membranes Based on Polystyrene-block-poly(diethyl acrylamide)
Within the present work, a thermo-responsive ultrafiltration membrane is manufactured based on a polystyrene-block-poly(diethyl acrylamide) block copolymer (BCP). The poly(diethyl acrylamide) block segment features a lower critical solution temperature (LCST) in water, similar to the well-known poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), but having increased biocompatibility and without exhibiting a hysteresis of the thermally induced switching behavior. The BCP is synthesized via sequential “living” anionic polymerization protocols and analyzed by 1H-NMR spectroscopy, size exclusion chromatography, and differential scanning calorimetry. The resulting morphology in the bulk state is investigated by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) revealing the intended hexagonal cylindrical morphology. The BCPs form micelles in a binary mixture of tetrahydrofuran and dimethylformamide, where BCP composition and solvent affinities are discussed in light of the expected structure of these micelles and the resulting BCP membrane formation. The membranes are manufactured using the non-solvent induced phase separation (NIPS) process and are characterized via scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and water permeation measurements. The latter are carried out at room temperature and at 50 °C revealing up to a 23-fold increase of the permeance, when crossing the LCST of the poly(diethyl acrylamide) block segment in water
Ecosystem functions of oil palm plantations - a review
Oil palm plantations have expanded rapidly in the last decades. This large-scale land-use change has had great impacts on both the areas converted to oil palm and their surroundings. Howev-er, research on the impacts of oil palm agriculture is scattered and patchy, and no clear overview ex-ists. Here, we address this gap through a systematic and comprehensive literature review of all ecosys-tem functions in oil palm plantations. We compare ecosystem functions in oil palm plantations to those in forests as forests are often cleared for the establishment of oil palm. We find that oil palm planta-tions generally have reduced ecosystem functioning compared to forests. Some of these functions are lost globally, such as those to gas and climate regulation and to habitat and nursery functions. The most serious impacts occur when land is cleared to establish new plantations, and immediately after-wards, especially on peat soils. To variable degrees, plantation management can prevent or reduce losses of some ecosystem functions. The only ecosystem function which increased in oil palm planta-tions is, unsurprisingly, the production of marketable goods. Our review highlights numerous research gaps. In particular, there are significant gaps with respect to information functions (socio-cultural functions). There is a need for empirical data on the importance of spatial and temporal scales, such as the differences between plantations in different environments, of different sizes, and of different ages. Finally, more research is needed on developing management practices that can off-set the losses of ecosystem functions
elPrep: high-performance preparation of sequence alignment/map files for variant calling
elPrep is a high-performance tool for preparing sequence alignment/map files for variant calling in sequencing pipelines. It can be used as a replacement for SAMtools and Picard for preparation steps such as filtering, sorting, marking duplicates, reordering contigs, and so on, while producing identical results. What sets elPrep apart is its software architecture that allows executing preparation pipelines by making only a single pass through the data, no matter how many preparation steps are used in the pipeline. elPrep is designed as a multithreaded application that runs entirely in memory, avoids repeated file I/O, and merges the computation of several preparation steps to significantly speed up the execution time. For example, for a preparation pipeline of five steps on a whole-exome BAM file (NA12878), we reduce the execution time from about 1: 40 hours, when using a combination of SAMtools and Picard, to about 15 minutes when using elPrep, while utilising the same server resources, here 48 threads and 23GB of RAM. For the same pipeline on whole-genome data (NA12878), elPrep reduces the runtime from 24 hours to less than 5 hours. As a typical clinical study may contain sequencing data for hundreds of patients, elPrep can remove several hundreds of hours of computing time, and thus substantially reduce analysis time and cost
Media ethnography
Contents
Editorial
Thematic Focus: Media Ethnography
Media Ethnography and Participation in Online Practices / David Waldecker, Kathrin Englert, Wolfgang Ludwig-Mayerhofer, Oliver Schmidtke
The Story is Everywhere. Dispersed Situations in a Literary Role Play Game / Wolfgang Reißmann
Co-operation and/as Participant Observation: Reflections on Ethnographic Fieldwork in Morocco / Simon Holdermann
Ethnomethodological Media Ethnography: Exploring Everyday Digital Practices in Families with Young Children / Clemens Eisenmann, Jan Peter, Erik Wittbusch
Cooperation and Difference. Camera Ethnography in the Research Project ‘Early Childhood and Smartphone’ / Bina E. Mohn, Pip Hare, Astrid Vogelpohl, Jutta Wiesemann
Reports
Coordinations, or Computing is Work / Sebastian Gießman
Sepsis related mortality of extremely low gestational age newborns after the introduction of colonization screening for multi-drug resistant organisms
Background: In 2013 German infection surveillance guidelines recommended weekly colonization screening for
multidrug-resistant (MDRO) or highly epidemic organisms for neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) and extended
hygiene measures based on screening results. It remains a matter of debate whether screening is worth the effort.
We therefore aimed to evaluate sepsis related outcomes before and after the guideline update.
Methods: The German Neonatal Network (GNN) is a prospective cohort study including data from extremely
preterm infants between 22 + 0 and 28 + 6 gestational weeks born in 62 German level III NICUs.
Results: Infants treated after guideline update (n = 8.903) had a lower mortality (12.5% vs. 13.8%, p = 0.036), reduced
rates for clinical sepsis (31.4 vs. 42.8%, p < 0.001) and culture-proven sepsis (14.4% vs. 16.5%, p = 0.003) as compared
to infants treated before update (n = 3.920). In a multivariate logistic regression analysis, nine pathogens of cultureproven sepsis were associated with sepsis-related death, e.g. Pseudomonas aeruginosa [OR 59 (19–180), p < 0.001)].
However, the guideline update had no significant effect on pathogen-specific case fatality, total sepsis-related
mortality and culture-proven sepsis rates with MDRO. While the exposure of GNN infants to cefotaxime declined
over time (31.1 vs. 40.1%, p < 0.001), the treatment rate with meropenem was increased (31.6 vs. 26.3%, p < 0.001).
Conclusions: The introduction of weekly screening and extended hygiene measures is associated with reduced
sepsis rates, but has no effects on sepsis-related mortality and sepsis with screening-relevant pathogens. The high
exposure rate to meropenem should be a target of antibiotic stewardship programs
Chlorhexidine gluconate usage is associated with antiseptic tolerance in staphylococci from the neonatal intensive care unit
Background: Intravascular catheters are essential for care in Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs) but predispose infants to catheter-associated infections including late-onset sepsis, commonly caused by CoNS. Antiseptics are applied to prevent infection with chlorhexidine (CHG) and octenidine (OCT) the most common agents used. Objectives: To investigate the association between antiseptic use and bacterial susceptibility. Methods: CoNS isolates were collected from two NICUs with differing antiseptic regimens: Norwich, UK (using CHG) and Lubeck, Germany (using OCT). CoNS were isolated from different body sites of babies upon admission, and weekly thereafter. Antiseptic susceptibility testing was performed, and a selection underwent genome sequencing. Results: A total of 1274 isolates were collected. UK isolates (n = 863) were significantly less susceptible than German isolates (n = 411) to both CHG (mean MIC: 20.1 mg/L versus 8.9 mg/L) and OCT (mean MIC: 2.3 mg/L versus 1.6 mg/L). UK isolates taken on admission were more susceptible to CHG than subsequent isolates. No cross-resistance between the agents was seen. Genome sequencing of 122 CoNS showed the most common species to be Staphylococcus epidermidis and Staphylococcus haemolyticus and phylogenetic analysis suggested antiseptic tolerance evolved multiple times in independent lineages. There was no evidence of dominant antiseptic tolerant clones and carriage of genes previously implicated in antimicrobial susceptibility (qac, smr, norA/B), did not correlate with CHG or OCT susceptibility. Conclusions: Long-term CHG use may select for CHG and OCT tolerance in CoNS. This highlights the different potential for separate antiseptic regimens to select for resistance development. This could be an important factor in developing future infection control policies
Lactobacillus Acidophilus/Bifidobacterium Infantis Probiotics Are Beneficial to Extremely Low Gestational Age Infants Fed Human Milk
To evaluate the nutrition-related effects of prophylactic Lactobacillus acidophilus/
Bifidobacterium infantis probiotics on the outcomes of preterm infants <29 weeks of gestation that
receive human milk and/or formula nutrition. We hypothesize that human-milk-fed infants benefit
from probiotics in terms of sepsis prevention and growth. Methods: We performed an observational
study of the German Neonatal Network (GNN) over a period of six years, between 1 January, 2013
and 31 December, 2018. Prophylactic probiotic use of L. acidophilus/B. infantis was evaluated in preterm
infants <29 weeks of gestation (n = 7516) in subgroups stratified to feeding type: (I) Exclusively
human milk (HM) of own mother and/or donors (HM group, n = 1568), (II) HM of own mother and/or
donor and formula (Mix group, n = 5221), and (III) exclusive exposure to formula (F group, n = 727).
The effect of probiotics on general outcomes and growth was tested in univariate models and adjusted
in linear/logistic regression models. Results: 5954 (76.5%) infants received L. acidophilus/B. infantisprophylactically for the prevention of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC). Probiotic use was associated
with improved growth measures in the HM group (e.g., weight gain velocity in g/day: effect size
B = 0.224; 95% CI: 2.82–4.35; p < 0.001) but not in the F group (effect size B = −0.06; 95% CI: −3.05–0.28;
p = 0.103). The HM group had the lowest incidence of clinical sepsis (34.0%) as compared to the
Mix group (35.5%) and the F group (40.0%). Only in the Mix group, probiotic supplementation
proved to be protective against clinical sepsis (OR 0.69; 95% CI: 0.59–0.79; p < 0.001). Conclusion:
Our observational data indicate that the exposure to L. acidophilus/B. infantis probiotics may promote
growth in exclusively HM-fed infants as compared to formula-fed infants. To exert a sepsis-preventive
effect, probiotics seem to require human milk
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