3,773 research outputs found
Hot pressing of nanocrystalline TiO2 (anatase) ceramics with controlled microstructure
The preparation conditions of nanocrystalline phase-pure TiO2 anatase ceramics by hot pressing are described. Density, surface area, pore size distribution and grain size are determined by various techniques, including gas adsorption, mercury porosimetry, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray diffraction (XRD). The evolution of the structural parameters is followed as function of temperature and pressure programme. It is shown that the porosity, grain and pore size of the ceramics can be controlled by a suitable choice of experimental conditions. Ceramics with densities higher than 90% of the theoretical limit with a mean grain size of 30 nm can be obtained at temperatures as low as 490 ◦C under 0.45 GPa for 2 h. The experimental results are discussed in view of the sintering theory
Models of protein production along the cell cycle: an investigation of possible sources of noise
In this article, we quantitatively study, through stochastic models, the
efects of several intracellular phenomena, such as cell volume growth, cell
division, gene replication as well as fuctuations of available RNA polymerases
and ribosomes. These phenomena are indeed rarely considered in classic models
of protein production and no relative quantitative comparison among them has
been performed. The parameters for a large and representative class of proteins
are determined using experimental measures. The main important and surprising
conclusion of our study is to show that despite the signifcant fuctuations of
free RNA polymerases and free ribosomes, they bring little variability to
protein production contrary to what has been previously proposed in the
literature. After verifying the robustness of this quite counter-intuitive
result, we discuss its possible origin from a theoretical view, and interpret
it as the result of a mean-feld efect
Electrical properties and defect chemistry of anatase (TiO2)
The electrical properties of pure Anatase are investigated by impedance spectroscopy as function of temperature and oxygen partial pressure. The experimental results are fully interpreted by point defect chemistry. A transition from predominant Schottky to Frenkel cation disorder is observed when the temperature increases and/or the oxygen partial pressure decreases. The reduction enthalpies are near those obtained for Rutile in previous studies
Thermal convection in Earth's inner core with phase change at its boundary
Inner core translation, with solidification on one hemisphere and melting on
the other, provides a promising basis for understanding the hemispherical
dichotomy of the inner core, as well as the anomalous stable layer observed at
the base of the outer core - the F-layer - which might be sustained by
continuous melting of inner core material. In this paper, we study in details
the dynamics of inner core thermal convection when dynamically induced melting
and freezing of the inner core boundary (ICB) are taken into account. If the
inner core is unstably stratified, linear stability analysis and numerical
simulations consistently show that the translation mode dominates only if the
viscosity is large enough, with a critical viscosity value, of order Pas, depending on the ability of outer core convection to supply or
remove the latent heat of melting or solidification. If is smaller, the
dynamical effect of melting and freezing is small. Convection takes a more
classical form, with a one-cell axisymmetric mode at the onset and chaotic
plume convection at large Rayleigh number. [...] Thermal convection requires
that a superadiabatic temperature profile is maintained in the inner core,
which depends on a competition between extraction of the inner core internal
heat by conduction and cooling at the ICB. Inner core thermal convection
appears very likely with the low thermal conductivity value proposed by Stacey
& Davis (2007), but nearly impossible with the much higher thermal conductivity
recently put forward. We argue however that the formation of an iron-rich layer
above the ICB may have a positive feedback on inner core convection: it implies
that the inner core crystallized from an increasingly iron-rich liquid,
resulting in an unstable compositional stratification which could drive inner
core convection, perhaps even if the inner core is subadiabatic.Comment: 25 pages, 12 figure
A Stochastic Analysis of Autoregulation of Gene Expression
This paper analyzes, in the context of a prokaryotic cell, the stochastic
variability of the number of proteins when there is a control of gene
expression by an autoregulation scheme. The goal of this work is to estimate
the efficiency of the regulation to limit the fluctuations of the number of
copies of a given protein. The autoregulation considered in this paper relies
mainly on a negative feedback: the proteins are repressors of their own gene
expression. The efficiency of a production process without feedback control is
compared to a production process with an autoregulation of the gene expression
assuming that both of them produce the same average number of proteins. The
main characteristic used for the comparison is the standard deviation of the
number of proteins at equilibrium. With a Markovian representation and a simple
model of repression, we prove that, under a scaling regime, the repression
mechanism follows a Hill repression scheme with an hyperbolic control. An
explicit asymptotic expression of the variance of the number of proteins under
this regulation mechanism is obtained. Simulations are used to study other
aspects of autoregulation such as the rate of convergence to equilibrium of the
production process and the case where the control of the production process of
proteins is achieved via the inhibition of mRNAs
Approximation Algorithms for Energy Minimization in Cloud Service Allocation under Reliability Constraints
We consider allocation problems that arise in the context of service
allocation in Clouds. More specifically, we assume on the one part that each
computing resource is associated to a capacity constraint, that can be chosen
using Dynamic Voltage and Frequency Scaling (DVFS) method, and to a probability
of failure. On the other hand, we assume that the service runs as a set of
independent instances of identical Virtual Machines. Moreover, there exists a
Service Level Agreement (SLA) between the Cloud provider and the client that
can be expressed as follows: the client comes with a minimal number of service
instances which must be alive at the end of the day, and the Cloud provider
offers a list of pairs (price,compensation), this compensation being paid by
the Cloud provider if it fails to keep alive the required number of services.
On the Cloud provider side, each pair corresponds actually to a guaranteed
success probability of fulfilling the constraint on the minimal number of
instances. In this context, given a minimal number of instances and a
probability of success, the question for the Cloud provider is to find the
number of necessary resources, their clock frequency and an allocation of the
instances (possibly using replication) onto machines. This solution should
satisfy all types of constraints during a given time period while minimizing
the energy consumption of used resources. We consider two energy consumption
models based on DVFS techniques, where the clock frequency of physical
resources can be changed. For each allocation problem and each energy model, we
prove deterministic approximation ratios on the consumed energy for algorithms
that provide guaranteed probability failures, as well as an efficient
heuristic, whose energy ratio is not guaranteed
Heteroatom-Substituted Radicals: 1,2-Asymmetric Induction
Radical reactions became during the last decade a very useful tool in organic synthesis. Spectacular progress has been made in the control of the stereoselectivity of these reactions. This contribution presents our recent results with 1- and 2-heteroatom substituted radicals in cyclic and acyclic systems. Several examples dealing with the use of Lewis acids to achieve high stereochemical control are presented
Simulations of propelling and energy harvesting articulated bodies via vortex particle-mesh methods
The emergence and understanding of new design paradigms that exploit flow
induced mechanical instabilities for propulsion or energy harvesting demands
robust and accurate flow structure interaction numerical models. In this
context, we develop a novel two dimensional algorithm that combines a Vortex
Particle-Mesh (VPM) method and a Multi-Body System (MBS) solver for the
simulation of passive and actuated structures in fluids. The hydrodynamic
forces and torques are recovered through an innovative approach which crucially
complements and extends the projection and penalization approach of Coquerelle
et al. and Gazzola et al. The resulting method avoids time consuming
computation of the stresses at the wall to recover the force distribution on
the surface of complex deforming shapes. This feature distinguishes the
proposed approach from other VPM formulations. The methodology was verified
against a number of benchmark results ranging from the sedimentation of a 2D
cylinder to a passive three segmented structure in the wake of a cylinder. We
then showcase the capabilities of this method through the study of an energy
harvesting structure where the stocking process is modeled by the use of
damping elements
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