4 research outputs found

    A participatory process to support sustainable water resources management in the Ebbsfleet Garden City

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from IAHR via the link in this recordThe present work describes the development of a participatory System Dynamics Model (SDM) aiming to explore sustainable urban water management (UWM) in a structured way and to understand where policy interventions might be best focused. The proposed multi-step process is useful for supporting decision-making at a strategic, system-wide level and for exploring the long-term consequences of alternative strategies. The strongly participatory base of the SDM allows both to include local knowledge held by relevant stakeholders, and to support a collective learning process, which should improve the effectiveness of the selected strategies. In the following sections on the SDM co-development to enhance sustainable urban water management in the Ebbsfleet Garden City are provided.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC

    Orbiting self-organization of filament-tethered surface-active droplets

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    Dissipative chemical systems operate outside of equilibrium, and hold potential to enable life-like behavior in synthetic matter, such as self-organization, motility, and dynamic switching between different states. Here, out-of-equilibrium self-organization is demonstrated at an air-water interface, enabled by amphiphile filaments that self-assemble from source droplets and tether to pivalic anhydride-based drain droplets, which are surrounded by a pivalic acid gradient due to their hydrolysis. The coupling of chemical gradients, self-assembly and Marangoni flow due to release and depletion of amphiphiles at the air-water interface generates a unique orbiting of drain droplets around the source droplet. This orbiting is proposed to be driven by the selective adhesion of filaments to the front of the moving drain, while filaments approaching the drain from behind are destabilized upon contact with the asymmetrical gradient of pivalic acid. The motion sustains itself to complete multiple rotations, ending when the depletion of amphiphiles at the drain, which drives the Marangoni flow towards the drain, becomes too weak to attract new filaments. Potential applications are foreseen in rearranging networks for dynamic transfer of chemical signals amongst interconnected droplets, and the implementation of dissipative chemical reactions in self-organizing systems as a strategy towards life-like behavior is highlighted
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