Strong Dependence (strong + dependence)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Chemistry


Selected Abstracts


Assessing a numerical cellular braided-stream model with a physical model

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 5 2005
Andrea B. Doeschl-Wilson
Abstract A. B. Murray and C. Paola (1994, Nature, vol. 371, pp. 54,57; 1997, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, vol. 22, pp. 1001,1025) proposed a cellular model for braided river dynamics as an exploratory device for investigating the conditions necessary for the occurrence of braiding. The model reproduces a number of the general morphological and dynamic features of braided rivers in a simplified form. Here we test the representation of braided channel morphodynamics in the Murray,Paola model against the known characteristics (mainly from a sequence of high resolution digital elevation models) of a physical model of a braided stream. The overall aim is to further the goals of the exploratory modelling approach by first investigating the capabilities and limitations of the existing model and then by proposing modifications and alternative approaches to modelling of the essential features of braiding. The model confirms the general inferences of Murray and Paola (1997) about model performance. However, the modelled evolution shows little resemblance to the real evolution of the small-scale laboratory river, although this depends to some extent on the coarseness of the grid used in the model relative to the scale of the topography. The model does not reproduce the bar-scale topography and dynamics even when the grid scale and amplitude of topography are adapted to be equivalent to the original Murray,Paola results. Strong dependence of the modelled processes on local bed slopes and the tendency for the model to adopt its own intrinsic scale, rather than adapt to the scale of the pre-existing topography, appear to be the main causes of the differences between numerical model results and the physical model morphology and dynamics. The model performance can be improved by modification of the model equations to more closely represent the water surface but as an exploratory approach hierarchical modelling promises greater success in overcoming the identified shortcomings. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Reproducibility and dependence on diffusion weighting of line scan diffusion in the lumbar intervertebral discs

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, Issue 4 2005
David C. Newitt PhD
Abstract Purpose To investigate the dependence of line scan diffusion imaging (LSDI) in the lumbar vertebral discs on diffusion weighting, fat suppression (FS), and postprocessing noise correction. Materials and Methods Eleven normal volunteers were scanned using 4 b-value and 12 b-value LSDI protocols, with and without FS. Three repeated four b-value scans were performed for evaluation of the reproducibility of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values calculated with mono- and biexponential decay models. Two-point ADC analysis for 12 b-value scans was performed with and without noise correction to evaluate the ADC dependence on diffusion weighting. Correlations between different ADC calculation and acquisition methods were evaluated. Results Monoexponential ADC measures had a coefficient of variation (CV) under 3%, while use of a constrained biexponential increased the CV to 6% to 9%. Strong dependence on b-value was seen from chemically shifted marrow fat signal and noise. These systematic variations in ADC were eliminated using noise correction and FS. ADC values from 4 and 12 b-value FS scans correlated strongly (R2 = 0.91), while biexponentially derived ADC values correlated moderately well with the FS ADC (R2 = 0.51). Conclusion LSDI gives reproducible ADC measurements in the lumbar discs, largely independent of b-value and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) when used with noise correction and FS. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2005;21:482,488. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Dynamics of Foaming of Polystyrene Particles

MACROMOLECULAR SYMPOSIA, Issue 1 2006
Gabriela Salejova
Abstract September 24, 2006 Summary: In this work, we address the industrially relevant problem of the foaming of expandable polystyrene (PS) impregnated by pentane as a traditional down-stream processing in the suspension polymerization of styrene. Once the polystyrene foam is formed by means of a proper foaming agent, e.g., pentane or fluoro- or chloro-hydrocarbons, the blowing agent diffuses out from the cellular structure. Environmental efforts call for the reduced consumption of blowing agents. The dynamics of foaming of polystyrene particles was recorded video-microscopically in our laboratory as the sequence of images of expanding particle located in the small pressure cell placed under the microscope with sufficient depth of focus. The amount of pentane sorbed in PS was controlled by the length of the impregnation period and was determined independently by gravimetric measurements. Strong dependence of the structure of the produced foam and of the foaming dynamics on the amount of sorbed pentane, temperature and particle size is reported and explanations for some observed foaming phenomena are provided. [source]


FMR study of strain-induced magnetic anisotropies in CrO2 thin films

PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (A) APPLICATIONS AND MATERIALS SCIENCE, Issue 15 2004
B. Z. Rameev
Abstract Epitaxial CrO2 thin films were grown on TiO2 (100) single-crystalline substrates by chemical vapour deposition (CVD) process with use of CrO3 solid precursor. The films with different thickness (27,530 nm) were studied by Ferromagnetic Resonance (FMR) technique. Strong dependence of FMR signal on the film thickness was observed in the series of CrO2 films deposited onto the pre-etched TiO2 substrates. It is shown that the magnetic behaviour of the CrO2 films arises from competition between magnetocrystalline and strain anisotropies that favour the [001] and [010] magnetization directions, respectively. For the thinnest film the strain anisotropy dominates, and the magnetic easy axis switches from [001] to the [010] direction. On the contrary, the CrO2 film grown on the unetched substrate demonstrates essentially strain-free magnetic anisotropy behaviour. (© 2004 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


Brazil's Bolsa Família: A Double-Edged Sword?

DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 5 2008
Anthony Hall
ABSTRACT In common with most Latin American countries, as governments embrace safety nets to attack poverty, conditional cash transfer (CCT) programmes have become part of mainstream social policy in Brazil. Under president Fernando Henrique Cardoso (1995,2002), and especially since Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva took office in 2003, targeted assistance in education, health and nutrition, now united under Bolsa Família, have expanded rapidly to benefit forty-four million (24 per cent of the total population), absorbing almost two-fifths of the social assistance budget earmarked for the poorest sectors. Despite its operational problems, Bolsa Família appears to have been effective in providing short-term relief to some of the most deprived groups in Brazil. Yet it could prove to be a double-edged sword. There is a risk that, due to its popularity among both the poor and Brazil's politicians, Bolsa Família could greatly increase patronage in the distribution of economic and social benefits and induce a strong dependence on government handouts. There are also early signs that it may be contributing to a reduction in social spending in key sectors such as education, housing and basic sanitation, possibly undermining the country's future social and economic development. [source]


The mid-latitude biodiversity ridge in terrestrial cave fauna

ECOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2006
David C. Culver
The world's obligate cave-dwelling fauna holds considerable promise for biogeographic analysis because it represents a large number of independent evolutionary experiments in isolation in caves and adaptation to subterranean life. We focus on seven north temperate regions of at least 2000 km2, utilizing more than 4300 records of obligate cave-dwelling terrestrial invertebrates. In North America, highest diversity was found in northeast Alabama while in Europe highest diversity was found in Ariège, France, and in southeast Slovenia. Based on these regions as well as more qualitative data from 16 other regions, we hypothesize that a ridge (ca 42°,46° in Europe and 34° in North America) of high biodiversity occurs in temperate areas of high productivity and cave density. This may reflect a strong dependence of cave communities on long term surface productivity (as reflected in actual evapotranspiration), because the subterranean fauna relies almost entirely on resources produced outside caves. This dependence may explain the unique biodiversity pattern of terrestrial cave invertebrates. [source]


Extinction risk under coloured environmental noise

ECOGRAPHY, Issue 2 2000
Mikko Heino
Positively autocorrelated red environmental noise is characterized by a strong dependence of expected sample variance on sample length. This dependence has to be taken into account when assessing extinction risk under red and white uncorrelated environmental noise. To facilitate a comparison between red and white noise, their expected variances can be scaled to be equal, but only at a chosen time scale. We show with a simple one-dimensional population dynamics model that the different but equally reasonable choices of the time scale yield qualitatively different results on the dependence of extinction risk on the colour of environmental noise: extinction risk might increase as well as decrease when the temporal correlation of noise increases. [source]


Responses of global plant diversity capacity to changes in carbon dioxide concentration and climate

ECOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 11 2008
F. I. Woodward
Abstract We model plant species diversity globally by country to show that future plant diversity capacity has a strong dependence on changing climate and carbon dioxide concentration. CO2 increase, through its impact on net primary production and warming is predicted to increase regional diversity capacity, while warming with constant CO2 leads to decreases in diversity capacity. Increased CO2 concentrations are unlikely to counter projected extinctions of endemic species, shown in earlier studies to be more strongly dependent on changing land use patterns than climate per se. Model predictions were tested against (1) contemporary observations of tree species diversity in different biomes, (2) an independent global map of contemporary species diversity and (3) time sequences of plant naturalisation for different locations. Good agreements between model, observations and naturalisation patterns support the suggestion that future diversity capacity increases are likely to be filled from a ,cosmopolitan weed pool' for which migration appears to be an insignificant barrier. [source]


Procedure for separating the selection effect from other effects in diversity,productivity relationship

ECOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 6 2001
paèková
In a greenhouse pot experiment we cultivated six meadow species in a replacement series design. The plants were grown at two sowing densities in monocultures and all possible species combinations. Our aim was to separate the selection effect from other diversity effects. This distinction is based on the notion that true overyielding is not a consequence of the selection effect. We suggest a hierarchical procedure, which is based on a repeated division of samples into the pots with the most productive species present and missing. Overyielding can be then demonstrated by a positive dependence of productivity on species richness in the subsets with the most productive species present. Although we found a strong dependence of biomass on species richness in the entire data set, the hierarchical method revealed no evidence of overyielding. Above-ground biomass in a monoculture was a good predictor of species success in a species mix. [source]


Stable Nickel Catalysts for Fast Norbornene Polymerization: Tuning Reactivity

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 19 2005
Juan A. Casares
Abstract The air-stable complexes trans -[Ni(C6Cl2F3)2L2] (L = SbPh3, 1; AsPh3, 2; AsCyPh2, 3; AsMePh2, 4; PPh3, 5) have been synthesized by arylation of [NiBr2(dme)] (dme = 1,2-dimethoxyethane) in the presence of the corresponding ligand L (for compounds 1,4) or by ligand substitution starting from 1 (for compound 5). The structures of 1, 2, and 5 have been determined by X-ray diffraction and show an almost perfect square-planar geometry in all cases. Their catalytic activity in insertion polymerization of norbornene have been tested showing a strong dependence of the yield and molecular mass of the polymer on the ligand used and the solvent. High yield and high molecular mass values are obtained using complexes with ligands easy to displace from NiII (SbPh3 is the best) and noncoordinating solvents. Complexes 1,3 are suggested as convenient bench-catalysts to have available in the lab. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2005) [source]


The Effect of Ring Size on Catenane Synthesis

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 17 2003
Stefan Duda
Abstract The synthesis of a [2]catenane with 87-membered rings was improved and extended to [2]catenanes with 63- and 147-membered rings. One of the key features is the carbonate linkage between phenols with tolane substituents in the 2- and 6-positions, which serves as a covalent template for the geometrical arrangement of a macrocycle and a ring precursor. Subsequent cyclization of the threaded ring precursor gives the precatenane as the main product, and this is converted into the catenane by carbonate hydrolysis. As well as the precatenane, its dumbbell shaped isomer is formed in the cyclization step. From the known conformation of the templating carbonate moiety and the strong dependence of the ratio of precatenane and dumbbell on the ring size, the dumbbell's origin is attributed to the conformational flexibility of the large rings and not to geometrical ambiguity of the carbonate moiety. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2003) [source]


Temperature-Resolved Local and Macroscopic Charge Carrier Transport in Thin P3HT Layers,

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 14 2010
Patrick Pingel
Abstract Previous investigations of the field-effect mobility in poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) layers revealed a strong dependence on molecular weight (MW), which was shown to be closely related to layer morphology. Here, charge carrier mobilities of two P3HT MW fractions (medium-MW: Mn,=,7,200 g mol,1; high-MW: Mn,=,27,000 g mol,1) are probed as a function of temperature at a local and a macroscopic length scale, using pulse-radiolysis time-resolved microwave conductivity (PR-TRMC) and organic field-effect transistor measurements, respectively. In contrast to the macroscopic transport properties, the local intra-grain mobility depends only weakly on MW (being in the order of 10,2 cm2 V,1 s,1) and being thermally activated below the melting temperature for both fractions. The striking differences of charge transport at both length scales are related to the heterogeneity of the layer morphology. The quantitative analysis of temperature-dependent UV/Vis absorption spectra according to a model of F. C. Spano reveals that a substantial amount of disordered material is present in these P3HT layers. Moreover, the analysis predicts that aggregates in medium-MW P3HT undergo a "pre-melting" significantly below the actual melting temperature. The results suggest that macroscopic charge transport in samples of short-chain P3HT is strongly inhibited by the presence of disordered domains, while in high-MW P3HT the low-mobility disordered zones are bridged via inter-crystalline molecular connections. [source]


Constant vapour pressure evaporation from a fragrance emulsion,effect of solubility of surfactant in the fragrance compound

FLAVOUR AND FRAGRANCE JOURNAL, Issue 1 2009
Lingling Ge
Abstract The algebraic system to extract information from phase diagrams was used to establish some of the conditions for an emulsion to evaporate under constant vapour pressure. The model system for the calculations was an emulsion characterized by virtually no solubility in water by either the surfactant or the fragrance and the same condition for the water in the oil. The surfactant and the fragrance, on the other hand, were assumed to be mutually completely soluble and this solution was presupposed to be close to ideal. The results showed a surprisingly strong dependence of the times for evaporation under constant vapour pressure on the surfactant concentration in the oil phase, at which the two-phase equilibrium between the aqueous and the oil phases is replaced by a three-phase equilibrium: aqueous phase, oil phase and liquid crystal phase. The lower this concentration, the more extended the times for evaporation under constant vapour pressure. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


New Stack Design of Micro-tubular SOFCs for Portable Power Sources

FUEL CELLS, Issue 6 2008
T. Suzuki
Abstract Micro-tubular solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs) have high thermal stability and higher volumetric power density, which are considered to be ideal features for portable power sources and auxiliary power units for automobile. Here, we report a new stack design using anode supported micro-tubular SOFCs with 2,mm diameter using Gd doped CeO2 (GDC) electrolyte, NiO-GDC anode and (La, Sr)(Co, Fe)O3 (LSCF)-GDC cathode. The new stack consists of three bundles with five tubular cells, sealing layers and interconnects and fuel manifolds. The performance of the stack whose volume is 1,cm3 was shown to be 2.8,V OCV and maximum power output of 1.5,W at 500,°C, applying air only by natural convection. The results also showed strong dependence of the fuel flow rates on the stack performance, which was correlated to the gas diffusion limitation. [source]


Local Indicators of Network-Constrained Clusters in Spatial Point Patterns

GEOGRAPHICAL ANALYSIS, Issue 3 2007
Ikuho Yamada
The detection of clustering in a spatial phenomenon of interest is an important issue in spatial pattern analysis. While traditional methods mostly rely on the planar space assumption, many spatial phenomena defy the logic of this assumption. For instance, certain spatial phenomena related to human activities are inherently constrained by a transportation network because of our strong dependence on the transportation system. This article thus introduces an exploratory spatial data analysis method named local indicators of network-constrained clusters (LINCS), for detecting local-scale clustering in a spatial phenomenon that is constrained by a network space. The LINCS method presented here applies to a set of point events distributed over the network space. It is based on the network K -function, which is designed to determine whether an event distribution has a significant clustering tendency with respect to the network space. First, an incremental K -function is developed so as to identify cluster size more explicitly than the original K -function does. Second, to enable identification of cluster locations, a local K -function is derived by decomposing and modifying the original network K -function. The local K -function LINCS, which is referred to as KLINCS, is tested on the distribution of 1997 highway vehicle crashes in the Buffalo, NY area. Also discussed is an adjustment of the KLINCS method for the nonuniformity of the population at risk over the network. As traffic volume can be seen as a surrogate of the population exposed to a risk of vehicle crashes, the spatial distribution of vehicle crashes is examined in relation to that of traffic volumes on the network. The results of the KLINCS analysis are validated through a comparison with priority investigation locations (PILs) designated by the New York State Department of Transportation. [source]


Use of tree rings to study the effect of climate change on trembling aspen in Québec

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 7 2010
MARIE-PIERRE LAPOINTE-GARANT
Abstract In this paper, we present a new approach, based on a mixed model procedure, to quantify the tree-ring-based growth-climate relationship of trembling aspen along a latitudinal gradient from 46 to 54 °N in eastern Canada. This approach allows breaking down the growth response into general intersite and local climatic responses, and analyzing variations of absolute ring width as well as interannual variations in tree growth. The final model also integrates nonclimatic variables such as soil characteristics and the occurrence of insect outbreaks into the growth predictions. Tree level random effects on growth were important as intercepts but were nonsignificant for the climatic variables, indicating that a single climate,growth relationship was justified in our case. The response of tree growth to climate showed, however, a strong dependence on the spatial scale at which the analysis was performed. Intersite variations in tree growth were mostly dependent on variations in the thermal heat sum, a variable that showed low interannual and high intersite variation. When variation for a single site was analyzed, other variables showed up to be important while the heat sum was unimportant. Finally, future growth under six different climate change scenarios was simulated in order to study the potential impact of climate change. Results suggest only moderate growth increases in the northern portion of the gradient and a growth decrease in the southern portion under future climatic conditions. [source]


Synthesis of New C(2) -Substituted gluco -Configured Tetrahydroimidazopyridines and Their Evaluation as Glucosidase Inhibitors

HELVETICA CHIMICA ACTA, Issue 10 2005
Bhagavathy Shanmugasundaram
The gluco -configured C(2) -substituted tetrahydroimidazopyridines 8,14 were prepared and tested as inhibitors of the , -glucosidases from Caldocellum saccharolyticum and from sweet almonds, and of the , -glucosidase from brewer's yeast. All new imidazopyridines are nanomolar inhibitors of the , -glucosidases and micromolar inhibitors of the , -glucosidase. The 3-phenylpropyl derivative 14 proved the strongest inhibitor of the Caldocellum , -glucosidase (Ki,=,0.9,nM), only slightly weaker than the known 2-phenylethyl analogue 7, and the propyl derivative 13 is the strongest inhibitor of the sweet almond , -glucosidases (Ki,=,3.2,nM), again slightly weaker than 7. There is no strong dependence of the inhibition on the nature of the C(2) -substituent and no clear correlation between the inhibitory strength of the known manno -configured imidazopyridines 2,6 and the gluco -analogues 8,12. While most manno -imidazopyridines are competitive inhibitors, the gluco -analogues proved non-competitive inhibitors of the Caldocellum , -glucosidase and mixed-type or partial mixed-type inhibitors of the sweet almond , -glucosidases. [source]


Coupled HM analysis using zero-thickness interface elements with double nodes.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL AND ANALYTICAL METHODS IN GEOMECHANICS, Issue 18 2008
Part I: Theoretical model
Abstract In recent years, the authors have proposed a new double-node zero-thickness interface element for diffusion analysis via the finite element method (FEM) (Int. J. Numer. Anal. Meth. Geomech. 2004; 28(9): 947,962). In the present paper, that formulation is combined with an existing mechanical formulation in order to obtain a fully coupled hydro-mechanical (or HM) model applicable to fractured/fracturing geomaterials. Each element (continuum or interface) is formulated in terms of the displacements (u) and the fluid pressure (p) at the nodes. After assembly, a particular expression of the traditional ,u,p' system of coupled equations is obtained, which is highly non-linear due to the strong dependence between the permeability and the aperture of discontinuities. The formulation is valid for both pre-existing and developing discontinuities by using the appropriate constitutive model that relates effective stresses to relative displacements in the interface. The system of coupled equations is solved following two different numerical approaches: staggered and fully coupled. In the latter, the Newton,Raphson method is used, and it is shown that the Jacobian matrix becomes non-symmetric due to the dependence of the discontinuity permeability on the aperture. In the part II companion paper (Int. J. Numer. Anal. Meth. Geomech. 2008; DOI: 10.1002/nag.730), the formulation proposed is verified and illustrated with some application examples. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Directional response of a reconstituted fine-grained soil,Part I: experimental investigation

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL AND ANALYTICAL METHODS IN GEOMECHANICS, Issue 13 2006
Daniele Costanzo
Abstract This paper discusses the results of a large experimental program designed to investigate in a systematic manner the main features of the incremental response of fine-grained soils. The results are obtained from triaxial stress probing experiments carried out on a French silty clay (Beaucaire Marl). All the tests have been performed on reconstituted specimens, normally consolidated to an initial state which is either isotropic or anisotropic. In the interpretation of the experimental results, extensive use is made of the concept of strain response envelope. The response envelopes obtained for different stress increment magnitudes are remarkably consistent with each other and indicate an inelastic and irreversible material response, i.e. a strong dependence on the stress increment direction, also at relatively small strain levels. A companion paper (Int. J. Numer. Anal. Meth. Geomech., this issue, 2006) assesses the performance of some advanced constitutive models in reproducing the behaviour of reconstituted Beaucaire Marl as observed in this experimental program. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Numerical simulation of vortical ideal fluid flow through curved channel

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN FLUIDS, Issue 11 2003
N. P. Moshkin
Abstract A numerical algorithm to study the boundary-value problem in which the governing equations are the steady Euler equations and the vorticity is given on the inflow parts of the domain boundary is developed. The Euler equations are implemented in terms of the stream function and vorticity. An irregular physical domain is transformed into a rectangle in the computational domain and the Euler equations are rewritten with respect to a curvilinear co-ordinate system. The convergence of the finite-difference equations to the exact solution is shown experimentally for the test problems by comparing the computational results with the exact solutions on the sequence of grids. To find the pressure from the known vorticity and stream function, the Euler equations are utilized in the Gromeka,Lamb form. The numerical algorithm is illustrated with several examples of steady flow through a two-dimensional channel with curved walls. The analysis of calculations shows strong dependence of the pressure field on the vorticity given at the inflow parts of the boundary. Plots of the flow structure and isobars, for different geometries of channel and for different values of vorticity on entrance, are also presented. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


The North Atlantic Oscillation and European vegetation dynamics

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 14 2008
Célia Gouveia
Abstract The relationship between vegetation greenness and the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is assessed over Europe. The study covers the 21-year period from 1982 to 2002 and is based on monthly composites of the Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) and Brightness Temperature from the Global Inventory Monitoring and Modelling System (GIMMS) as well as on monthly precipitation from the Global Precipitation Climatology Centre (GPCC). A systematic analysis is first performed of point correlation fields over the 21-year period between the winter NAO index and spring and summer NDVI, followed by an assessment of the vegetation response to precipitation and temperature conditions in winter, over two contrasting regions, namely the Iberian Peninsula and Northeastern Europe. Finally, the impact of NAO on vegetation dynamics over the two regions is evaluated by studying the corresponding annual cycles of NDVI and comparing their behaviour for years associated with opposite NAO phases. Over the Iberian Peninsula there is strong evidence that positive (negative) values of winter NAO induce low (high) vegetation activity in the following spring and summer seasons. This feature is mainly associated with the impact of NAO on winter precipitation, together with the strong dependence of spring and summer NDVI on water availability during the previous winter. Northeastern Europe shows a different behaviour, with positive (negative) values of winter NAO inducing high (low) values of NDVI in spring, but low (high) values of NDVI in summer. This behaviour mainly results from the strong impact of NAO on winter temperature, associated with the critical dependence of vegetation growth on the combined effect of warm conditions and water availability during the winter season. Copyright © 2008 Royal Meteorological Society [source]


Confinement of Charge Carriers and Excitons in Electrophosphorescent Devices: Mechanism of Light Emission and Degradation,

ADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 16 2007
D. Chin
Charge-carrier and exciton confinement is essential for efficiency and stability enhancment of electrophosphorescent devices. Emission-layer lifetimes of a 4,4,- N,N,-dicarbazole-biphenyl host doped with either a red- or green- emitting dye (upper and lower figures) show a strong dependence and near independence, respectively, on the type of exciton blocking layer used (four are shown). This is explained using energy- level differences and corresponding charge-trapping behavior. [source]


The influence of large-scale atmospheric circulation on the surface energy balance of the King George Island ice cap

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 1 2001
Matthias Braun
Abstract During the austral summer 1997,1998 three automatic weather stations were operated at different altitudes on the sub-Antarctic ice cap of King George Island (South Shetland Islands). Snowmelt was derived from energy balance computations. Turbulent heat fluxes were calculated from meteorological measurements using the bulk aerodynamic approach, with net radiation being measured directly. Modelled ablation rates were compared with readings at ablation stakes and continuously measured snow height at a reference site. Snow depletion and daily snowmelt cycles could be well reproduced by the model. Generally, radiation balance provided the major energy input for snowmelt at all altitudes, whereas sensible heat flux was a second heat source only in lower elevations. The average latent heat flux was negligible over the entire measuring period. A strong altitudinal gradient of available energy for snowmelt was observed. Sensible heat flux as well as latent heat flux decreased with altitude. The measurements showed a strong dependence of surface energy fluxes and ablation rates on large-scale atmospheric conditions. Synoptic weather situations were analysed based on AVH RR infrared quicklook composite images and surface pressure charts. Maximum melt rates of up to 20 mm per day were recorded during a northwesterly advection event with meridional air mass transport. During this northwesterly advection, the contribution of turbulent heat fluxes to the energy available for snowmelt exceeded that of the radiation balance. For easterly and southerly flows, continentally toned, cold dry air masses dominated surface energy balance terms and did not significantly contribute to ablation. The link between synoptic situations and ablation is especially valuable, as observed climatic changes along the Antarctic Peninsula are attributed to changes in the atmospheric circulation. Therefore, the combination of energy balance calculations and the analysis of synoptic-scale weather patterns could improve the prediction of ablation rates for climate change scenarios. Copyright © 2001 Royal Meteorological Society [source]


Highly Selective Oxidation of Alkylphenols to Benzoquinones with Hydrogen Peroxide over Silica-Supported Titanium Catalysts: Titanium Cluster Site versus Titanium Single Site

ADVANCED SYNTHESIS & CATALYSIS (PREVIOUSLY: JOURNAL FUER PRAKTISCHE CHEMIE), Issue 11-12 2009
Oxana
Abstract Titanium-silica catalysts have been prepared by supporting titanium(IV) precursors with different nuclearity {mononuclear titanocene dichloride Ti(Cp)2Cl2, dinuclear titanium diethyl tartrate and the tetranuclear titanium peroxo complex (NH4)8[Ti4(C6H4O7)4(O2)4],8,H2O} onto the surface of silica materials with different textural characteristics. The supported catalysts have been explored as highly active and reusable catalysts for the oxidation of 2,3,6-trimethylphenol (TMP) and 2,6-dimethylphenol (DMP) to 2,3,5-trimethyl-1,4-benzoquinone (TMBQ, vitamin E key intermediate) and 2,6-dimethyl-1,4-benzoquinone (DMBQ), respectively, using aqueous hydrogen peroxide as green oxidant. Catalysts prepared by grafting mononuclear Ti(Cp)2Cl2 revealed a strong dependence of the product selectivity on the surface concentration of titanium active centers. Mesoporous materials with titanium surface concentration in the range of 0.6,1.0,Ti/nm2 were identified as optimal catalysts for the transformation of alkylphenols to benzoquinones. Catalysts having <0.6,Ti/nm2 produced a mixture of benzoquinones and dimeric by-products. Conversely, when di-/tetranuclear titanium precursors were employed for the catalyst preparation, a diminution of the titanium surface concentration had no impact on the benzoquinone selectivity, which was typically as high as 96,99%. DR-UV spectroscopic studies revealed that the catalysts capable of producing alkylbenzoquinones with nearly quantitative yields possess titanium dimers and/or subnanometer-size clusters homogeneously distributed on a silica surface. On the contrary, catalysts with isolated titanium sites give a considerable amount of dimeric by-products. This is the first example which clearly demonstrates the advantages of titanium cluster-site catalysts over titanium single-site catalysts in hydrogen peroxide-based selective oxidation reaction. [source]


Immobilisation of the BINAP Ligand on Dendrimers and Hyperbranched Polymers: Dependence of the Catalytic Properties on the Linker Unit

ADVANCED SYNTHESIS & CATALYSIS (PREVIOUSLY: JOURNAL FUER PRAKTISCHE CHEMIE), Issue 4 2009
Jutta
Abstract A series of immobilised Carbo-BINAP ligands has been synthesised using poly(propylene imine) (PPI) dendrimers as soluble supports. They contain up to 64 BINAP ligands at their periphery without an additional linking unit. Despite the high steric requirements of the ligand, all dendrimers could be completely functionalised, resulting in the immobilised systems in good yields. Furthermore, the immobilisation strategy that worked out for the fixation of AMINAP ligands with additional linking units as well as of Carbo-BINAP ligands without additional linking units on dendrimers has thus been extended to less regularly hyperbranched poly(ethylene imines) (PEI) as soluble supports. In that way it has been possible to attach on average 9, 26, and 138 Glutaroyl-AMINAP or Carbo-BINAP ligands to PEIs of different molecular weights. The catalytic properties of these systems in the copper-catalysed hydrosilylation of acetophenone were investigated. The dendritic PPI-bound Carbo-BINAP ligands displayed a strong dependence of enantioselectivity and activity on the generation of the dendrimer. For the Carbo-BINAP and Glutaroyl-AMINAP ligands immobilised on the hyperbranched polymers, however, activities and enantioselectivities comparable to those of the mononuclear catalysts were found. The macromolecular, immobilised BINAP ligands could be recycled several times without any observable loss of activity or enantioselectivity. [source]


An in situ method for the study of strain broadening using synchrotron X-ray diffraction

JOURNAL OF APPLIED CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, Issue 4 2007
C. C. Tang
A tensonometer for stretching metal foils has been constructed for the study of strain broadening in X-ray diffraction line profiles. This device, which is designed for use on powder diffractometers and was tested on Station 2.3 at Daresbury Laboratory, allows in situ measurements to be performed on samples under stress. It can be used for data collection in either transmission or reflection modes using either symmetric or asymmetric diffraction geometries. As a test case, measurements were carried out on an 18,µm-thick copper foil experiencing strain levels of up to 5% using both symmetric reflection and symmetric transmission diffraction. All the diffraction profiles displayed peak broadening and asymmetry which increased with strain. The measured profiles were analysed by the fundamental-parameters approach using the TOPAS peak-fitting software. All the observed broadened profiles were modelled by convoluting a refineable diffraction profile, representing the dislocation and crystallite size broadening, with a fixed instrumental profile predetermined using high-quality LaB6 reference powder. The deconvolution process yielded `pure' sample integral breadths and asymmetry results which displayed a strong dependence on applied strain and increased almost linearly with applied strain. Assuming crystallite size broadening in combination with dislocation broadening arising from f.c.c. a/2,110,{111} dislocations, the variation of mechanical property with strain has been extracted. The observation of both peak asymmetry and broadening has been interpreted as a manifestation of a cellular structure with cell walls and cell interiors possessing high and low dislocation densities. [source]


Model-free evaluation of directional predictability in foreign exchange markets

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS, Issue 5 2007
Jaehun Chung
We examine directional predictability in foreign exchange markets using a model-free statistical evaluation procedure. Based on a sample of foreign exchange spot rates and futures prices in six major currencies, we document strong evidence that the directions of foreign exchange returns are predictable not only by the past history of foreign exchange returns, but also the past history of interest rate differentials, suggesting that the latter can be a useful predictor of the directions of future foreign exchange rates. This evidence becomes stronger when the direction of larger changes is considered. We further document that despite the weak conditional mean dynamics of foreign exchange returns, directional predictability can be explained by strong dependence derived from higher-order conditional moments such as the volatility, skewness and kurtosis of past foreign exchange returns. Moreover, the conditional mean dynamics of interest rate differentials contributes significantly to directional predictability. We also examine the co-movements between two foreign exchange rates, particularly the co-movements of joint large changes. There exists strong evidence that the directions of joint changes are predictable using past foreign exchange returns and interest rate differentials. Furthermore, both individual currency returns and interest rate differentials are also useful in predicting the directions of joint changes. Several sources can explain this directional predictability of joint changes, including the level and volatility of underlying currency returns. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Influence of hydroxyvalerate composition of polyhydroxy butyrate valerate (PHBV) copolymer on bone cell viability and in vitro degradation

JOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE, Issue 6 2010
Hui Liu
Abstract The objective of this study was to elucidate the role of hydroxyvalerate (HV) composition in polyhydroxy butyrate valerate (PHBV) copolymer film on the degradation of copolymer and osteoblastic cell activity. Degradation was studied by monitoring time-dependent changes in mass and chemical composition of the macroporous films. The mass loss of PHBV film upon 19 weeks of exposure to pH 7.4 phosphate buffer medium was found to range from 2.8% to 9.2% with a strong dependence on the original composition of the copolyester film and morphology. Tapping mode atomic force microscopy (TMAFM) was used to examine the roughness change of polyester films due to exposure to buffer medium. Chemical analysis of the degraded film was carried out using NMR to aid in the interpretation of the mass loss and TMAFM data. The NMR results showed a significant decrease in the mol % of HV content in the degraded PHBV film. Additionally, we established that UMR-106 cell proliferation on macroporous PHBV matrix is minimally enhanced by the HV content of PHBV copolymer. Information provided by this study can be used in the selection of appropriate PHBV copolymer for clinical use where the biopolymer needs to remain physically intact and chemically unchanged during the intended period of biomedical application. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci, 2010 [source]


Loss of E-cadherin mediated cell,cell adhesion as an early trigger of apoptosis induced by photodynamic treatment

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 1 2005
Sergio Galaz
Photodynamic treatment with different photosensitizers (PSs) can result in the specific induction of apoptosis in many cell types. It is commonly accepted that this apoptotic response depends on the mitochondrial accumulation of the PS. Accumulation in other cellular organelles, such as lysosomes or the Golgi complex, and subsequent photodamage resulting in an apoptotic process has been also described. However, the role played by cell adhesion in apoptosis induced in epithelial cells after photodynamic treatment is not well characterized. Here, we have used a murine keratinocyte line, showing a strong dependence on E-cadherin for cell,cell adhesion and survival, to analyze the relevance of this adhesion complex in the context of zinc(II)-phthalocyanine (ZnPc) photodynamic treatment. We report that under apoptotic conditions, ZnPc phototreatment induces a rapid disorganization of the E-cadherin mediated cell,cell adhesion, which largely preceded both the detachment of cells from the substrate, via ,-1 integrins and the induction of apoptotic mitochondrial markers. Therefore, the alteration in E-cadherin, ,- and ,-catenins adhesion proteins preceded the release of cytochrome c (cyt c) from mitochondria to the cytosol and the activation of caspase 3. In addition, blocking E-cadherin function with a specific antibody (Decma-1) induced apoptosis in this cell system. These results strongly suggest that the E-cadherin adhesion complex could be the primary target of ZnPc phototreatment, and that loss of E-cadherin mediated cell adhesion after early photodamage triggers an apoptotic response. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


The relationship of oocyte diameter and incubation temperature to incubation time in temperate freshwater fish species

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2009
F. Teletchea
Based on the analysis of six egg variables and incubation temperature of 65 temperate freshwater fish species, the possible relationships between oocyte diameter, incubation time and incubation temperature were reassessed and compared to the results obtained from marine fishes. Most freshwater species have eggs (mean ±s.d. 2·19 ± 1·52 mm) larger than marine species, that are chiefly demersal and develop stuck to various substrata, such as plants or rocks. A strong negative relationship was found between incubation time (t, days) and incubation temperature (T, ° C): t = 186·23e,0·197T (r2= 0·87). A strong dependence of incubation time on oocyte diameter (Ø, mm) and incubation temperature was also found and was defined as: log10t= 3·002 + 0·599 log10Ø, 1·91 log10 (T + 2), which explained 92% of the variance of the data set. Five major groups of species were defined based on the principal component analysis (PCA) of four quantitative variables. There were two distinct groups of salmonids, displaying demersal and non-adhesive eggs with a long incubation time at low temperature, the eggs of which required a high number of degree-days. There was a large group of species possessing small, mostly demersal and adhesive eggs developing at high temperature during a short period of time, and requiring a low number of degree-days. Between these two extremes, there was a fourth group displaying intermediate values and a fifth group including three species with large, adhesive and demersal eggs incubating at high temperatures during a short period of time. The burbot Lota lota displayed an unusual combination of variables compared to the remaining species in the data set. [source]