6 resultados para COMPLEX DIELECTRIC-CONSTANT
em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland
Resumo:
The print substrate influences the print result in dry toner electrophotography, which is a widely used digital printing method. The influence of the substrate can be seen more easily in color printing, as that is a more complex process compared to monochrome printing. However, the print quality is also affected by the print substrate in grayscale printing. It is thus in the interests of both substrate producers and printing equipment manufacturers to understand the substrate properties that influence the quality of printed images in more detail. In dry toner electrophotography, the image is printed by transferring charged toner particles to the print substrate in the toner transfer nip, utilizing an electric field, in addition to the forces linked to the contact between toner particles and substrate in the nip. The toner transfer and the resulting image quality are thus influenced by the surface texture and the electrical and dielectric properties of the print substrate. In the investigation of the electrical and dielectric properties of the papers and the effects of substrate roughness, in addition to commercial papers, controlled sample sets were made on pilot paper machines and coating machines to exclude uncontrolled variables from the experiments. The electrical and dielectric properties of the papers investigated were electrical resistivity and conductivity, charge acceptance, charge decay, and the dielectric permittivity and losses at different frequencies, including the effect of temperature. The objective was to gain an understanding of how the electrical and dielectric properties are affected by normal variables in papermaking, including basis weight, material density, filler content, ion and moisture contents, and coating. In addition, the dependency of substrate resistivity on the electric field applied was investigated. Local discharging did not inhibit transfer with the paper roughness levels that are normal in electrophotographic color printing. The potential decay of paper revealed that the charge decay cannot be accurately described with a single exponential function, since in charge decay there are overlapping mechanisms of conduction and depolarization of paper. The resistivity of the paper depends on the NaCl content and exponentially on moisture content although it is also strongly dependent on the electric field applied. This dependency is influenced by the thickness, density, and filler contents of the paper. Furthermore, the Poole-Frenkel model can be applied to the resistivity of uncoated paper. The real part of the dielectric constant ε’ increases with NaCl content and relative humidity, but when these materials cannot polarize freely, the increase cannot be explained by summing the effects of their dielectric constants. Dependencies between the dielectric constant and dielectric loss factor and NaCl content, temperature, and frequency show that in the presence of a sufficient amount of moisture and NaCl, new structures with a relaxation time of the order of 10-3 s are formed in paper. The ε’ of coated papers is influenced by the addition of pigments and other coating additives with polarizable groups and due to the increase in density. The charging potential decreases and the electrical conductivity, potential decay rate, and dielectric constant of paper increase with increasing temperature. The dependencies are exponential and the temperature dependencies and their activation energies are altered by the ion content. The results have been utilized in manufacturing substrates for electrophotographic color printing.
Resumo:
Alikriittisellä vedellä tarkoitetaan paineistettua vettä, joka on kriittisen lämpötilansa (374 °C) alapuolella nestemäisessä tilassa. Veden tiheys pienenee lämpötilan kasvaessa Veden liuotinominaisuuksia voidaan säädellä lämpötilan avulla. Veden pintajännitys, viskositeetti, tiheys ja polaarisuus pienenevät lämpötilan kasvaessa, ja alikriittisen veden aineominaisuudet muuttuvat lähemmäksi orgaanista liuotinta. Alikriittisen veden dielektrisyysvakion aleneminen johtuu pääasiassa lämpötilan vaikutuksesta ja vain vähän paineen vaikutuksesta. Alikriittistä vettä on käytetty liuottimena uutossa, mutta nyt myös alikriittinen kromatografia on kehittymässä oleva erotusmenetelmä. Työn kokeellisessa osassa kehitettiin kromatografinen laitteisto alikriittiselle vedelle, jolla tutkittiin sokerialkoholien ja sokerien kromatografista erotusta alikriittisen veden avulla. Lisäksi tutkittiin sokerialkoholien, sokereiden ja stationäärifaasien termistä kestävyyttä. Tutkittavina komponentteina olivat sorbitoli, mannitoli, ksylitoli, arabinoosi, mannoosi, ksyloosi, maltoosi ja ramnoosi. Stationäärifaaseina käytettiin makrohuokoista funktionalisoimatonta polystyreenidivinyylibentseenikopolymeeriä, sekä vahvoja ja heikkoja divinyylibentseenillä ristisilloitettuja kationinvaihtohartseja, jotka olivat joko Na+- tai Ca2+-ionimuodoissa. Veden lämpötilan nostaminen vaikuttaa sekä kromatografisen stationäärifaasin tilavuusmuutoksiin että näytekomponenttien ominaisuuksiin. Vahvoilla kationinvaihtimilla havaittiin termisten tilavuusmuutosten riippuvan ionimuodosta: Na+-muotoiset hartsit turpoavat ja Ca2+-muotoiset kutistuvat lämpötilan noustessa. Heikot kationinvaihtimet kutistuvat molemmissa ionimuodoissa, mutta Ca2+-muoto kutistuu Na+-muotoa voimakkaammin. Näytekomponenteista sokerialkoholien havaittiin kestävän paremmin korkeita lämpötiloja kuin sokerien. Sokerialkoholeista kestävimmäksi havaittiin ksylitoli ja sokereista ramnoosi. Tutkittavien komponenttien piikkien havaittiin kapenevan, häntimisen vähenevän, ja piikkien eluoituvan aikaisemmin riippuen käytettävästä stationäärifaasista. Ca2+-muotoisen vahvan kationinvaihtimen kompleksinmuodostuskyky heikkeni lämpötilan kasvaessa. Näytekomponenttien erotus ei kuitenkaan parantunut lämpötilan noustessa tutkituilla stationäärifaaseilla.
Resumo:
Tässä diplomityössä tutkittiin ja kehitettiin edelleen mikroliuskarakenteisen T-resonaattorin käyttöä laajakaistaisessa piirilevylaminaattien dielektrisyysvakion ja häviökertoimen määrityksessä. Työssä perehdyttiin eristeominaisuuksien määrityksessä tarvittaviin laskentamenetelmiin sekä T-resonaattorin toimintaan. T-resonaattorin suunnittelu ja käyttöä varten valitut laskentamenetelmät on esitelty. Työssä suunniteltiin ja valmistettiin mikroliuskarakenteinen T-resonaattorimittausrakenne, jolla määritettiin erään FR-4 -tyyppisen piirilevylaminaattimateriaalin dielektrisyysvakio sekä häviökerroin mittausten ja laskennan avulla taajuuskaistalla 0,5 - 10 GHz. Tuloksia verrattiin muilla käytössä olevilla menetelmillä määritettyihin tuloksiin. Tulosten perusteella voitiin osoittaa, että mikroliuskarakenteinen T-resonaattori soveltuu hyvin piirilevylaminaattien eristeominaisuuksien määritykseen, ja käytetyt laskenta-menetelmät antavat realistisia tuloksia.
Resumo:
Asymmetric synthesis using modified heterogeneous catalysts has gained lots of interest in the production of optically pure chemicals, such as pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, fragrances and agrochemicals. Heterogeneous modified catalysts capable of inducing high enantioselectivities are preferred in industrial scale due to their superior separation and handling properties. The topic has been intensively investigated both in industry and academia. The enantioselective hydrogenation of ethyl benzoylformate (EBF) to (R)-ethyl mandelate over (-)-cinchonidine (CD)-modified Pt/Al2O3 catalyst in a laboratory-scale semi-batch reactor was studied as a function of modifier concentration, reaction temperature, stirring rate and catalyst particle size. The main product was always (R)-ethyl mandelate while small amounts of (S)-ethyl mandelate were obtained as by product. The kinetic results showed higher enantioselectivity and lower initial rates approaching asymptotically to a constant value as the amount of modifier was increased. Additionally, catalyst deactivation due to presence of impurities in the feed was prominent in some cases; therefore activated carbon was used as a cleaning agent of the raw material to remove impurities prior to catalyst addition. Detailed characterizations methods (SEM, EDX, TPR, BET, chemisorption, particle size distribution) of the catalysts were carried out. Solvent effects were also studied in the semi-batch reactor. Solvents with dielectric constant (e) between 2 and 25 were applied. The enantiomeric excess (ee) increased with an increase of the dielectric coefficient up to a maximum followed by a nonlinear decrease. A kinetic model was proposed for the enantioselectivity dependence on the dielectric constant based on the Kirkwood treatment. The non-linear dependence of ee on (e) successfully described the variation of ee in different solvents. Systematic kinetic experiments were carried out in the semi-batch reactor. Toluene was used as a solvent. Based on these results, a kinetic model based on the assumption of different number of sites was developed. Density functional theory calculations were applied to study the energetics of the EBF adsorption on pure Pt(1 1 1). The hydrogenation rate constants were determined along with the adsorption parameters by non-linear regression analysis. A comparison between the model and the experimental data revealed a very good correspondence. Transient experiments in a fixed-bed reactor were also carried out in this work. The results demonstrated that continuous enantioselective hydrogenation of EBF in hexane/2-propanol 90/10 (v/v) is possible and that continuous feeding of (-)-cinchonidine is needed to maintain a high steady-state enantioselectivity. The catalyst showed a good stability and high enantioselectivity was achieved in the fixed-bed reactor. Chromatographic separation of (R)- and (S)-ethyl mandelate originating from the continuous reactor was investigated. A commercial column filled with a chiral resin was chosen as a perspective preparative-scale adsorbent. Since the adsorption equilibrium isotherms were linear within the entire investigated range of concentrations, they were determined by pulse experiments for the isomers present in a post-reaction mixture. Breakthrough curves were measured and described successfully by the dispersive plug flow model with a linear driving force approximation. The focus of this research project was the development of a new integrated production concept of optically active chemicals by combining heterogeneous catalysis and chromatographic separation technology. The proposed work is fundamental research in advanced process technology aiming to improve efficiency and enable clean and environmentally benign production of enantiomeric pure chemicals.
Resumo:
Photosystem II (PSII) of oxygenic photosynthesis is susceptible to photoinhibition. Photoinhibition is defined as light induced damage resulting in turnover of the D1 protein subunit of the reaction center of PSII. Both visible and ultraviolet (UV) light cause photoinhibition. Photoinhibition induced by UV light damages the oxygen evolving complex (OEC) via absorption of UV photons by the Mn ion(s) of OEC. Under visible light, most of the earlier hypotheses assume that photoinhibition occurs when the rate of photon absorption by PSII antenna exceeds the use of the absorbed energy in photosynthesis. However, photoinhibition occurs at all light intensities with the same efficiency per photon. The aim of my thesis work was to build a model of photoinhibition that fits the experimental features of photoinhibition. I studied the role of electron transfer reactions of PSII in photoinhibition and found that changing the electron transfer rate had only minor influence on photoinhibition if light intensity was kept constant. Furthermore, quenching of antenna excitations protected less efficiently than it would protect if antenna chlorophylls were the only photoreceptors of photoinhibition. To identify photoreceptors of photoinhibition, I measured the action spectrum of photoinhibition. The action spectrum showed resemblance to the absorption spectra of Mn model compounds suggesting that the Mn cluster of OEC acts as a photoreceptor of photoinhibition under visible light, too. The role of Mn in photoinhibition was further supported by experiments showing that during photoinhibition OEC is damaged before electron transfer activity at the acceptor side of PSII is lost. Mn enzymes were found to be photosensitive under visible and UV light indicating that Mn-containing compounds, including OEC, are capable of functioning as photosensitizers both in visible and UV light. The experimental results above led to the Mn hypothesis of the mechanism of continuous-light-induced photoinhibition. According to the Mn hypothesis, excitation of Mn of OEC results in inhibition of electron donation from OEC to the oxidized primary donor P680+ both under UV and visible light. P680 is oxidized by photons absorbed by chlorophyll, and if not reduced by OEC, P680+ may cause harmful oxidation of other PSII components. Photoinhibition was also induced with intense laser pulses and it was found that the photoinhibitory efficiency increased in proportion to the square of pulse intensity suggesting that laser-pulse-induced photoinhibition is a two-photon reaction. I further developed the Mn hypothesis suggesting that the initial event in photoinhibition under both continuous and pulsed light is the same: Mn excitation that leads to the inhibition of electron donation from OEC to P680+. Under laser-pulse-illumination, another Mn-mediated inhibitory photoreaction occurs within the duration of the same pulse, whereas under continuous light, secondary damage is chlorophyll mediated. A mathematical model based on the Mn hypothesis was found to explain photoinhibition under continuous light, under flash illumination and under the combination of these two.
Resumo:
During mitosis, the duplicated genome must be accurately divided between two daughter cells. Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) and Aurora B kinase, together with its binding partners Incenp, Survivin and Borealin (chromosomal passenger complex, CPC), have key roles in coordinating mitotic events. The accuracy of cell division is safeguarded by a signaling cascade termed the mitotic spindle checkpoint (SC), which ensures that chromosomes are not physically separated before correct bipolar attachments have been formed between kinetochores and spindle microtubules (MT). An inhibitory “wait anaphase” signal, which delays chromosome separation (anaphase onset), is created at individual kinetochores and broadcasted throughout the cell in response to lack of kinetochore-microtubule (kMT) attachment or proper interkinetochore tension. It is believed that the fast turnover of SC molecules at kinetochores contributes to the cell’s ability to produce this signal and enables rapid responses to changing cellular conditions. Kinetochores that lack MT attachment and tension express a certain phosphoepitope called the 3F3/2 phosphoepitope, which has been linked to SC signaling. In the experimental part, we investigated the regulation of the 3F3/2 phosphoepitope, analyzed whether CPC molecules turn over at centromeres, and dissected the mitotic roles of the CPC using a microinjection technique that allowed precise temporal control over its function. We found that the kinetochore 3F3/2 phosphoepitope is created by Plk1, and that CPC proteins exhibit constant exchange at centromeres. Moreover, we found that CPC function is necessary in the regulation of chromatid movements and spindle morphology in anaphase. In summary, we identified new functions of key mitotic regulators Plk1 and CPC, and provided insighs into the coordination of mitotic events.