5 resultados para Two-Dimensional Search Problem
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
In questo lavoro di tesi è presentato un metodo per lo studio della compartimentalizzazione dell’acqua in cellule biologiche, mediante lo studio dell’autodiffusione delle molecole d’acqua tramite uno strumento NMR single-sided. Le misure sono state eseguite nel laboratorio NMR all’interno del DIFA di Bologna. Sono stati misurati i coefficienti di autodiffusione di tre campioni in condizione bulk, ottenendo risultati consistenti con la letteratura. È stato poi analizzato un sistema cellulare modello, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, allo stato solido, ottimizzando le procedure per l’ottenimento di mappe di correlazione 2D, aventi come assi il coefficiente di autodiffusione D e il tempo di rilassamento trasversale T2. In questo sistema l’acqua è confinata e l’autodiffusione è ristretta dalle pareti cellulari, si parla quindi di coefficiente di autodiffusione apparente, Dapp. Mediante le mappe sono state individuate due famiglie di nuclei 1H. Il campione è stato poi analizzato in diluizione in acqua distillata, confermando la separazione del segnale in due distinte famiglie. L’utilizzo di un composto chelato, il CuEDTA, ha permesso di affermare che la famiglia con il Dapp maggiore corrisponde all’acqua esterna alle cellule. L’analisi dei dati ottenuti sulle due famiglie al variare del tempo lasciato alle molecole d’acqua per la diffusione hanno portato alla stima del raggio dei due compartimenti: r=2.3±0.2µm per l’acqua extracellulare, r=0.9±0.1µm per quella intracellulare, che è probabilmente acqua scambiata tra gli organelli e il citoplasma. L’incertezza associata a tali stime tiene conto soltanto dell’errore nel calcolo dei parametri liberi del fit dei dati, è pertanto una sottostima, dovuta alle approssimazioni connesse all’utilizzo di equazioni valide per un sistema poroso costituito da pori sferici connessi non permeabili. Gli ordini di grandezza dei raggi calcolati sono invece consistenti con quelli osservabili dalle immagini ottenute con il microscopio ottico.
Resumo:
Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Halide Perovskites (HOIPs) include a large class of materials described with the general formula ABX3, where A is an organic cation, B an inorganic cation and X an halide anion. HOIPs show excellent optoelectronic characteristics such as tunable band gap, high adsorption coefficient and great mobility life-time. A subclass of these materials, the so-called two- dimensional (2D) layered HOIPs, have emerged as potential alternatives to traditional 3D analogs to enhance the stability and increase performance of perovskite devices, with particular regard in the area of ionizing radiation detectors, where these materials have reached truly remarkable milestones. One of the key challenges for future development of efficient and stable 2D perovskite X-ray detector is a complete understanding of the nature of defects that lead to the formation of deep states. Deep states act as non-radiative recombination centers for charge carriers and are one of the factors that most hinder the development of efficient 2D HOIPs-based X-ray detectors. In this work, deep states in PEA2PbBr4 were studied through Photo-Induced Current Transient Spectroscopy (PICTS), a highly sensitive spectroscopic technique capable of detecting the presence of deep states in highly resistive ohmic materials, and characterizing their activation energy, capture cross section and, under stringent conditions, the concentration of these states. The evolution of deep states in PEA 2 PbBr 4 was evaluated after exposure of the material to high doses of ionizing radiation and during aging (one year). The data obtained allowed us to evaluate the contribution of ion migration in PEA2PbBr4. This work represents an important starting point for a better understanding of transport and recombination phenomena in 2D perovskites. To date, the PICTS technique applied to 2D perovskites has not yet been reported in the scientific literature.
Resumo:
Slope failure occurs in many areas throughout the world and it becomes an important problem when it interferes with human activity, in which disasters provoke loss of life and property damage. In this research we investigate the slope failure through the centrifuge modeling, where a reduced-scale model, N times smaller than the full-scale (prototype), is used whereas the acceleration is increased by N times (compared with the gravity acceleration) to preserve the stress and the strain behavior. The aims of this research “Centrifuge modeling of sandy slopes” are in extreme synthesis: 1) test the reliability of the centrifuge modeling as a tool to investigate the behavior of a sandy slope failure; 2) understand how the failure mechanism is affected by changing the slope angle and obtain useful information for the design. In order to achieve this scope we arranged the work as follows: Chapter one: centrifuge modeling of slope failure. In this chapter we provide a general view about the context in which we are working on. Basically we explain what is a slope failure, how it happens and which are the tools available to investigate this phenomenon. Afterwards we introduce the technology used to study this topic, that is the geotechnical centrifuge. Chapter two: testing apparatus. In the first section of this chapter we describe all the procedures and facilities used to perform a test in the centrifuge. Then we explain the characteristics of the soil (Nevada sand), like the dry unit weight, water content, relative density, and its strength parameters (c,φ), which have been calculated in laboratory through the triaxial test. Chapter three: centrifuge tests. In this part of the document are presented all the results from the tests done in centrifuge. When we talk about results we refer to the acceleration at failure for each model tested and its failure surface. In our case study we tested models with the same soil and geometric characteristics but different angles. The angles tested in this research were: 60°, 75° and 90°. Chapter four: slope stability analysis. We introduce the features and the concept of the software: ReSSA (2.0). This software allows us to calculate the theoretical failure surfaces of the prototypes. Then we show in this section the comparisons between the experimental failure surfaces of the prototype, traced in the laboratory, and the one calculated by the software. Chapter five: conclusion. The conclusion of the research presents the results obtained in relation to the two main aims, mentioned above.
Resumo:
In this work we study a model for the breast image reconstruction in Digital Tomosynthesis, that is a non-invasive and non-destructive method for the three-dimensional visualization of the inner structures of an object, in which the data acquisition includes measuring a limited number of low-dose two-dimensional projections of an object by moving a detector and an X-ray tube around the object within a limited angular range. The problem of reconstructing 3D images from the projections provided in the Digital Tomosynthesis is an ill-posed inverse problem, that leads to a minimization problem with an object function that contains a data fitting term and a regularization term. The contribution of this thesis is to use the techniques of the compressed sensing, in particular replacing the standard least squares problem of data fitting with the problem of minimizing the 1-norm of the residuals, and using as regularization term the Total Variation (TV). We tested two different algorithms: a new alternating minimization algorithm (ADM), and a version of the more standard scaled projected gradient algorithm (SGP) that involves the 1-norm. We perform some experiments and analyse the performance of the two methods comparing relative errors, iterations number, times and the qualities of the reconstructed images. In conclusion we noticed that the use of the 1-norm and the Total Variation are valid tools in the formulation of the minimization problem for the image reconstruction resulting from Digital Tomosynthesis and the new algorithm ADM has reached a relative error comparable to a version of the classic algorithm SGP and proved best in speed and in the early appearance of the structures representing the masses.
Resumo:
The study of turbulence is also nowadays a problem that does not have solution from the mathematical point of view due to the lack of solution to link the mean part of the flow with the fluctuating one. To solve this problem, in the CICLoPE laboratory of Predappio, experiments on different type of jets are performed in order to derive a closure model able to close our mathematical model. One of the most interesting type of jet that could be studied is the planar turbulent free jet which is a two dimensional canonical jet characterized by the self-similarity condition of the velocity profiles. To study this particular jet, a new facility was built. The aim of this project is to characterize the jet at different distances from the nozzle exit, for different values of Reynolds number, to demonstrate that the self-similarity condition is respected. To do that, the evaluation of quantities such as spreading rate, centerline velocity decay and relation between fluctuations and mean part of the flow has to be obtain. All these parameters could be detected thanks to the use of single and X hot-wire anemometry with which it is possible to analyzed the fluctuating behaviour of the flow by associating to an electric signal a physical variable expressed in terms of velocity. To justify the data obtain by the measures, a comparison with results coming from the literature has to be shown.