5 resultados para Key to species
em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha
Resumo:
The world's rising demand of energy turns the development of sustainable and more efficient technologies for energy production and storage into an inevitable task. Thermoelectric generators, composed of pairs of n-type and p-type semiconducting materials, di¬rectly transform waste heat into useful electricity. The efficiency of a thermoelectric mate¬rial depends on its electronic and lattice properties, summarized in its figure of merit ZT. Desirable are high electrical conductivity and Seebeck coefficients, and low thermal con¬ductivity. Half-Heusler materials are very promising candidates for thermoelectric applications in the medium¬ temperature range such as in industrial and automotive waste heat recovery. The advantage of Heusler compounds are excellent electronic properties and high thermal and mechanical stability, as well as their low toxicity and elemental abundance. Thus, the main obstacle to further enhance their thermoelectric performance is their relatively high thermal conductivity.rn rnIn this work, the thermoelectric properties of the p-type material (Ti/Zr/Hf)CoSb1-xSnx were optimized in a multistep process. The concept of an intrinsic phase separation has recently become a focus of research in the compatible n-type (Ti/Zr/Hf)NiSn system to achieve low thermal conductivities and boost the TE performance. This concept is successfully transferred to the TiCoSb system. The phase separation approach can form a significant alternative to the previous nanostructuring approach via ball milling and hot pressing, saving pro¬cessing time, energy consumption and increasing the thermoelectric efficiency. A fundamental concept to tune the performance of thermoelectric materials is charge carrier concentration optimization. The optimum carrier concentration is reached with a substitution level for Sn of x = 0.15, enhancing the ZT about 40% compared to previous state-of-the-art samples with x = 0.2. The TE performance can be enhanced further by a fine-tuning of the Ti-to-Hf ratio. A correlation of the microstructure and the thermoelectric properties is observed and a record figure of merit ZT = 1.2 at 710°C was reached with the composition Ti0.25Hf0.75CoSb0.85Sn0.15.rnTowards application, the long term stability of the material under actual conditions of operation are an important issue. The impact of such a heat treatment on the structural and thermoelectric properties is investigated. Particularly, the best and most reliable performance is achieved in Ti0.5Hf0.5CoSb0.85Sn0.15, which reached a maximum ZT of 1.1 at 700°C. The intrinsic phase separation and resulting microstructure is stable even after 500 heating and cooling cycles.
Resumo:
Als Ergebnis der Revision der Gattung Lygus Hahn (Heteroptera, Miridae, Insecta) wurden die fünf neuen Arten beschrieben: L. sibiricus Aglyamzyanov, 1990, L. orientis Aglyamzyanov, 1994, L. izyaslavi Aglyamzyanov, 1994, L. monticola Aglyamzyanov, 1994 und L. martensi Aglyamzyanov, 2003. Die vier Speziessnamen wurden synonymisiert: L. dracunculi Josifov, 1992, L. alashanensis Qi, 1993, L. renati Schwartz, 1998 (L. elegans Aglyamzyanov, 1994) = L. poluensis (Wagner, 1967) und L. kerzhneri Qi, 1993 = L. punctatus (Zetterstedt, 1838). Artstatus von L. israelensis Linnavuori, 1962 wurde wiederhergestellt. Nach aktuellen Angaben wurden in der Paläarktis 19 Lygus-Arten festgestellt: L. discrepans Reuter, 1906; L. gemellatus (Herrich-Schaeffer, 1835); L. hsiaoi Zheng & Yu, 1992; L. israelensis Linnavuori, 1962; L. italicus Wagner, 1950; L. izyaslavi Aglyamzyanov, 1994; L. maritimus Wagner, 1949; L. martensi Aglyamzyanov, 2003; L. monticola Aglyamzyanov, 1994; L. orientis Aglyamzyanov, 1994; L. pachycnemis Reuter, 1879; L. paradiscrepans Zheng & Yu, 1992; L. poluensis (Wagner, 1967); L. pratensis (Linnaeus, 1758); L. punctatus (Zetterstedt, 1838); L. rugulipennis Poppius, 1911; L. sibiricus Aglyamzyanov, 1990; L. tibetanus Zheng & Yu, 1992 und L. wagneri Remane, 1955. Es wurden die diagnostischen Merkmale analysiert, eine Bestimmungstabelle erstellt und die Areale der Verbreitung der einigen Arten präzisiert.
Resumo:
In den letzten Jahrzehnten wurde eine deutliche, anhaltende Veränderung des globalen Klimas beobachtet, die in Zukunft zu einer Erhöhung der durchschnittlichen Oberflächentemperatur, erhöhten Niederschlagsmengen und anderen gravierenden Umweltveränderungen führen wird (IPCC 2001). Der Klimawandel wird in Flüssen sowohl mehr Extremereignisse verursachen als auch das Abflussregime bisher schmelzwasserdominierter Flüsse zu grundwassergespeisten hin ändern; dies gilt insbesondere für den Rhein (MIDDELKOOP et al. 2001). Um die möglichen Auswirkungen dieser Veränderungen auf die genetische Populationsstruktur von Makrozoobenthosorganismen vorhersagen zu können, wurden in den grundwassergespeisten Flüssen Main und Mosel sowie im Rhein Entnahmestellen oberhalb und unterhalb von Staustufen beprobt, die durch kontrastierende Strömungsverhältnisse als Modell für die zu erwartenden Änderungen dienten. Als Untersuchungsobjekt wurden Dreissena polymorpha PALLAS 1771 sowie Dikerogammarus villosus SOWINSKI 1894 herangezogen. Sie zeichnen sich durch hohe Abundanzen aus, sind aber unterschiedlich u.a. hinsichtlich ihrer Besiedlungsstrategie und –historie. Bei beiden Spezies sind die phylogeographischen Hintergründe bekannt; daher wurde auch versucht, die Einwanderungsrouten in der Populationsstruktur nachzuweisen (phylogeographisches Szenario). Dies konkurrierte mit der möglichen Anpassung der Spezies an das Abflussregime des jeweiligen Flusses (Adaptations-Szenario). Die Populationen wurden molekulargenetisch mit Hilfe der AFLP-Methode („Amplified-Fragment Length Polymorphism“) untersucht. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass D. polymorpha deutlich durch die Abflussregimes der Flüsse (Schmelz- oder Grundwasserdominanz) beeinflusst wird. Die Allelfrequenzen in Populationen des Rheins sind von denen der beiden grundwassergespeisten Flüsse Main und Mosel deutlich unterscheidbar (Adaptations-Szenario). Jedoch ist kein Unterschied der genetischen Diversitäten zu beobachten; das ist auf die lange Adaptation an ihre jeweiligen Habitate durch die lange Besiedlungsdauer zurückzuführen. Dies ist auch der Grund, warum die Einwanderungsrouten anhand der Populationsstruktur nicht mehr nachzuweisen waren. Die kontrastierenden Strömungsverhältnisse um die Staustufen hatten ebenfalls keine konsistenten Auswirkungen auf die genetische Diversität der Populationen. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen eine hohe phänotypische Plastizität der Spezies und dadurch eine große Anpassungsfähigkeit an wechselnde Umweltbedingungen, die unter anderem für den großen Erfolg dieser Spezies verantwortlich ist. D. villosus wanderte erst vor Kurzem in das Untersuchungsgebiet ein; die Einwanderungsroute war anhand der genetischen Diversität nachvollziehbar (phylogeographisches Szenario); durch die kurze Besiedlungsdauer war eine Adaptation an die divergenten Abflussregime der Flüsse nicht zu erwarten und wurde auch nicht gefunden. Dagegen war ein deutlicher negativer Einfluss von starker Strömung auf die genetische Diversität nachweisbar. Die Ergebnisse weisen darauf hin, dass die zukünftigen Auswirkungen des Klimawandels auf die Strömungsgeschwindigkeit negative Konsequenzen auf die genetische Diversität von D. villosus haben werden, während D. polymorpha hier keine Auswirkungen erkennen lässt. Die Auswirkungen des veränderten Abflussregimes im Rhein sind für D. villosus mit den vorliegenden Daten aufgrund der kurzen Besiedlungsdauer nicht vorhersagbar; D. polymorpha wird durch die Veränderung des Rheins zu einem grundwassergespeisten Fluss zwar einen Wandel in der genetischen Struktur erfahren, aber auch hier keine Einbußen in der genetischen Diversität erleiden.
Resumo:
Urban centers significantly contribute to anthropogenic air pollution, although they cover only a minor fraction of the Earth's land surface. Since the worldwide degree of urbanization is steadily increasing, the anthropogenic contribution to air pollution from urban centers is expected to become more substantial in future air quality assessments. The main objective of this thesis was to obtain a more profound insight in the dispersion and the deposition of aerosol particles from 46 individual major population centers (MPCs) as well as the regional and global influence on the atmospheric distribution of several aerosol types. For the first time, this was assessed in one model framework, for which the global model EMAC was applied with different representations of aerosol particles. First, in an approach with passive tracers and a setup in which the results depend only on the source location and the size and the solubility of the tracers, several metrics and a regional climate classification were used to quantify the major outflow pathways, both vertically and horizontally, and to compare the balance between pollution export away from and pollution build-up around the source points. Then in a more comprehensive approach, the anthropogenic emissions of key trace species were changed at the MPC locations to determine the cumulative impact of the MPC emissions on the atmospheric aerosol burdens of black carbon, particulate organic matter, sulfate, and nitrate. Ten different mono-modal passive aerosol tracers were continuously released at the same constant rate at each emission point. The results clearly showed that on average about five times more mass is advected quasi-horizontally at low levels than exported into the upper troposphere. The strength of the low-level export is mainly determined by the location of the source, while the vertical transport is mainly governed by the lifting potential and the solubility of the tracers. Similar to insoluble gas phase tracers, the low-level export of aerosol tracers is strongest at middle and high latitudes, while the regions of strongest vertical export differ between aerosol (temperate winter dry) and gas phase (tropics) tracers. The emitted mass fraction that is kept around MPCs is largest in regions where aerosol tracers have short lifetimes; this mass is also critical for assessing the impact on humans. However, the number of people who live in a strongly polluted region around urban centers depends more on the population density than on the size of the area which is affected by strong air pollution. Another major result was that fine aerosol particles (diameters smaller than 2.5 micrometer) from MPCs undergo substantial long-range transport, with about half of the emitted mass being deposited beyond 1000 km away from the source. In contrast to this diluted remote deposition, there are areas around the MPCs which experience high deposition rates, especially in regions which are frequently affected by heavy precipitation or are situated in poorly ventilated locations. Moreover, most MPC aerosol emissions are removed over land surfaces. In particular, forests experience more deposition from MPC pollutants than other land ecosystems. In addition, it was found that the generic treatment of aerosols has no substantial influence on the major conclusions drawn in this thesis. Moreover, in the more comprehensive approach, it was found that emissions of black carbon, particulate organic matter, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides from MPCs influence the atmospheric burden of various aerosol types very differently, with impacts generally being larger for secondary species, sulfate and nitrate, than for primary species, black carbon and particulate organic matter. While the changes in the burdens of sulfate, black carbon, and particulate organic matter show an almost linear response for changes in the emission strength, the formation of nitrate was found to be contingent upon many more factors, e.g., the abundance of sulfuric acid, than only upon the strength of the nitrogen oxide emissions. The generic tracer experiments were further extended to conduct the first risk assessment to obtain the cumulative risk of contamination from multiple nuclear reactor accidents on the global scale. For this, many factors had to be taken into account: the probability of major accidents, the cumulative deposition field of the radionuclide cesium-137, and a threshold value that defines contamination. By collecting the necessary data and after accounting for uncertainties, it was found that the risk is highest in western Europe, the eastern US, and in Japan, where on average contamination by major accidents is expected about every 50 years.
Resumo:
I investigated the systematics, phylogeny and biogeographical history of Juncaginaceae, a small family of the early-diverging monocot order Alismatales which comprises about 30 species of annual and perennial herbs. A wide range of methods from classical taxonomy to molecular systematic and biogeographic approaches was used. rnrnIn Chapter 1, a phylogenetic analysis of the family and members of Alismatales was conducted to clarify the circumscription of Juncaginaceae and intrafamilial relationships. For the first time, all accepted genera and those associated with the family in the past were analysed together. Phylogenetic analysis of three molecular markers (rbcL, matK, and atpA) showed that Juncaginaceae are not monophyletic. As a consequence the family is re-circumscribed to exclude Maundia which is pro-posed to belong to a separate family Maundiaceae, reducing Juncaginaceae to include Tetroncium, Cycnogeton and Triglochin. Tetroncium is weakly supported as sister to the rest of the family. The reinstated Cycnogeton (formerly included in Triglochin) is highly supported as sister to Triglochin s.str. Lilaea is nested within Triglochin s. str. and highly supported as sister to the T. bulbosa complex. The results of the molecular analysis are discussed in combination with morphological characters, a key to the genera of the family is given, and several new combinations are made.rnrnIn Chapter 2, phylogenetic relationships in Triglochin were investigated. A species-level phylogeny was constructed based on molecular data obtained from nuclear (ITS, internal transcribed spacer) and chloroplast sequence data (psbA-trnH, matK). Based on the phylogeny of the group, divergence times were estimated and ancestral distribution areas reconstructed. The monophyly of Triglochin is confirmed and relationships between the major lineages of the genus were resolved. A clade comprising the Mediterranean/African T. bulbosa complex and the American T. scilloides (= Lilaea s.) is sister to the rest of the genus which contains two main clades. In the first, the widespread T. striata is sister to a clade comprising annual Triglochin species from Australia. The second clade comprises T. palustris as sister to the T. maritima complex, of which the latter is further divided into a Eurasian and an American subclade. Diversification in Triglochin began in the Miocene or Oligocene, and most disjunctions in Triglochin were dated to the Miocene. Taxonomic diversity in some clades is strongly linked to habitat shifts and can not be observed in old but ecologically invariable lineages such as the non-monophyletic T. maritima.rnrnChapter 3 is a collaborative revision of the Triglochin bulbosa complex, a monophyletic group from the Mediterranean region and Africa. One new species, Triglochin buchenaui, and two new subspecies, T. bulbosa subsp. calcicola and subsp. quarcicola, from South Africa were described. Furthermore, two taxa were elevated to species rank and two reinstated. Altogether, seven species and four subspecies are recognised. An identification key, detailed descriptions and accounts of the ecology and distribution of the taxa are provided. An IUCN conservation status is proposed for each taxon.rnrnChapter 4 deals with the monotypic Tetroncium from southern South America. Tetroncium magellanicum is the only dioecious species in the family. The taxonomic history of the species is described, type material is traced, and a lectotype for the name is designated. Based on an extensive study of herbarium specimens and literature, a detailed description of the species and notes on its ecology and conservation status are provided. A detailed map showing the known distribution area of T. magellanicum is presented. rnrnIn Chapter 5, the flower structure of the rare Australian endemic Maundia triglochinoides (Maundiaceae, see Chapter 1) was studied in a collaborative project. As the morphology of Maundia is poorly known and some characters were described differently in the literature, inflorescences, flowers and fruits were studied using serial mictrotome sections and scanning electron microscopy. The phylogenetic placement, affinities to other taxa, and the evolution of certain characters are discussed. As Maundia exhibits a mosaic of characters of other families of tepaloid core Alismatales, its segregation as a separate family seems plausible.