6 resultados para Evaporation (Meteorology)

em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça


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BACKGROUND The development of metabolic alkalosis was described recently in patients with hypernatremia. However, the causes for this remain unknown. The current study serves to clarify whether metabolic alkalosis develops in vitro after removal of free water from plasma and whether this can be predicted by a mathematical model. MATERIALS AND METHODS Ten serum samples of healthy humans were dehydrated by 29 % by vacuum centrifugation corresponding to an increase of the contained concentrations by 41 %. Constant partial pressure of carbon dioxide at 40 mmHg was simulated by mathematical correction of pH [pH(40)]. Metabolic acid-base state was assessed by Gilfix' base excess subsets. Changes of acid-base state were predicted by the physical-chemical model according to Watson. RESULTS Evaporation increased serum sodium from 141 (140-142) to 200 (197-203) mmol/L, i.e., severe hypernatremia developed. Acid-base analyses before and after serum concentration showed metabolic alkalosis with alkalemia: pH(40): 7.43 (7.41 to 7.45) vs 7.53 (7.51 to 7.55), p = 0.0051; base excess: 1.9 (0.7 to 3.6) vs 10.0 (8.2 to 11.8), p = 0.0051; base excess of free water: 0.0 (- 0.2 to 0.3) vs 17.7 (16.8 to 18.6), p = 0.0051. The acidifying effects of evaporation, including hyperalbuminemic acidosis, were beneath the alkalinizing ones. Measured and predicted acid-base changes due to serum evaporation agreed well. CONCLUSIONS Evaporation of water from serum causes concentrational alkalosis in vitro, with good agreement between measured and predicted acid-base values. At least part of the metabolic alkalosis accompanying hypernatremia is independent of renal function.

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DAURE (Determination of the Sources of Atmospheric Aerosols in Urban and Rural Environments in the Western Mediterranean) was a multidisciplinary international field campaign aimed at investigating the sources and meteorological controls of particulate matter in the Western Mediterranean Basin (WMB). Measurements were simultaneously performed at an urban-coastal (Barcelona, BCN) and a rural-elevated (Montseny, MSY) site pair in NE Spain during winter and summer. State-of-the-art methods such as 14C analysis, proton-transfer reaction mass spectrometry, and high-resolution aerosol mass spectrometry were applied for the first time in the WMB as part of DAURE. WMB regional pollution episodes were associated with high concentrations of inorganic and organic species formed during the transport to inland areas and built up at regional scales. Winter pollutants accumulation depended on the degree of regional stagnation of an air mass under anticyclonic conditions and the planetary boundary layer height. In summer, regional recirculation and biogenic secondary organic aerosols (SOA) formation mainly determined the regional pollutant concentrations. The contribution from fossil sources to organic carbon (OC) and elemental carbon (EC) and hydrocarbon-like organic aerosol concentrations were higher at BCN compared with MSY due to traffic emissions. The relative contribution of nonfossil OC was higher at MSY especially in summer due to biogenic emissions. The fossil OC/EC ratio at MSY was twice the corresponding ratio at BCN indicating that a substantial fraction of fossil OC was due to fossil SOA. In winter, BCN cooking emissions were identified as an important source of modern carbon in primary organic aerosol.