892 resultados para half-live
Resumo:
The conversion of dissipated heat into electricity is the basic principle of thermoelectricity. In this context, half-Heusler (HH) compounds are promising thermoelectric (TE) materials for waste heat recovery. They meet all the requirements for commercial TE applications, ranging from good efficiencies via environmentally friendliness to being low cost materials. This work focused on the TE properties of Ti0.3Zr0.35Hf0.35NiSn-based HH materials. This compound undergoes an intrinsic phase separation into a Ti-poor and Ti-rich HH phase during a rapid solidification process. The resulting dendritic microstructure causes a drastic reduction of the thermal conductivity, leading to higher TE efficiencies in these materials. The TE properties and temperature dependence of the phase-separated Ti0.3Zr0.35Hf0.35NiSn compound were investigated. The TE properties can be adjusted depending on the annealing treatment. The extension of annealing time for 21 days at 1000 °C revealed a reduction of the thermal conductivity and thus an enhancement of the TE performance in this sample. An increase of annealing temperature caused a change of the phase fraction ratio in favor of the Ti-rich phase, leading to an improvement of the electronic properties. rnInspired by the TE properties of the Ti0.3Zr0.35Hf0.35NiSn HH compound, the performance of different n- and p-type materials, realized via site substitution with donor and acceptor elements was examined. The fabrication of a TE n- and p-type material pair based on one starting compound can guarantee similar TE and mechanical properties and is enormous beneficial for device engineering. As donor dopants V, Nb and Sb were tested. Depending on the lattice position small doping levels were sufficient to attain distinct improvement in their TE efficiency. Acceptor-induced doping with Sc, Y and Co caused a change in the transport behavior from n- to p- type conduction, revealing the highest Seebeck coefficients obtained in the MNiSn system. rnThen, the long-term stability of an exemplary n- and p-type HH compound was proven. Surprisingly, the dendritic microstructure can be maintained even after 500 cycles (1700 h) from 373 to 873 K. The TE performance of both n- and p-type materials showed no significant change under the long-term treatment, indicating the extraordinary temperature stability of these compounds. Furthermore both HH materials revealed similar temperature-dependence of their mechanical properties. This work demonstrates the excellent suitability of phase-separated HH materials for future TE applications in the moderate temperature range.rn
Resumo:
Thermoelectric generators (TEG) are solid state devices and are able to convert thermal energy directly into electricity and thus could play an important role in waste heat recovery in the near future. Half-Heusler (HH) compounds with the general formula MNiSn (M = Ti, Zr, Hf) built a promising class of materials for these applications because of their high Seebeck coefficients, their environmentally friendliness and their cost advantage over conventional thermoelectric materials.rnrnMuch of the existing literature on HH deals with thermoelectric characterization of n-type MNiSn and p-type MCoSb compounds. Studies on p-type MNiSn-based HHs are far fewer in number. To fabricate high efficient thermoelectric modules based on HH compounds, high performance p-type MNiSn systems need to be developed that are compatible with the existing n-type HH compounds. This thesis explores synthesis strategies for p-type MNiSn based compounds. In particular, the efficacy of transition metals (Sc, La) and main group elements (Al, Ga, In) as acceptor dopants on the Sn-site in ZrNiSn, was investigated by evaluating their thermoelectric performance. The most promising p-type materials could be achieved with transition metal dopants, where the introduction of Sc on the Zr side, yielded the highest Seebeck coefficient in a ternary NiSn-based HH compound up to this date. Hall effect and band gap measurements of this system showed, that the high mobility of minority carrier electrons dominate the transport properties at temperatures above 500 K. It could be shown that this is the reason, why n-type HH are successful TE materials for high temperature applications, and that p-types are subjected to bipolar effects which will lead to diminished thermoelectric efficiencies at high temperatures.rnrnTo complement the experimental investigations on different metal dopants and their influence on the TE properties of HH compounds, numerical solutions to the Boltzmann transport equation were used to predict the optimum carrier concentration where the maximum TE efficiency occurs for p-type HH compounds. The results for p-type samples showed that can not be treated within a simple parabolic band model approach, due to bipolar and multi-band effects.rnrnThe parabolic band model is commonly used for bulk TE materials. It is most accurate when the transport properties are dominated by one single carrier type. Since the transport properties of n-type HH are dominated by only one carrier type (high mobility electrons), it could be shown, that the use of a simple parabolic band model lead to a successful prediction of the optimized carrier concentration and thermoelectric efficiency in n-type HH compounds. rn
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:
Il presente elaborato offre una panoramica generale del Remote Interpreting (RI) con l'obiettivo di strutturare un ipotetico seminario da tenere alla SLLTI (Scuola di Lingue e Letterature, Traduzione e Interpretazione, ex SSLMIT) di Forlì, in collaborazione con l'azienda VEASYT, spin-off dell’università Ca' Foscari di Venezia, per introdurre l'argomento agli studenti del corso di laurea in Interpretazione di Conferenza. A tal scopo la tesi è stata suddivisa in dieci capitoli, ognuno dei quali analizza una sfaccettatura dell'interpretazione da remoto; la prima parte verte sull'evoluzione storica delle nuove tecnologie nel mondo dell'interpretariato, con particolare attenzione all'introduzione degli impianti per l'interpretazione simultanea e delle Tecnologie dell'Informazione e della Comunicazione (TIC); si presentano inoltre i principali tipi di interpretazione a distanza, seguendo la loro comparsa in ordine cronologico, e i dispositivi necessari per effettuare una sessione di video-interpretazione. Nella seconda parte si descrivono alcuni ambiti di applicazione del RI (RI per non udenti, in ambito giuridico, in ambito medico-sanitario) e si illustra la situazione a livello mondiale passando in rassegna, a titolo di esempio, alcune aziende presenti in Australia, Stati Uniti, Germania, Austria e Gran Bretagna. Nella terza parte si presentano alcuni regolamenti e disposizioni raccomandati da associazioni di categoria e dalle istituzioni europee e si analizzano i principali vantaggi e svantaggi del RI. Nella quarta parte si mettono a confronto le caratteristiche e il tipo di formazione di un interprete che lavora in situ con quelle di un interprete che lavora a distanza, illustrando alcune strategie sviluppate dagli interpreti durante le sessioni di RI. L'ultima parte riguarda l'azienda VEASYT, la quale viene presentata come case study italiano, descrivendo la sua piattaforma per il servizio di interpretariato da remoto e la modalità di reclutamento degli interpreti. In conclusione si trova la proposta di seminario da tenere ipoteticamente alla SLLTI di Forlì, che viene articolata seguendo la successione dei capitoli precedenti.
Resumo:
In tissue engineering, a variety of methods are commonly used to evaluate survival of cells inside tissues or three-dimensional (3D) carriers. Among these methods confocal laser scanning microscopy opened accessibility of 3D tissue using live cell imaging into the tissue or 3D scaffolds. However, although this technique is ideally applied to 3D tissue or scaffolds with thickness up to several millimetres, this application is surprisingly rare and scans are often done on slices with thickness <20 μm. Here, we present novel protocols for the staining of 3D tissue (e.g. intervertebral disc tissue) and scaffolds, such as fibrin gels or alginate beads.
Bewegungsspiele - Martinus Half-Time und die Rolle des Ballsports in der französischen Musik um 1920
Resumo:
Leaders and faculty at private colleges and universities should support funding for public higher education.
Resumo:
We use long instrumental temperature series together with available field reconstructions of sea-level pressure (SLP) and three-dimensional climate model simulations to analyze relations between temperature anomalies and atmospheric circulation patterns over much of Europe and the Mediterranean for the late winter/early spring (January–April, JFMA) season. A Canonical Correlation Analysis (CCA) investigates interannual to interdecadal covariability between a new gridded SLP field reconstruction and seven long instrumental temperature series covering the past 250 years. We then present and discuss prominent atmospheric circulation patterns related to anomalous warm and cold JFMA conditions within different European areas spanning the period 1760–2007. Next, using a data assimilation technique, we link gridded SLP data with a climate model (EC-Bilt-Clio) for a better dynamical understanding of the relationship between large scale circulation and European climate. We thus present an alternative approach to reconstruct climate for the pre-instrumental period based on the assimilated model simulations. Furthermore, we present an independent method to extend the dynamic circulation analysis for anomalously cold European JFMA conditions back to the sixteenth century. To this end, we use documentary records that are spatially representative for the long instrumental records and derive, through modern analogs, large-scale SLP, surface temperature and precipitation fields. The skill of the analog method is tested in the virtual world of two three-dimensional climate simulations (ECHO-G and HadCM3). This endeavor offers new possibilities to both constrain climate model into a reconstruction mode (through the assimilation approach) and to better asses documentary data in a quantitative way.
Resumo:
This study uses the carapace of emydid turtles to address hypothesized differences between terrestrial and aquatic species. Geometric morphometrics are used to quantify shell shape, and performance is estimated for two shell functions: shell strength and hydrodynamics. Aquatic turtle shells differ in shape from terrestrial turtle shells and are characterized by lower frontal areas and presumably lower drag. Terrestrial turtle shells are stronger than those of aquatic turtles; many-to-one mapping of morphology to function does not entirely mitigate a functional trade-off between mechanical strength and hydrodynamic performance. Furthermore, areas of morphospace characterized by exceptionally poor performance in either of the functions are not occupied by any emydid species. Though aquatic and terrestrial species show no significant differences in the rate of morphological evolution, aquatic species show a higher lineage density, indicative of a greater amount of convergence in their evolutionary history. The techniques employed in this study, including the modeling of theoretical shapes to assess performance in unoccupied areas of morphospace, suggest a framework for future studies of morphological variation.
Resumo:
Background. Measles control may be more challenging in regions with a high prevalence of HIV infection. HIV-infected children are likely to derive particular benefit from measles vaccines because of an increased risk of severe illness. However, HIV infection can impair vaccine effectiveness and may increase the risk of serious adverse events after receipt of live vaccines. We conducted a systematic review to assess the safety and immunogenicity of measles vaccine in HIV-infected children. Methods. The authors searched 8 databases through 12 February 2009 and reference lists. Study selection and data extraction were conducted in duplicate. Meta-analysis was conducted when appropriate. Results. Thirty-nine studies published from 1987 through 2008 were included. In 19 studies with information about measles vaccine safety, more than half reported no serious adverse events. Among HIV-infected children, 59% (95% confidence intervals [CI], 46–71%) were seropositive after receiving standard-titer measles vaccine at 6 months (1 study), comparable to the proportion of seropositive HIV-infected children vaccinated at 9 (8 studies) and 12 months (10 studies). Among HIV-exposed but uninfected and HIV-unexposed children, the proportion of seropositive children increased with increasing age at vaccination. Fewer HIV-infected children were protected after vaccination at 12 months than HIV-exposed but uninfected children (relative risk, 0.61; 95% CI, .50–.73). Conclusions. Measles vaccines appear to be safe in HIV-infected children, but the evidence is limited. When the burden of measles is high, measles vaccination at 6 months of age is likely to benefit children of HIV-infected women, regardless of the child's HIV infection status.