350 research outputs found

    Theoretical insights on electron donor-acceptor interactions involving carbon dioxide

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    Electron donor-acceptor (EDA) interactions are widely involved in chemistry and their understanding is essential to design new technological applications in a variety of fields ranging from material sciences and chemical engineering to medicine. In this work, we study EDA complexes of carbon dioxide with ketones using several ab initio and Density Functional Theory methods. Energy contributions to the interaction energy have been analyzed in detail using both variational and perturbational treatments. Dispersion energy has been shown to play a key role in explaining the high stability of a non-conventional structure, which can roughly be described by a cooperative EDA interaction

    Slott-Agape Project

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    SLOTT-AGAPE (Systematic Lensing Observation at Toppo Telescope - Andromeda Gravitational Amplification Pixel Lensing Experiment) is a new collaboration project among international partners from England, France, Germany, Italy and Switzerland that intends to perform microlensing observation by using M31 as target. The MACHOs search is made thanks to the pixel lensing technique.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, proceeding of XLIII Congresso della Societa' Astronomica Italiana, Napoli, 4-8 Maggio, 199

    Measurement of the branching fraction for the decay KS --> pi e nu

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    We present a measurement of the branching ratio BR(KS --> pi e nu) performed using the KLOE detector. KS mesons are produced in the reaction e+ e- --> phi --> KS KL at the DAFNE collider. In a sample of about 5 million KS-tagged events we find 624 +- 30 semileptonic KS decays. Normalizing to the KS --> pi+ pi- count in the same data sample, we obtain BR(KS --> pi e nu) = (6.91 +- 0.37) 10^-4, in agreement with the Standard Model expectation.Comment: 9 pages, 5 Encapsulated Postscript figures. Submitted to Phys. Lett.

    Study of the Decay phi --> eta pi0 gamma with the KLOE detector

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    In a sample of 5.3x10^7 phi-decays observed with the KLOE detector at the Frascati phi-factory Dafne we find 605 eta pi0 gamma events with eta --> gamma\gamma and 197 eta pi0 gamma events with eta --> pi+ pi- pi0. The decay phi --> eta pi0 gamma is dominated by the process phi --> a0 gamma. From a fit to the eta pi0 mass spectrum we find BR(phi --> ao(980) gamma)= (7.4 +- 0.7)x10^-5.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys.Lett.

    Measuring the hadronic cross section via radiative return

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    Recently it has been demonstrated that particle factories, such as DAPHNE and PEP-II, operating at fixed center-of-mass energies, are able to measure hadronic cross sections as a function of the hadronic system energy using the raditive return. This paper is an experimental overview of the progress in this aera. Preliminary results from KLOE for the process e+e- -> \rho \gamma -> \pi+\pi-\gamma and a fit to the pion form factor are presented. Some first results from the BABAR collaboration are also shown.Comment: Invited talk presented at RADCOR/Loops and Legs 2002, Kloster Banz/Germany, September 8-13 2002, 6 pages, 2 Figures; v1: references added, typos correcte

    Design and validation of thermal comfort questionnaire using exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses

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    Within the field of indoor environmental quality, several objective and subjective techniques have been developed to monitor conditions and provide user feedback. One such approach features occupant-centred questionnaires, indicating different aspects of comfort, including thermal, visual, acoustic or related to air quality. This study introduces the development and validation of such a questionnaire to optimise its completion rate and meaningfulness. Exploration and confirmatory analysis techniques were applied to identify the questionnaire's underlying structures, and the models' reliability and validation secured the validity of our findings. Questionnaire factors appeared to be connected to different aspects of temperature and humidity, each accounting for a significant portion of response variability, indicating that the questionnaire items effectively capture multiple dimensions within these constructs. The proposed thermal comfort questionnaire was also found to be reliable, with room for improvement through additional testing of individual elements. Overall, the questionnaire serves its intended purpose and can be used in subsequent analysis to improve the indoor environments of building occupants. The validation logic presented here, an essential step in the process of monitoring and building improvements, can serve as a set of guidelines and be replicated by other studies employing subjective feedback collection in the indoor environmental quality realm

    Design and validation of thermal comfort questionnaire using exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses

    Get PDF
    Within the field of indoor environmental quality, several objective and subjective techniques have been developed to monitor conditions and provide user feedback. One such approach features occupant-centred questionnaires, indicating different aspects of comfort, including thermal, visual, acoustic or related to air quality. This study introduces the development and validation of such a questionnaire to optimise its completion rate and meaningfulness. Exploration and confirmatory analysis techniques were applied to identify the questionnaire's underlying structures, and the models’ reliability and validation secured the validity of our findings. Questionnaire factors appeared to be connected to different aspects of temperature and humidity, each accounting for a significant portion of response variability, indicating that the questionnaire items effectively capture multiple dimensions within these constructs. The proposed thermal comfort questionnaire was also found to be reliable, with room for improvement through additional testing of individual elements. Overall, the questionnaire serves its intended purpose and can be used in subsequent analysis to improve the indoor environments of building occupants. The validation logic presented here, an essential step in the process of monitoring and building improvements, can serve as a set of guidelines and be replicated by other studies employing subjective feedback collection in the indoor environmental quality realm

    Au Nanoparticles Decorated Graphene-Based Hybrid Nanocomposite for As(III) Electroanalytical Detection

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    Electrochemical sensors integrating hybrid nanostructured platforms are a promising alternative to conventional detection techniques for addressing highly relevant challenges of heavy metal determination in the environment. Hybrid nanocomposites based on graphene derivatives and inorganic nanoparticles (NPs) are ideal candidates as active materials for detecting heavy metals, as they merge the relevant physico-chemical properties of both the components, finally leading to a rapid and sensitive current response. In this work, a hybrid nanocomposite formed of reduced graphene oxide (RGO) sheets, surface functionalized by π-π interactions with 1-pyrene carboxylic acid (PCA), and decorated in situ by Au NPs, was synthesized by using a colloidal route. The hybrid nanocomposite was characterized by cyclic voltammetry and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy with respect to the corresponding single components, both bare and deposited as a layer-by-layer junction onto the electrode. The results demonstrated the high electrochemical activity of the hybrid nanocomposite with respect to the single components, highlighting the crucial role of the nanostructured surface morphology of the electrode and the PCA coupling agent at the NPs-RGO interphase in enhancing the nanocomposite electroactivity. Finally, the Au NP-decorated PCA-RGO sheets were tested by anodic stripping voltammetry of As(III) ion—a particularly relevant analyte among heavy metal ions—in order to assess the sensing ability of the nanocomposite material with respect to its single components. The nanocomposite has been found to present a sensitivity higher than that characterizing the bare components, with LODs complying with the directives established by the U.S. EPA and in line with those reported for state-of-the-art electrochemical sensors based on other Au-graphene nanocomposites

    Multi-level engineering facilitates the production of phenylpropanoid compounds in tomato

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    Phenylpropanoids comprise an important class of plant secondary metabolites. A number of transcription factors have been used to upregulate-specific branches of phenylpropanoid metabolism, but by far the most effective has been the fruit-specific expression of AtMYB12 in tomato, which resulted in as much as 10% of fruit dry weight accumulating as flavonols and hydroxycinnamates. We show that AtMYB12 not only increases the demand of flavonoid biosynthesis but also increases the supply of carbon from primary metabolism, energy and reducing power, which may fuel the shikimate and phenylalanine biosynthetic pathways to supply more aromatic amino acids for secondary metabolism. AtMYB12 directly binds promoters of genes encoding enzymes of primary metabolism. The enhanced supply of precursors, energy and reducing power achieved by AtMYB12 expression can be harnessed to engineer high levels of novel phenylpropanoids in tomato fruit, offering an effective production system for bioactives and other high value ingredients
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