2,300 research outputs found

    Double layer for hard spheres with an off-center charge

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    Simulations for the density and potential profiles of the ions in the planar electrical double layer of a model electrolyte or an ionic liquid are reported. The ions of a real electrolyte or an ionic liquid are usually not spheres; in ionic liquids, the cations are molecular ions. In the past, this asymmetry has been modelled by considering spheres that are asymmetric in size and/or valence (viz., the primitive model) or by dimer cations that are formed by tangentially touching spheres. In this paper we consider spherical ions that are asymmetric in size and mimic the asymmetrical shape through an off-center charge that is located away from the center of the cation spheres, while the anion charge is at the center of anion spheres. The various singlet density and potential profiles are compared to (i) the dimer situation, that is, the constituent spheres of the dimer cation are tangentially tethered, and (ii) the standard primitive model. The results reveal the double layer structure to be substantially impacted especially when the cation is the counterion. As well as being of intrinsic interest, this off-center charge model may be useful for theories that consider spherical models and introduce the off-center charge as a perturbation.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure

    Influence of anisotropic ion shape, asymmetric valency, and electrolyte concentration on structural and thermodynamic properties of an electric double layer

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    Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulation results are reported for an electric double layer modelled by a planar charged hard wall, anisotropic shape cations, and spherical anions at different electrolyte concentrations and asymmetric valencies. The cations consist of two tangentially tethered hard spheres of the same diameter, dd. One sphere is charged while the other is neutral. Spherical anions are charged hard spheres of diameter dd. The ion valency asymmetry 1:2 and 2:1 is considered, with the ions being immersed in a solvent mimicked by a continuum dielectric medium at standard temperature. The simulations are carried out for the following electrolyte concentrations: 0.1, 1.0 and 2.0 M. Profiles of the electrode-ion, electrode-neutral sphere singlet distributions, the average orientation of dimers, and the mean electrostatic potential are calculated for a given electrode surface charge, σ\sigma, while the contact electrode potential and the differential capacitance are presented for varying electrode charge. With an increasing electrolyte concentration, the shape of differential capacitance curve changes from that with a minimum surrounded by maxima into that of a distorted single maximum. For a 2:1 electrolyte, the maximum is located at a small negative σ\sigma value while for 1:2, at a small positive value.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure

    Human cachexia induces changes in mitochondria, autophagy and apoptosis in the skeletal muscle

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    Cachexia is a wasting syndrome characterized by the continuous loss of skeletal muscle mass due to imbalance between protein synthesis and degradation, which is related with poor prognosis and compromised quality of life. Dysfunctional mitochondria are associated with lower muscle strength and muscle atrophy in cancer patients, yet poorly described in human cachexia. We herein investigated mitochondrial morphology, autophagy and apoptosis in the skeletal muscle of patients with gastrointestinal cancer-associated cachexia (CC), as compared with a weight-stable cancer group (WSC). CC showed prominent weight loss and increased circulating levels of serum C-reactive protein, lower body mass index and decreased circulating hemoglobin, when compared to WSC. Electron microscopy analysis revealed an increase in intermyofibrillar mitochondrial area in CC, as compared to WSC. Relative gene expression of Fission 1, a protein related to mitochondrial fission, was increased in CC, as compared to WSC. LC3 II, autophagy-related (ATG) 5 and 7 essential proteins for autophagosome formation, presented higher content in the cachectic group. Protein levels of phosphorylated p53 (Ser46), activated caspase 8 (Asp384) and 9 (Asp315) were also increased in the skeletal muscle of CC. Overall, our results demonstrate that human cancer-associated cachexia leads to exacerbated muscle-stress response that may culminate in muscle loss, which is in part due to disruption of mitochondrial morphology, dysfunctional autophagy and increased apoptosis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report showing quantitative morphological alterations in skeletal muscle mitochondria in cachectic patients

    Comparação entre extratores químicos de fósforo disponível.

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    Foram comparados três extratos quimicos de fósforo dispon¡vel em um Latossolo Vermelho-Escuro submetido a quatro tratamentos de adubação fosfatada (0, 150 e 450 mg de P/dm3 de solo). Os extratores qu¡micos testados foram: Mehlich 1, Mehlich 3 e resina trocadora de ânions. Entre esses, sobressaiu-se a resina, com maiores coeficientes de correlação entre a matéria seca da parte aérea de plantas de milho e o fósforo acumulado no tecido vegetal e com o fósforo extra¡do do solo. A resina também recuperou maior quantidade de fósforo do solo, além de ter apresentado correlação significativa com os outros extratores.bitstream/item/35785/1/Bol18.pd

    Riding a Spiral Wave: Numerical Simulation of Spiral Waves in a Co-Moving Frame of Reference

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    We describe an approach to numerical simulation of spiral waves dynamics of large spatial extent, using small computational grids.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, as accepted by Phys Rev E 2010/03/2

    Percolation Threshold, Fisher Exponent, and Shortest Path Exponent for 4 and 5 Dimensions

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    We develop a method of constructing percolation clusters that allows us to build very large clusters using very little computer memory by limiting the maximum number of sites for which we maintain state information to a number of the order of the number of sites in the largest chemical shell of the cluster being created. The memory required to grow a cluster of mass s is of the order of sθs^\theta bytes where θ\theta ranges from 0.4 for 2-dimensional lattices to 0.5 for 6- (or higher)-dimensional lattices. We use this method to estimate dmind_{\scriptsize min}, the exponent relating the minimum path \ell to the Euclidean distance r, for 4D and 5D hypercubic lattices. Analyzing both site and bond percolation, we find dmin=1.607±0.005d_{\scriptsize min}=1.607\pm 0.005 (4D) and dmin=1.812±0.006d_{\scriptsize min}=1.812\pm 0.006 (5D). In order to determine dmind_{\scriptsize min} to high precision, and without bias, it was necessary to first find precise values for the percolation threshold, pcp_c: pc=0.196889±0.000003p_c=0.196889\pm 0.000003 (4D) and pc=0.14081±0.00001p_c=0.14081\pm 0.00001 (5D) for site and pc=0.160130±0.000003p_c=0.160130\pm 0.000003 (4D) and pc=0.118174±0.000004p_c=0.118174\pm 0.000004 (5D) for bond percolation. We also calculate the Fisher exponent, τ\tau, determined in the course of calculating the values of pcp_c: τ=2.313±0.003\tau=2.313\pm 0.003 (4D) and τ=2.412±0.004\tau=2.412\pm 0.004 (5D)

    Exposing errors related to weak memory in GPU applications

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    © 2016 ACM.We present the systematic design of a testing environment that uses stressing and fuzzing to reveal errors in GPU applications that arise due to weak memory effects. We evaluate our approach on seven GPUS spanning three NVIDIA architectures, across ten CUDA applications that use fine-grained concurrency. Our results show that applications that rarely or never exhibit errors related to weak memory when executed natively can readily exhibit these errors when executed in our testing environment. Our testing environment also provides a means to help identify the root causes of such errors, and automatically suggests how to insert fences that harden an application against weak memory bugs. To understand the cost of GPU fences, we benchmark applications with fences provided by the hardening strategy as well as a more conservative, sound fencing strategy

    Intermediate temperature dynamics of one-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnets

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    We present a general theory for the intermediate temperature (T) properties of Heisenberg antiferromagnets of spin-S ions on p-leg ladders, valid for 2Sp even or odd. Following an earlier proposal for 2Sp even (Damle and Sachdev, cond-mat/9711014), we argue that an integrable, classical, continuum model of a fixed-length, 3-vector applies over an intermediate temperature range; this range becomes very wide for moderate and large values of 2Sp. The coupling constants of the effective model are known exactly in terms of the energy gap above the ground state (for 2Sp even) or a crossover scale (for 2Sp odd). Analytic and numeric results for dynamic and transport properties are obtained, including some exact results for the spin-wave damping. Numerous quantitative predictions for neutron scattering and NMR experiments are made. A general discussion on the nature of T>0 transport in integrable systems is also presented: an exact solution of a toy model proves that diffusion can exist in integrable systems, provided proper care is taken in approaching the thermodynamic limit.Comment: 38 pages, including 12 figure
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