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A building's indoor climate is an essential input variable for a variety of building physics computational models, simulations, and analyses. Precise knowledge of the indoor climate is necessary to minimize the risk of mold or moisture damage and is required to ensure minimum heat insulation standards in buildings. Detailed data are especially necessary for the progressive application of transient calculations, for example, concerning thermal comfort or energy consumption. While the properties of building materials and the (local) outdoor climate are known, only rudimentary information about the dynamic indoor climate is available. Most existing information in the literature about indoor climate is fairly general and forgoes a differentiation between climatic region, occupancy profile, and the utilization of rooms. In this paper, we report on indoor climate measurements in naturally ventilated apartments over a period of 1 year. The measurement results complement the existing data to provide accurate indoor climate data in buildings. The measured values of indoor temperature and relative humidity serve to derive the dew point temperature and moisture load whereby dynamic time-dependent regression functions are determined for these parameters. The evaluations are carried out separately according to room use. The comparison of living rooms and bedrooms indicates a great influence of room use on the indoor climate in residential buildings. The determined indoor climate model can be used for the planning of buildings and simulations. The classification into living rooms and bedrooms makes it possible to take user behavior into account more realistically in building physics simulations. The minimum thermal insulation in residential buildings can also be checked and designed based on realistic data. The prediction interval describes the limits in which residential rooms are free of damage with a high probability. In this way, the indoor climate model describes an approach to examine and evaluate simulation results regarding condensation risk and mold damage in naturally ventilated rooms.
Magnetic heterostructures consisting of single-crystal yttrium iron garnet (YIG) films coated with platinum are widely used in spin-wave experiments related to spintronic phenomena such as the spin-transfer-torque, spin-Hall, and spin-Seebeck effects. However, spin waves in YIG/Pt bilayers experience much stronger attenuation than in bare YIG films. For micrometer-thick YIG films, this effect is caused by microwave eddy currents in the Pt layer. This paper reports that by employing an excitation configuration in which the YIG film faces the metal plate of the microstrip antenna structure, the eddy currents in Pt are shunted and the transmission of the Damon–Eschbach surface spin wave is greatly improved. The reduction in spin-wave attenuation persists even when the Pt coating is separated from the ground plate by a thin dielectric layer. This makes the proposed excitation configuration suitable for injection of an electric current into the Pt layer and thus for application in spintronics devices. The theoretical analysis carried out within the framework of the electrodynamic approach reveals how the platinum nanolayer and the nearby highly conductive metal plate affect the group velocity and the lifetime of the Damon–Eshbach surface wave and how these two wavelength-dependent quantities determine the transmission characteristics of the spin-wave device.
A novel core–shell species for the adsorption-based separation of carbon dioxide (CO2) from methane (CH4) is introduced by hydrothermal synthesis of Ni-MOF-74 on mesoporous spherical Al2O3 carrier substrate. The material was characterized and the shell thickness determined by means of optical and scanning electron microscopy as well as volumetric adsorption and fluid displacement experiments. Kinetic experiments with Ni-MOF-74@Al2O3 core–shell composites carried out at 303.15 K and at pressures up to 10 bar expose remarkably dominating uptake rates for CO2 over CH4. In the contrary Ni-MOF-74@Al2O3 appears to be unselective according to equilibrium data at the same conditions. Dynamic breakthrough experiments of binary CH4/CO2-mixtures (at 303.15 K and 5 bar) prove the prevailing effect of adsorption kinetics and the storage function of the mesoporous core. This statement is supported by a considerable boost in CO2-selectivity and capacity compared to adsorption equilibria measured on pure Ni-MOF-74 by the factor of 55.02 and up to 2.42, respectively.
Surface wetting can be simulated using a phase field approach which describes the continuous liquid-gas transition with the help of an order parameter. In this publication, wetting of non-planar surfaces is investigated based on a phase field model by Diewald et al. [1, 2]. Different scenarios of droplets on rough surfaces are simulated. The static equilibrium for those scenarios is calculated using an Allen-Cahn evolution equation. The influence of the surface morphology on the resulting contact angle is investigated while the width of the phase transition from liquid to gas is varied as a model parameter.
The great flexibility of direct laser writing (DLW) arises from the possibility to fabricate precise three-dimensional structures on very small scales as well as the broad range of applicable materials. However, there is still a vast number of promising materials, which are currently inaccessible requiring the continuous development of novel photoresists. Herein, a new bio-sourced resist is reported that uses the monomeric unit of chitin, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, paving the way from existing hydrogel resists based on animal carbohydrates to a new class of non-hydrogel ones. In addition, it is shown that the combined use of two photoinitiators is advantageous over the use of a single one. In this approach, the first photoinitiator is a good two-photon absorber at the applied wavelength, while the second photoinitiator exhibits poor two-photon absorbtion abilities, but is better suited for cross-linking of the monomer. The first photoinitiator absorbs the light acting as a sensitizer and transfers the energy to the second initiator, which subsequently forms a radical and initializes the polymerization. This sensitization effect enables a new route to utilize reactive photointiators with a small two-photon absorption cross section for DLW without changing their chemical structure.
Starting from [(η5-cyclopentadienyl)(η6-phenyl)iron(II)]imidazole, dicationic imidazolium salts were prepared by N-alkylation. Reaction of these compounds with basic metal precursors such as mesityl copper(I) or palladium(II) acetate led to mono respectively dicationic transition metal NHC complexes (NHC=N-heterocyclic carbene). Transmetalation using the copper(I) complexes opened up the access to NHC gold(I) compounds. PEPPSI-type NHC complexes of palladium(II) and platinum(II) were prepared by offering a neutral pyridine ligand to the transition metal center. A rhodium(I) NHC complex was accessible by deprotonation of the dicationic imidazolium precursor and subsequent treatment with [(COD)Rh(μ2-Cl)]2 (COD=1,5-cyclooctadiene). The new NHC complexes were investigated by means of NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry as well as single crystal X-ray structure analysis. Both, the palladium(II) containing PEPPSI-type and the gold(I) complex, were investigated for their catalytic properties in typical model reactions such as cyclization reactions, Suzuki coupling and cyanation. In addition, a selenium adduct was synthesized in order to study the electronic properties of the underlying ligand backbone. Based on the chemical shift in the 77Se NMR spectrum, it is evident that these NHC ligands possess rather poor π-acidity.
Janus materials are anisotropic nano- and microarchitectures with two different faces consisting of distinguishable or opposite physicochemical properties. In parallel with the discovery of new methods for the fabrication of these materials, decisive progress has been made in their application, for example, in biological science, catalysis, pharmaceuticals, and, more recently, in battery technology. This Minireview systematically covers recent and significant achievements in the application of task-specific Janus nanomaterials as heterogeneous catalysts in various types of chemical reactions, including reduction, oxidative desulfurization and dye degradation, asymmetric catalysis, biomass transformation, cascade reactions, oxidation, transition-metal-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions, electro- and photocatalytic reactions, as well as gas-phase reactions. Finally, an outlook on possible future applications is given.
The folding of newly synthesized polypeptides requires the coordinated action of molecular chaperones. Prokaryotic cells and the chloroplasts of plant cells possess the ribosome-associated chaperone trigger factor, which binds nascent polypeptides at their exit stage from the ribosomal tunnel. The structure of bacterial trigger factor has been well characterized and it has a dragon-shaped conformation, with flexible domains responsible for ribosome binding, peptidyl-prolyl cis–trans isomerization (PPIase) activity and substrate protein binding. Chloroplast trigger-factor sequences have diversified from those of their bacterial orthologs and their molecular mechanism in plant organelles has been little investigated to date. Here, the crystal structure of the plastidic trigger factor from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is presented at 2.6 Å resolution. Due to the high intramolecular flexibility of the protein, diffraction to this resolution was only achieved using a protein that lacked the N-terminal ribosome-binding domain. The eukaryotic trigger factor from C. reinhardtii exhibits a comparable dragon-shaped conformation to its bacterial counterpart. However, the C-terminal chaperone domain displays distinct charge distributions, with altered positioning of the helical arms and a specifically altered charge distribution along the surface responsible for substrate binding. While the PPIase domain shows a highly conserved structure compared with other PPIases, its rather weak activity and an unusual orientation towards the C-terminal domain points to specific adaptations of eukaryotic trigger factor for function in chloroplasts.
An improved route for the highly stereoselective synthesis of (Z)-2-oxyenamides is reported. The desired products can be accessed in only three steps from aminoacetaldehyde dimethyl acetal as common, readily available building block in a highly modular fashion. The improved procedure has been applied to the synthesis of various acylated and sufonylated oxyenamides. Mechanistic and theoretical studies provide a conclusive rationale for the observed stereoselectivities.
Scaled boundary isogeometric analysis (SB-IGA) describes the computational domain by proper boundary NURBS together with a well-defined scaling center; see [5]. More precisely, we consider star convex domains whose domain boundaries correspond to a sequence of NURBS curves and the interior is determined by a scaling of the boundary segments with respect to a chosen scaling center. However, providing a decomposition into star shaped blocks one can utilize SB-IGA also for more general shapes. Even though several geometries can be described by a single patch, in applications frequently there appear multipatch structures. Whereas a C0 continuous patch coupling can be achieved relatively easily, the situation becomes more complicated if higher regularity is required. Consequently, a suitable coupling method is inevitably needed for analyses that require global C1 continuity.In this contribution we apply the concept of analysis-suitable G1 parametrizations [2] to the framework of SB-IGA for the C1 coupling of planar domains with a special consideration of the scaling center. We obtain globally C1 regular basis functions and this enables us to handle problems such as the Kirchhoff-Love plate and shell, where smooth coupling is an issue. Furthermore, the boundary representation within SB-IGA makes the method suitable for the concept of trimming. In particular, we see the possibility to extend the coupling procedure to study trimmed plates and shells.The approach was implemented using the GeoPDEs package [1] and its performance was tested on several numerical examples. Finally, we discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the proposed method and outline future perspectives.