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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.
Print path-dependent contact temperature dependency for 3D printing using fused filament fabrication
(2022)
This paper focuses on the effects of different time spans and thus different contact temperatures when a molten strand contacts an adjacent already solidified strand in a plane during 3D printing with fused filament fabrication. For this purpose, both the manufacturing parameters and the geometry of the component are systematically varied and the effect on morphology and mechanical properties is investigated. The results clearly show that even with identical printing parameters, the transitions between the individual layers are much more visible with long time spans until fusion and lead to low mechanical properties. In contrast, short spans lead to hardly visible welds and high mechanical properties. Transferring the findings to different component sizes ultimately verifies that the average temperature at the time of contact between the already solidified and the currently deposited strand is decisive for component quality. In order to generate high component qualities, this finding must therefore be taken into account in the future in the path generation strategy, i.e., in so-called slicing.
Methods for predicting Henry's law constants Hij are important as experimental data are scarce. We introduce a new machine learning approach for such predictions: matrix completion methods (MCMs) and demonstrate its applicability using a data base that contains experimental Hij values for 101 solutes i and 247 solvents j at 298 K. Data on Hij are only available for 2661 systems i + j. These Hij are stored in a 101 × 247 matrix; the task of the MCM is to predict the missing entries. First, an entirely data-driven MCM is presented. Its predictive performance, evaluated using leave-one-out analysis, is similar to that of the Predictive Soave-Redlich-Kwong equation-of-state (PSRK-EoS), which, however, cannot be applied to all studied systems. Furthermore, a hybrid of MCM and PSRK-EoS is developed in a Bayesian framework, which yields an unprecedented performance for the prediction of Hij of the studied data set.
Based on conservation of resources theory, this paper examines the mediating mechanisms in the relationship between digital affordances and employee corporate entrepreneurship participation likelihood. Findings from an experimental study with 207 employees show a statistically significant and positive indirect effect of digital affordances on employee corporate entrepreneurship participation likelihood through employee-perceived information technology support for innovation and a statistically significant and—contrary to our expectations—positive indirect effect through employee-perceived work overload. Results are corroborated by insights from in-depth interviews with senior managers. They provide support for digital affordances as action potentials that are associated with resource gains that in turn foster employee corporate entrepreneurship participation likelihood.
Overexpression of the vacuolar sugar transporter TST1 in Arabidopsis leads to higher seed lipid levels and higher total seed yield per plant. However, effects on fruit biomass have not been observed in crop plants like melon, strawberry, cotton, apple, or tomato with increased tonoplast sugar transporter (TST) activity. Thus, it was unclear whether overexpression of TST in selected crops might lead to increased fruit yield, as observed in Arabidopsis. Here, we report that constitutive overexpression of TST1 from sugar beet in the important crop species Camelina sativa (false flax) resembles the seed characteristics observed for Arabidopsis upon increased TST activity. These effects go along with a stimulation of sugar export from source leaves and not only provoke optimised seed properties like higher lipid levels and increased overall seed yield per plant, but also modify the root architecture of BvTST1 overexpressing Camelina lines. Such mutants grew longer primary roots and showed an increased number of lateral roots, especially when developed under conditions of limited water supply. These changes in root properties result in a stabilisation of total seed yield under drought conditions. In summary, we demonstrate that increased vacuolar TST activity may lead to optimised yield of an oil-seed crop species with high levels of healthy ω3 fatty acids in storage lipids. Moreover, since BvTST1 overexpressing Camelina mutants, in addition, exhibit optimised yield under limited water availability, we might devise a strategy to create crops with improved tolerance against drought, representing one of the most challenging environmental cues today and in future.
Cyanobacteria oxygenated Earth's atmosphere ~2.4 billion years ago, during the Great Oxygenation Event (GOE), through oxygenic photosynthesis. Their high iron requirement was presumably met by high levels of Fe(II) in the anoxic Archean environment. We found that many deeply branching Cyanobacteria, including two Gloeobacter and four Pseudanabaena spp., cannot synthesize the Fe(II) specific transporter, FeoB. Phylogenetic and relaxed molecular clock analyses find evidence that FeoB and the Fe(III) transporters, cFTR1 and FutB, were present in Proterozoic, but not earlier Archaean lineages of Cyanobacteria. Furthermore Pseudanabaena sp. PCC7367, an early diverging marine, benthic strain grown under simulated Archean conditions, constitutively expressed cftr1, even after the addition of Fe(II). Our genetic profiling suggests that, prior to the GOE, ancestral Cyanobacteria may have utilized alternative metal iron transporters such as ZIP, NRAMP, or FicI, and possibly also scavenged exogenous siderophore bound Fe(III), as they only acquired the necessary Fe(II) and Fe(III) transporters during the Proterozoic. Given that Cyanobacteria arose 3.3–3.6 billion years ago, it is possible that limitations in iron uptake may have contributed to the delay in their expansion during the Archean, and hence the oxygenation of the early Earth.
In selective laser melting (SLM), a powdered material is locally melted by a laser and, after cooling, forms a coherent solid structure that enables the production of complex geometries with various materials. The process involves extreme heating and cooling rates and, thus, large temperature gradients, which lead to anisotropic material properties on the macroscopic scale and, in the worst case, reduced mechanical properties. In order to reliably predict the final mechanical component properties, simulations can be performed at different time and length scales. Enormous computational resources are often required to perform such simulations. In order to transform these simulations into suitable surrogate models, the generated data must be compressed and evaluated in a suitable way. This paper shows first preliminary work and a possible new data description of such simulations.
In diesem Beitrag stellt sich die Nachwuchswissenschaftlerin Dr.-Ing. Dorina Strieth vom Lehrgebiet Bioverfahrenstechnik der TU Kaiserslautern vor. Neben aktuellen Forschungsarbeiten und Lehraktivität berichtet sie über die Notwendigkeit des Wissenstransfers in die Zivilgesellschaft. Fachlich berichtet sie von aktuellen Ergebnissen der intelligenten Nutzung phototropher Biofilme sowie dem Potenzial zur biotechnologischen Herstellung nachhaltiger Baumaterialien.
Tracking waterborne microplastic (MP) in urban areas is a challenging task because of the various sources and transport pathways involved. Since MP occurs in low concentrations in most wastewater and stormwater streams, large sample volumes need to be captured, prepared, and carefully analyzed. The recent research in urban areas focused mainly on MP emissions at wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), as obvious entry points into receiving waters. However, important transport pathways under wet-weather conditions are yet not been investigated thoroughly. In addition, the lack of comprehensive and comparable sampling strategies complicated the attempts for a deeper understanding of occurrence and sources. The goal of this paper is to (i) introduce and describe sampling strategies for MP at different locations in a municipal catchment area under dry and wet-weather conditions, (ii) quantify MP emissions from the entire catchment and two other smaller ones within the bigger catchment, and (iii) compare the emissions under dry and wet-weather conditions. WWTP has a high removal rate of MP (>96%), with an estimated emission rate of 189 kg/a or 0.94 g/[population equivalents (PEQ · a)], and polyethylene (PE) as the most abundant MP. The specific dry-weather emissions at a subcatchment were ≈30 g/(PEQ · a) higher than in the influent of WWTP with 23 g/(PEQ · a). Specific wet-weather emissions from large sub-catchment with higher traffic and population densities were 1952 g/(ha · a) higher than the emissions from smaller catchment (796 g/[ha · a]) with less population and traffic. The results suggest that wet-weather transport pathways are likely responsible for 2–4 times more MP emissions into receiving waters compared to dry-weather ones due to tire abrasion entered from streets through gullies. However, more investigations of wet-weather MP need to be carried out considering additional catchment attributes and storm event characteristics.
Model-based prediction is becoming increasingly important to meet the ever-increasing demands on manufacturing. In grinding, the prediction of the process forces and the generated surface by physical models are particularly important.Since cooling lubricants are almost always used on an industrial scale, the grinding model, developed at our institut, must be extended to include this component. Therefore, in order to implement cooling lubricants into the FEM-based model, it is first necessary to investigate the behaviors and effects of cooling lubricants in real experiments. Various influencing factors such as the scratching speed of individual abrasive grains in interaction with cooling lubricants need to be investigated. However, the existing physical grinding model is not limited exclusively to the prediction of the resulting forces. It is also supposed to be able to qualitatively predict the expected resulting surface of the workpiece. Hence, this paper will focus on the topographic characteristics that can occur in the scratch test due to different cooling lubricants and scratching speeds.Based on real experiments on a test rig for such scratch tests, it has been shown that different scratch speeds have a negligible influence on the topographical nature and expression of a scratch. In contrast, however, there is a direct influence of cooling lubricants on the topographic properties. This effect is additionally influenced by the viscosity of the cooling lubricant used.
In gravity separators, also known as settlers, two immiscible liquid phases separate due to differences in density. In extraction mixer-settler units, a dispersion needs to be separated within the separator unit. In order to overcome the hitherto purely experimental design, a knitted mesh adapted model as well as an automated test facility were developed in this work, which easily enable a scale-up to industrial units. An automation allows for a controlled investigation of knitted meshes as coalescing aids in settlers, and this was achieved via photo-optical probes with an optimized image analysis technique. It overcomes the limitations of neuronal network training based on manually annotating images using computer-generated image data. Therefore, the new methodology and setup are explained in detail, and the derivation and application of a new model to design separators with knitted meshes as coalescing aid is presented and compared to experimental results using meshes of different structures and materials. Finally, case studies and scale-up are discussed.
Within a biorefinery platform several conversion steps such as pretreatment, saccharification, fermentation and downstream processing are necessary to obtain the final bio-based product(s) from lignocellulosic biomass. The structural composition of the biomass, especially the lignin content, determines the necessary pretreatment steps. To obtain sugar monomers, the hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass is an essential step. This work examines the impact of different pretreatments on the sugar release during biocatalysis. Even without prior pretreatment the biocatalysis of low lignin biomass achieves glucose yields of up to 93 %, while the biocatalysis of high lignin biomass requires an upstream hydrothermal procedure to achieve a glucose yield of 74
Sound localization involves information analysis in the lateral superior olive (LSO), a conspicuous nucleus in the mammalian auditory brainstem. LSO neurons weigh interaural level differences (ILDs) through precise integration of glutamatergic excitation from the cochlear nucleus (CN) and glycinergic inhibition from the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB). Sound sources can be localized even during sustained perception, an accomplishment that requires robust neurotransmission. Virtually nothing is known about the sustained performance and the temporal precision of MNTB–LSO inputs after postnatal day (P)12 (time of hearing onset) and whether acoustic experience guides development. Here we performed whole-cell patch-clamp recordings to investigate neurotransmission of single MNTB-LSO fibres upon sustained electrical stimulation (1–200 Hz/60 s) at P11 and P38 in wild-type (WT) and deaf otoferlin (Otof) knock-out (KO) mice. At P11, WT and KO inputs performed remarkably similarly. In WTs, the performance increased drastically between P11 and P38, e.g. manifested by an 8 to 11-fold higher replenishment rate (RR) of synaptic vesicles and action potential robustness. Together, these changes resulted in reliable and highly precise neurotransmission at frequencies ≤100 Hz. In contrast, KO inputs performed similarly at both ages, implying impaired synaptic maturation. Computational modelling confirmed the empirical observations and established a reduced RR per release site for P38 KOs. In conclusion, acoustic experience appears to contribute massively to the development of reliable neurotransmission, thereby forming the basis for effective ILD detection. Collectively, our results provide novel insights into experience-dependent maturation of inhibitory neurotransmission and auditory circuits at the synaptic level.
Development of a simple substitute model to describe the normal force of fluids in narrow gaps
(2023)
Fluids in narrow gaps are employed frequently in many applications. The motivation for their use is diverse and ranges from hydrodynamic lubrication in plain bearings to the transport of hard particles into the working gap for the purpose of machining workpiece surfaces in lapping processes. Depending on the focus of the analysis, it may be useful to investigate the entire pressure field or to calculate only individual quantities. For example, in sophisticated simulations it may be of interest to know the resulting force of a fluid as a function of the external system state in order to describe its damping characteristics. Especially for the simulation of flows in narrow gaps, the Reynolds equation is a convenient choice, which, in contrast to the more general Navier-Stokes equations, can lead to considerable savings in computational time because no three-dimensional discretization is required, but only a two-dimensional discretization. However, if not a highly detailed pressure field is of interest, but only simple relations such as the resulting force as a function of distance and velocity, and if this relation to be evaluated many times for different parameter combinations over a wide range of values, the use of a robust substitute model is a good choice. This article deals with the creation of such a substitute model based on the Reynolds equation taking cavitation into account.
Machine learning algorithms are widely applied to create powerful prediction models. With increasingly complex models, humans' ability to understand the decision function (that maps from a high-dimensional input space) is quickly exceeded. To explain a model's decisions, black-box methods have been proposed that provide either non-linear maps of the global topology of the decision boundary, or samples that allow approximating it locally. The former loses information about distances in input space, while the latter only provides statements about given samples, but lacks a focus on the underlying model for precise ‘What-If'-reasoning. In this paper, we integrate both approaches and propose an interactive exploration method using local linear maps of the decision space. We create the maps on high-dimensional hyperplanes—2D-slices of the high-dimensional parameter space—based on statistical and personal feature mutability and guided by feature importance. We complement the proposed workflow with established model inspection techniques to provide orientation and guidance. We demonstrate our approach on real-world datasets and illustrate that it allows identification of instance-based decision boundary structures and can answer multi-dimensional ‘What-If'-questions, thereby identifying counterfactual scenarios visually.
In the last decades, the phase field method has drawn much attention for its application in fracture mechanics because it offers a simple unified framework for crack propagation. The core idea of phase field models for fracture is to introduce a continuous scalar field representing the discontinuous crack. Recently, a phase field model for fatigue has been proposed along this path. The fatigue failure differs from the other fracture scenarios since cracks only occur after a considerable number of load cycles. As fracturing happens, changes of the material microstructure are involved, which causes the evolution of the structural configuration. Thus, a new mathematical description not based on traditional spatial coordinates but the material manifold is desired, which will serve as an elegant analysis tool to understand the energetic forces for crack propagation. Configurational forces are a suitable choice for this purpose, as they describe the energetic driving forces associated with phenomena changing the material itself. In this work, we present a phase field model for fatigue. Furthermore, the phase field fatigue model is analyzed within the concept of configurational forces, which provides a straightforward way to understand the phase field simulations of fatigue fracture.
Citizen conceptions of democracy and support for artificial intelligence in government and politics
(2022)
How much do citizens support artificial intelligence (AI) in government and politics at different levels of decision-making authority and to what extent is this AI support associated with citizens’ conceptions of democracy? Using original survey data from Germany, the analysis shows that people are overall sceptical toward using AI in the political realm. The findings suggest that how much citizens endorse democracy as liberal democracy as opposed to several of its disfigurations matters for AI support, but only in high-level politics. While a stronger commitment to liberal democracy is linked to lower support for AI, the findings contradict the idea that a technocratic notion of democracy lies behind greater acceptance of political AI uses. Acceptance is higher only among those holding reductionist conceptions of democracy which embody the idea that whatever works to accommodate people's views and preferences is fine. Populists, in turn, appear to be against AI in political decision making.
CFD-DEM Simulation of Superquadric Cylindrical Particles in a Spouted Bed and a Rotor Granulator
(2023)
The fluidization behavior of cylindrical particles in a spouted bed was first investigated experimentally using a camera setup. The obtained average spouted bed height was used to evaluate the accuracy of different drag models in CFD-DEM simulations with the superquadric approach to model the particle shape. The drag model according to Sanjeevi et al. showed the best agreement. With this model, cylindrical particles were simulated in a rotor granulator and the particle dynamics were compared with the fluidization of volume equivalent spherical particles.
Drawing on theorising on digital technologies as external enablers of entrepreneurial activities and an interactionist perspective on corporate entrepreneurship, this article examines the relationship between digital technology support and employee intrapreneurial behaviour. We propose that management support for innovation as an organisational characteristic and intrapreneurial self-efficacy as an individual characteristic moderate this relationship. Findings from a metric conjoint experiment with 1360 decisions nested within 85 employees showed that support by social media, support by collaborative technologies, and support by intelligent decision support systems were significant predictors of employee intrapreneurial behaviour. However, the relative impact of support by these digital technologies varied with different levels of management support for innovation and intrapreneurial self-efficacy.
Edit distances between merge trees of scalar fields have many applications in scientific visualization, such as ensemble analysis, feature tracking or symmetry detection. In this paper, we propose branch mappings, a novel approach to the construction of edit mappings for merge trees. Classic edit mappings match nodes or edges of two trees onto each other, and therefore have to either rely on branch decompositions of both trees or have to use auxiliary node properties to determine a matching. In contrast, branch mappings employ branch properties instead of node similarity information, and are independent of predetermined branch decompositions. Especially for topological features, which are typically based on branch properties, this allows a more intuitive distance measure which is also less susceptible to instabilities from small-scale perturbations. For trees with 𝒪(n) nodes, we describe an 𝒪(n4) algorithm for computing optimal branch mappings, which is faster than the only other branch decomposition-independent method in the literature by more than a linear factor. Furthermore, we compare the results of our method on synthetic and real-world examples to demonstrate its practicality and utility.
The direct regioselective C−H-functionalization of simple, unfunctionalized pyridines is considered a long-standing challenge in heterocyclic chemistry. Herein, we report a novel one-pot protocol for the C4-selective sulfonylation of pyridines via triflic anhydride (Tf2O) activation, base-mediated addition of a sulfinic acid salt, and subsequent elimination/re-aromatization. Contrary to previous approaches employing tailored blocking groups, positional selectivity can be controlled by using N-methylpiperidine as simple, readily available external base. This method offers a highly modular and streamlined access to C4-sulfonylated pyridines.
Janus-Materialien sind anisotrope Nano- und Mikroarchitekturen, die zwei verschiedene Seiten mit unterschiedlichen oder entgegengesetzten physikochemischen Eigenschaften aufweisen. Parallel zur Entwicklung neuer Methoden zur Herstellung dieser Materialien wurden entscheidende Fortschritte in Bezug auf Anwendungen erzielt, z. B. in der Biologie, der Katalyse, der Pharmazie und neuerdings auch in der Batterietechnologie. Dieser Kurzaufsatz stellt die jüngsten und wichtigsten Erfolge bei der Anwendung aufgabenspezifisch funktionalisierter Janus-Nanomaterialien im Bereich der heterogenen Katalyse für unterschiedliche chemische Transformationen vor. Er umfasst Reduktionreaktionen, oxidative Entschwefelung und Farbstoffabbau, asymmetrische Katalyse, Biomassetransformationen, Kaskadenreaktionen, Oxidationsreaktionen, übergangsmetallkatalysierte Kreuzkupplungsreaktionen, elektro- und photokatalytische Reaktionen sowie Gasphasenreaktionen. Zum Abschluss folgt ein Ausblick auf mögliche zukünftige Anwendungen.
Algorithms increasingly govern people's lives, including through rapidly spreading applications in the public sector. This paper sheds light on acceptance of algorithms used by the public sector emphasizing that algorithms, as parts of socio-technical systems, are always embedded in a specific social context. We show that citizens' acceptance of an algorithm is strongly shaped by how they evaluate aspects of this context, namely the personal importance of the specific problems an algorithm is supposed to help address and their trust in the organizations deploying the algorithm. The objective performance of presented algorithms affects acceptance much less in comparison. These findings are based on an original dataset from a survey covering two real-world applications, predictive policing and skin cancer prediction, with a sample of 2661 respondents from a representative German online panel. The results have important implications for the conditions under which citizens will accept algorithms in the public sector.
The development of algorithmic differentiation (AD) tools focuses mostly on handling floating point types in the target language. Taping optimizations in these tools mostly focus on specific operations like matrix vector products. Aggregated types like std::complex are usually handled by specifying the AD type as a template argument. This approach provides exact results, but prevents the use of expression templates. If AD tools are extended and specialized such that aggregated types can be added to the expression framework, then this will result in reduced memory utilization and improve the timing for applications where aggregated types such as complex number or matrix vector operations are used. Such an integration requires a reformulation of the stored data per expression and a rework of the tape evaluation process. We will demonstrate the overheads on a synthetic benchmark and show the improvement when aggregated types are handled properly by the expression framework of the AD tool.
A stereoselective synthesis of isoindolo[2,1-a]quinolin-11(5H)-ones containing three contiguous stereogenic centers is described. This Lewis-acid mediated reaction of enamides with N-aryl-acylimines affords the desired fused heterocyclic isoindolinones in high yields and diastereoselectivities. Scope and limitations of this method are discussed. The stereochemical outcome of this transformation indicates a stepwise reaction pathway.
The measurement of self-diffusion coefficients using pulsed-field gradient (PFG) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a well-established method. Recently, benchtop NMR spectrometers with gradient coils have also been used, which greatly simplify these measurements. However, a disadvantage of benchtop NMR spectrometers is the lower resolution of the acquired NMR signals compared to high-field NMR spectrometers, which requires sophisticated analysis methods. In this work, we use a recently developed quantum mechanical (QM) model-based approach for the estimation of self-diffusion coefficients from complex benchtop NMR data. With the knowledge of the species present in the mixture, signatures for each species are created and adjusted to the measured NMR signal. With this model-based approach, the self-diffusion coefficients of all species in the mixtures were estimated with a discrepancy of less than 2 % compared to self-diffusion coefficients estimated from high-field NMR data sets of the same mixtures. These results suggest benchtop NMR is a reliable tool for quantitative analysis of self-diffusion coefficients, even in complex mixtures.
We compute three-dimensional displacement vector fields to estimate the deformation of microstructural data sets in mechanical tests. For this, we extend the well-known optical flow by Brox et al. to three dimensions, with special focus on the discretization of nonlinear terms. We evaluate our method first by synthetically deforming foams and comparing against this ground truth and second with data sets of samples that underwent real mechanical tests. Our results are compared to those from state-of-the-art algorithms in materials science and medical image registration. By a thorough evaluation, we show that our proposed method is able to resolve the displacement best among all chosen comparison methods.
We study the sensor fault estimation and accommodation problems in a data-driven \(\mathcal{H}_\infty\) setting, leading to a data-driven sensor fault-tolerant control scheme. First, we formulate the fault estimation problem as a finite-horizon minimax \(\mathcal{H}_\infty\)-optimization problem in a data-driven setup, whose solution yields the fault estimate. The estimated fault is then used for output compensation. This compensated output and the experimental input are used to achieve certain control objectives in a data-driven \(\mathcal{H}_\infty\) setting. Next, the data-driven \(\mathcal{H}_\infty\) fault estimation and control problems are solved using a subspace predictor-based approach. Finally, the proposed algorithm is applied to the steering subsystem of the remotely operated underwater vehicle.
Opposition parties under minority governments find themselves in a fundamental dilemma. They are competing with other parties, including the government, for electoral support while also having a common responsibility to make stable government work. This dilemma is especially pronounced for opposition parties signing support agreements with the government. While not formally in a coalition, they nonetheless publicly commit to supporting a government. They may thus be concerned about losing distinctiveness and have an interest in strategically timing cooperation with the minority government. The present paper tests whether this is the case using data on opposition party voting on committee proposals from 23 years of Swedish minority governments between 1991 and 2018. The findings indicate that support parties are less likely to support the government towards the beginning and end of the election cycle, that is, when public attention is intense – a pattern that is not observable for other opposition parties.
With direct laser writing micro structures can be manufactured by solidifying a photo resist when the laser beam triggers a photochemical reaction in the focal voxel. We have used direct laser writing to fabricate a thermally actuated microgripper, which can move its two cantilever like arms to grip micro-objects. One cantilever consists thereby of two strips with different coefficients of thermal expansion such that both cantilevers bends towards each other for an increasing temperature like a welded bimetal.This work investigates the impact of each cantilever's geometry on the gripping performance of the micro gripper theoretically. The tip deflection of the gripper is calculated by the analytical model of Timoshenko's theory of elasticity. After fabricaiton of the microgripper, its gripping performance is observed under the microscope while heated by a heating element.
The quality of risk reports: Integrating requirement levels of standard setters into text analysis
(2021)
The intention of this paper is to shed light on the analysis of financial disclosure through the integration of requirement levels. This in return will lead to the development of a general applicable evaluation methodology based on Bloom's taxonomy system. Therefore, it will be possible to explicitly consider the relevance of the given information. To underline the appropriateness of our method, we combine the requirement levels with a qualitative content analysis. Based on the German accounting standard DRS 20, we clarify the respective application of the requirement levels in the context of the qualitative content analysis. Hence, we will discuss the limitations of our developed approach. In addition, we analyze further areas of application in the context of qualitative analysis of financial disclosure. All things considered, it is evident that our chosen approach, through the integration of a taxonomy system, contributes to the validity of established text analyzing methods.
Firn describes the interstage product between snow and ice in cold regions of the earth, where annual snow fall exceeds the amount of snow melting. The continuing accumulation of snow leads to its densificiation due to overburden stress until it becomes ice. In the field of glaciology various attempts on simulating firn densification have been made and new models are still developed, as the knowledge of the firn column's density structure allows important derivations.
The presented study reassesses a model description for low density firn based on the process of grain boundary sliding presented by Alley in 1987 [1] using an optimisation approach. By comparing simulation results to 159 measured firn density profiles from Greenland and Antarctica it finds a possible additional dependency of the constitutive relation on the mean surface mass balance. This result is interpreted as an insufficient description of the stress regime.
Disorder and photonics have long been seen as natural adversaries and designers of optical systems have often driven systems to perfection by minimizing deviations from the ideal design. Especially in the field of photonic crystals and metamaterials but also for optical circuits, disorder has been avoided as a nuisance for many years. However, starting from the very robust structural colors found in nature, scientists learn to analyze and tailor disorder to achieve functionalities beyond what is possible with perfectly ordered or ideal systems alone. This review article covers theoretical and materials aspects of tailored disorder as well as experimental results. Furthermore selected examples are highlighted in greater detail, for which the intentional use of disorder adds additional functionality or provides novel functionality impossible without disorder.
A novel method for the synthesis of nitro fatty acids (NFAs), an intriguing class of endogenously occurring lipid mediators, is reported. This one-pot procedure enables the controlled and stereoselective construction of nitro fatty acids from a simple set of common building blocks in a highly facile manner. Thereby, this methodology offers a streamlined, highly modular access to naturally occurring nitro fatty acids as well as non-natural NFA derivatives.
Sulfones play a pivotal role in modern organic chemistry. They are highly versatile building blocks and find various applications as drugs, agrochemicals, or functional materials. Therefore, sustainable access to this class of molecules is of great interest. Herein, the goal was to provide a summary on recent developments in the field of sustainable sulfone synthesis. Advances and existing limitations in traditional approaches towards sulfones were reviewed on selected examples. Furthermore, novel emerging technologies for a more sustainable sulfone synthesis and future directions were discussed.
A concept for the quantification of cooperative effects in transition-metal complexes is presented. It is demonstrated for a series of novel N,N- (mononuclear) and C,N-coordinated homo- and heterometallic binuclear complexes based on the (2-dimethylamino)-4-(2-pyrimidinyl)pyrimidine ligand, which are accessible by applying roll-over cyclometallation. These iridium-, platinum-, and palladium-containing compounds are investigated with respect to their absorption and fluorescence spectra. The cooperative effects in the electronic absorptions, i. e., the energetic shifts between mononuclear and dinuclear complexes, and free ligands are analyzed on the basis of the lowest energy π-π* transitions and compared to calculated data, obtained from TD-DFT calculations. Furthermore the corresponding fluorescence spectra are presented and analyzed with respect to the concept of cooperativity.
In nanobiotechnology, viral nanoparticles have come into focus as interesting nano building blocks. In this context, the formation of 2D and 3D structures is of particular interest. Herein, the creation of defined 2D patterns of an icosahedral plant virus, the tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV), by means of different techniques is reported on: the top-down lithography ebeam and focused ion beam (FIB) as well as the bottom-up fluidic force microscope (FluidFM) approach. The obtained layer structures are imaged by scanning force and scanning electron microscopy. The data show that a defined 2D structure can successfully be created either top down by FIB or bottom up by FluidFM. Electron beam lithography is not able to remove viruses from the substrate under the chosen conditions. FIB has an advantage if larger areas covered with viruses combined with smaller areas without being desired. FluidFM is advantageous if only small areas with viruses are required. A further benefit is that the uncovered areas are not affected. The pattern formation in FluidFM is influenced not only by the spotting parameters, but in particular by the drying process. Deegan and Marangoni effects are shown to play a role if the spotted droplets are not very small.
A highly diastereoselective one-pot synthesis of the 1,3-diamino-2-alcohol unit bearing three continuous stereocenters is described. This method utilizes 2-oxyenamides as a novel type of building block for the rapid assembly of the 1,3-diamine scaffold containing an additional stereogenic oxygen functionality at the C2 position. A stereoselective preparation of the required (Z)-oxyenamides is reported as well.
In the present work, microfibrillar composites (MFCs) consisting of polypropylene (PP) and poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) were successfully produced by melt extrusion and cold stretching. The resulting filaments were then printed using fused filament fabrication. The morphological results demonstrate that the highly oriented PET fibrils after stretching are still well preserved in the printed components. Since the printing process defines the alignment of the fibrils in the final component the fibers can be perfectly adapted to the load paths. Comparative analyses of the mechanical properties reveal that the PET fibrils act as an effective reinforcement in the 3D printed components, resulting in the superior mechanical performance of the PP/PET MFCs compared to a PP/PET blend and a neat PP. Due to the combination of material and innovative processing, the study opens up a new way of using the morphology-based enormous potential of polymer fibers for lightweight, cost-effective and recyclable full polymer solutions in compact components.
Turbulence models, which are a means to fix the closure problem arising from Reynolds averaging of Navier-Stokes equations, are economical stop-gaps but suffer from accuracy issues. Modifying turbulence models by incorporating corrections in their functional form is one approach to improve their accuracy. We estimate correction functionals for the Spalart - Allmaras turbulence model, based on an inverse problem with PDE constraints emphasizing the issue of regularization.