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Preferential Solvation Study of Rosuvastatin in the {PEG400 (1) + Water (2)} Cosolvent Mixture and GastroPlus Software-Based In Vivo Predictions (open access)

Preferential Solvation Study of Rosuvastatin in the {PEG400 (1) + Water (2)} Cosolvent Mixture and GastroPlus Software-Based In Vivo Predictions

Article claims that rosuvastatin (RST) is a poorly water-soluble drug responsible for limited in vivo dissolution and subsequently low oral systemic absorption (poor bioavailability). The results of inverse Kirkwood–Buff integrals showed the PS of RST by PEG400 as observed in all studied ratios of the binary mixture.
Date: March 28, 2023
Creator: Hussain, Afzal; Afzal, Obaid; Yasmin, Sabina; Haider, Nazima; Alfawaz Altamimi, Abdulmalik Saleh; Martínez, Fleming et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Highly efficient and selective electrocatalytic hydrogen peroxide production on Co-O-C active centers on graphene oxide (open access)

Highly efficient and selective electrocatalytic hydrogen peroxide production on Co-O-C active centers on graphene oxide

Article demonstrating that single cobalt atoms anchored on oxygen functionalized graphene oxide form Co-O-C@GO active centres (abbreviated as Co₁@GO for simplicity) act as an efficient and durable electrocatalyst for H₂O₂ production.
Date: March 28, 2022
Creator: Zhang, Bin-Wei; Zheng, Tao; Wang, Yun-Xiao; Du, Yi; Chu, Sheng-Qi; Xia, Zhenhai et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
What Can We Learn about Dispersion from the Conformer Surface of n-Pentane? (open access)

What Can We Learn about Dispersion from the Conformer Surface of n-Pentane?

Article describes study in which researchers mapped the torsional surface of n-pentane to 10-degree resolution at the CCSD(T)-F12 level near the basis set limit.
Date: March 28, 2013
Creator: Martin, Jan M. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Constitutive Theory for Velocity Dispersion in Rock with Dual Porosity (open access)

Constitutive Theory for Velocity Dispersion in Rock with Dual Porosity

The high frequency behavior of the bulk modulus of fluid-saturated rock can be obtained from a double-porosity constitutive model, which is a direct conceptual extension of Biot's (1941) constitutive equations and which provides additional stiffening due to unrelaxed induced pore pressures in the soft porosity phase. Modeling the stiffening of the shear modulus at high frequency requires an effective medium average over the unequal induced pore pressures in cracks of different orientations. The implicit assumptions are that pore fluid equilibration does not occur between cracks of different orientations and between cracks and porous matrix. The correspondence between the constitutive equations of Berryman and Wang (1995) and Mavko and Jizba (1991) is explicitly noted.
Date: March 28, 2002
Creator: Wang, H F & Berryman, J G
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Atmospheric Release Advisory Center (NARAC) Model Development and Evaluation (open access)

National Atmospheric Release Advisory Center (NARAC) Model Development and Evaluation

None
Date: March 28, 2004
Creator: Sugiyama, G
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assesing the Impacts of Local Deposition of Mercury Associated With Coal-Fired Power Plants. (open access)

Assesing the Impacts of Local Deposition of Mercury Associated With Coal-Fired Power Plants.

Mercury emissions from coal fired plants will be limited by regulations enforced by the Environmental Protection Agency. However, there is still debate over whether the limits should be on a plant specific basis or a nationwide basis. The nationwide basis allows a Cap and Trade program similar to that for other air pollutants. Therefore, a major issue is the magnitude and extent of local deposition. Computer modeling suggests that increased local deposition will occur on a local (2 to 10 Km) to regional scale (20 to 50 Km) with the increase being a small percentage of background deposition on the regional scale. The amount of deposition depends upon many factors including emission rate, chemical form of mercury emitted (with reactive gaseous mercury depositing more readily than elemental mercury), other emission characteristics (stack height, exhaust temperature, etc), and meteorological conditions. Modeling suggests that wet deposition will lead to the highest deposition rates and that these will occur locally. Dry deposition is also predicted to deposit approximately the same amount of mass as wet deposition, but over a much greater area. Therefore, dry deposition rates will contribute a fraction of total deposition on the regional scale. The models have a number of …
Date: March 28, 2004
Creator: Sullivan, T.; Bowerman, B.; Adams, J.; Ogeka, C.; Lipfert, F. & Renninger, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessing the Mercury Health Risks Associated With Coal-Fired Power Plants: Issues in Atmospheric Processes. (open access)

Assessing the Mercury Health Risks Associated With Coal-Fired Power Plants: Issues in Atmospheric Processes.

The rationale for regulating air emissions of mercury from U.S. coal-fired power plants largely depends on mathematical dispersion modeling, including the atmospheric chemistry processes that affect the partitioning of Hg emissions into elemental (Hg{sub 0}) and the reactive (RGM) forms that may deposit more rapidly near sources. This paper considers and evaluates the empirical support for this paradigm. We consider the extant experimental data at three spatial scales: local (< 30 km), regional (< {approx}300 km), and national (multi-state data). An additional issue involves the finding of excess Hg levels in urban areas.
Date: March 28, 2004
Creator: Lipfert, F.; Sullivan, T. & Renninger, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
MGA Analysis on Elevated {sup 238}Pu Samples (open access)

MGA Analysis on Elevated {sup 238}Pu Samples

Plutonium gamma-ray data analysis, in the 100-keV region, using MGA has been improved to overcome the original maximum limit of 2% {sup 238}Pu relative plutonium content in a sample in order perform an analysis. MGA analysis results of elevated {sup 238}Pu samples are compared to the results from mass spectrometry.
Date: March 28, 2002
Creator: Wang, T. F.; Moody, K. J.; Raschke, K. E. & Ruhter, W. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical Studies of Interactions Between TATB Molecules and the Origins of Anisotropic Thermal Expansion and Growth (open access)

Theoretical Studies of Interactions Between TATB Molecules and the Origins of Anisotropic Thermal Expansion and Growth

TATB containing explosives tend to permanently expand as their temperatures are increased or thermally cycled, a phenomenon known as ''ratchet-growth.'' Several mechanisms as to the cause of the non-reversible growth have been proposed, and are taken up here using various different modeling techniques. High-level quantum chemistry calculations have been used in parameterization of a classical potential function suitable for atomistic simulations of TATB. The quantum-chemistry-based force field for TATB was validated by comparing condensed phase properties obtained from molecular dynamics simulations with available experimental data. No permanent growth was manifest at the molecular level. Dissipative particle dynamics simulations were carried out in order to study the geometric packing effects on the mesoscopic scale, similar to the scales representative of Ultrafine. No permanent growth was identified when only simple packing effects were considered in the TATB model. However, non-reversible growth was displayed when crystal fracture capabilities were incorporated in the model, suggesting that crystal fracture induced by the anisotropic volume expansion of TATB is the root cause for the permanent growth seen in TATB containing explosives.
Date: March 28, 2002
Creator: Gee, R H; Roszak, S M & Fried, L E
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE COLOR GLASS CONDENSATE: A SUMMARY OF KEY IDEAS AND RECENT DEVELOPMENTS. (open access)

THE COLOR GLASS CONDENSATE: A SUMMARY OF KEY IDEAS AND RECENT DEVELOPMENTS.

We summarize the theory and phenomenology of the Color Glass Condensate reviewed previously by E. Iancu and the author in hep-ph/0303204. In addition, we discuss some of the subsequent developments in the past year both in theory and in phenomenological applications.
Date: March 28, 2004
Creator: Venugopalan, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
RELATIVISTIC HEAVY ION PHYSICS: A THEORETICAL OVERVIEW. (open access)

RELATIVISTIC HEAVY ION PHYSICS: A THEORETICAL OVERVIEW.

This is a mini-review of recent theoretical work in the field of relativistic heavy ion physics. The following topics are discussed initial conditions and the Color Glass Condensate; approach to thermalization and the hydrodynamic evolution; hard probes and the properties of the Quark-Gluon Plasma. Some of the unsolved problems and potentially promising directions for future research are listed as well.
Date: March 28, 2004
Creator: Kharzeev, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Case A Binary Evolution (open access)

Case A Binary Evolution

We undertake a comparison of observed Algol-type binaries with a library of computed Case A binary evolution tracks. The library consists of 5500 binary tracks with various values of initial primary mass M{sub 10}, mass ratio q{sub 0}, and period P{sub 0}, designed to sample the phase-space of Case A binaries in the range -0.10 {le} log M{sub 10} {le} 1.7. Each binary is evolved using a standard code with the assumption that both total mass and orbital angular momentum are conserved. This code follows the evolution of both stars until the point where contact or reverse mass transfer occurs. The resulting binary tracks show a rich variety of behavior which we sort into several subclasses of Case A and Case B. We present the results of this classification, the final mass ratio and the fraction of time spent in Roche Lobe overflow for each binary system. The conservative assumption under which we created this library is expected to hold for a broad range of binaries, where both components have spectra in the range G0 to B1 and luminosity class III - V. We gather a list of relatively well-determined observed hot Algol-type binaries meeting this criterion, as well as …
Date: March 28, 2001
Creator: Nelson, C A & Eggleton, P P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stress-induced transverse isotropy in rocks (open access)

Stress-induced transverse isotropy in rocks

The application of uniaxial pressure can induce elastic anisotropy in otherwise isotropic rock. We consider models based on two very different rock classes, granites and weakly consolidated granular systems. We show that these models share common underlying assumptions, that they lead to similar qualitative behavior, and that both provide a microscopic basis for elliptical anisotropy. In the granular case, we make experimentally verifiable predictions regarding the horizontally propagating modes based on the measured behavior of the vertical modes.
Date: March 28, 1994
Creator: Schwartz, L. M.; Murphy, W. F. III & Berryman, J. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rapid determination of uranium in natural waters by thermal emission mass spectrometry. Revision 1 (open access)

Rapid determination of uranium in natural waters by thermal emission mass spectrometry. Revision 1

A six-inch radius mass spectrometer has been constructed and demonstrated to adequately analyze water samples for uranium concentrations down to 5 to 10 ng/liter (ppt). The precision and accuracy of the isotope-dilution, thermal emission method is sufficient to meet the needs of the Uranium Resources Evaluation (URE) project. A single analyst can analyze in excess of 50 samples per day, including all preparation and instrument time. This analysis rate will meet the economic constraints of the URE analytical program.
Date: March 28, 1977
Creator: Ferguson, J. R.; Caylor, J. D.; Rogers, E. R. & Cole, S. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Debris collection from implosion of microballoons (open access)

Debris collection from implosion of microballoons

Recovery of krypton from implosion of glass microballoons has been studied in the development of a radiochemical diagnostic for determination of <rho r> /sub fuel/. Collection onto metal surfaces following implosions performed on the OMEGA laser with 1-3 TW (1-2 kJ) of 0.35 ..mu..m light is consistent with an ion implantation mechanism. The dependence of the intrinsic collection efficiency on the energy fluence to the collector surface and its variation in implosions carried out under the same nominal conditions indicate ion energies extending to at least 0.1 MeV and energy distribution functions that are sensitive to the details of the implosion dynamics. Intrinsic sticking efficiencies approaching 0.5 can be obtained in the limit of low total energy fluence to the collector surface (less than or equal to 0.1 J cm/sup -2/).
Date: March 28, 1986
Creator: Prussin, S.G.; Lane, S.M.; Richardson, M.C. & Noyes, S.G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low level signal data acquisition for the MFTF-B superconducting magnet system (open access)

Low level signal data acquisition for the MFTF-B superconducting magnet system

Acquisition of low level signals from sensors mounted on the superconducting magnets in the Tandem Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF-B) impose very strict requirements on the magnet signal conditioning and data acquisition system. Of the various types of sensors required, thermocouples and strain gages produce very low level outputs. These low level outputs must be accurately measured in the harsh environment of slowly varying magnetic fields, cryogenic temperatures, high vacuum, 80 kV pulse power, 60 Hz, 17 MHz and 28, 35, and 56 GHz electrical noise and possible neutron radiation. Successful measurements require careful attention to grounding, shielding, signal handling and processing in the data acquisition system. The magnet instrumentation system provides a means of effectively measuring both low level signals and high level signals from all types of sensors. Various methods involved in the design and implementation of the system for signal conditioning and data gathering will be presented.
Date: March 28, 1984
Creator: Montoya, C.R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental prospects for the synthesis and detection of superheavy elements (open access)

Experimental prospects for the synthesis and detection of superheavy elements

Schemes that could be used for detection of superheavy elements (SHE) are briefly discussed first. The question of producing SHE in other than complete fusion reactions (e.g., in deep inelastic reactions) is addressed at greater length. Production cross sections are estimated. A heavy ion lens spectrometer for the detection of reaction products is described. 18 figures, 3 tables. (RWR)
Date: March 28, 1978
Creator: Nitschke, J.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct numerical control at Bendix Kansas City Division (open access)

Direct numerical control at Bendix Kansas City Division

Background information concerning how and why Bendix Kansas City became interested in numerical control of machine tools and what the approach was in determining whether it would prove beneficial is presented. The present status of implementation and future plans are discussed. The material is presented by 22 slides. (TFD)
Date: March 28, 1978
Creator: Finlay, G. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent searches for superheavy elements at the superhilac. [Cross section limits for Z = 110 to 118] (open access)

Recent searches for superheavy elements at the superhilac. [Cross section limits for Z = 110 to 118]

The results of the search for superheavy elements are negative with respect to the finding of such elements. However, by assuming 2 spontaneous fission events as the lower limit of detection, the limits to their formation cross sections are calculated and plotted. It is noted that the half-life limits, also shown are easily within the huge uncertainties of the theoretical predicted half lives for any superheavy element nuclides produced in the experiment. 19 references. (JFP)
Date: March 28, 1978
Creator: Hulet, E. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mirror Advanced Reactor Study (MARS) (open access)

Mirror Advanced Reactor Study (MARS)

Progress in a two year study of a 1200 MWe commercial tandem mirror reactor (MARS - Mirror Advanced Reactor Study) has reached the point where major reactor system technologies are identified. New design features of the magnets, blankets, plug heating systems and direct converter are described. With the innovation of radial drift pumping to maintain low plug density, reactor recirculating power fraction is reduced to 20%. Dominance of radial ion and impurity losses into the halo permits gridless, circular direct converters to be dramatically reduced in size. Comparisons of MARS with the Starfire tokamak design are made.
Date: March 28, 1983
Creator: Logan, B. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
COBRA-PI: an extension of the COBRA-3M code dynamically dimensioned to accept pin bundles of any size. [LMFBR] (open access)

COBRA-PI: an extension of the COBRA-3M code dynamically dimensioned to accept pin bundles of any size. [LMFBR]

COBRA, in general, performs a thermal-hydraulic analysis of an actual pin bundle by subdividing the bundle cross-section into coolant subchannels, pin sectors, duct wall sectors. Its calculation includes heat convected axially upward through coolant mass flow, heat flow between pin sectors and adjoining subchannels, and heat and mass flow between coolant subchannels. COBRA-3M is a version of COBRA built for LMFBR applications, that includes a sophisticated thermal model of fuel pins and duct wall. COBRA-3M that can explicitly model a wider variety of pin bundle configurations than 3M would allow and includes significant improvements to its thermal modeling. COBRA-PI is currently being used for thermal-hydraulic analysis of hypothetical LMFBR accident transients in both power and flow. Pin bundles currently being analyzed explicitly range from 7 to 37 pins of axial lengths ranging from approx. 0.3-2.0 meters.
Date: March 28, 1983
Creator: Froehle, P. H. & Bauer, T. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nucleonics of a Be-Li-Th blanket for the fusion breeder (open access)

Nucleonics of a Be-Li-Th blanket for the fusion breeder

The nuclear performance of a candidate fission-suppressed, U233-producing blanket is assessed. It is predicted to have a breeding ratio (fusile + fissile) of 1.68 and produce U233 at a rate of 8030 kg/year from 3140 MW of DT fusion and a blanket coverage of 96%. Blanket energy multiplication is estimated to vary between 1.3 and 2.0 as the U233/Th232 ratio varies between 0 and 0.5%. Heterogeneous effects in the blanket's pebble-bed configuration were found to be important and more detailed analysis is needed to more accurately predict Li6 content required and U233 fission power versus U233 content.
Date: March 28, 1983
Creator: Lee, J. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance Measurement System: recent systems development and applications (open access)

Performance Measurement System: recent systems development and applications

The Performance Measurement System (PMS), a system for managing a given project or program, is described; this system incorporates the value earned for work accomplished approach. Development and application of this system is discussed under the following headings: PMS vs conventional management control systems; PMS implementation on a project/program; PMS data elements (organization, planning and budgeting, accounting, analysis, reports, and performance measurement data elements); recent PMS applications (FFTF, CRBRP, FMEF, and FMIT); and future of PMS. 25 references, 6 figures, 3 tables. (RWR)
Date: March 28, 1979
Creator: Rigney, R. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Finite and discrete relativistic quantum mechanics (open access)

Finite and discrete relativistic quantum mechanics

None
Date: March 28, 1989
Creator: Noyes, H. Pierre
System: The UNT Digital Library