387 results on '"Radio-frequency"'
Search Results
352. Electrosurgical device for both mechanical cutting and coagulation of bleeding
- Author
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McCabe, Charles [Los Alamos, NM]
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- 1987
353. Nuclear magnetic resonance apparatus having semitoroidal rf coil for use in topical NMR and NMR imaging
- Author
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Gibson, Atholl [Bryan, TX]
- Published
- 1986
354. Radio frequency sustained ion energy
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Hooke, William [Princeton, NJ]
- Published
- 1977
355. Probing molecular interactions on carbon nanotube surfaces using surface plasmon resonance sensors
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Coskun Kocabas, Nurbek Kakenov, Osman Balci, and Sinan Balci
- Subjects
Nanotube ,Materials science ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,Performance ,Microfluidics ,Surface plasmon ,Nanotechnology ,Carbon nanotube ,Chemical vapor deposition ,Transistors ,law.invention ,Radio-frequency ,law ,Monolayer ,Polariton ,Adsorption ,Electronics ,Graphene ,Surface plasmon resonance - Abstract
Cataloged from PDF version of article. In this work, we present a method to probe molecular interactions on single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) surfaces using a surface plasmon sensor. SWNT networks were synthesized by chemical vapor deposition and transfer-printed on gold surfaces. We studied the excitation of surface plasmon-polaritons on nanotube coated gold surfaces with sub-monolayer, monolayer, and multilayer surface coverage. Integrating the fabricated sensor with a microfluidic device, we were able to obtain binding dynamics of a bovine serum albumin (BSA) protein on SWNT networks with various tube densities. The results reveal the kinetic parameters for nonspecific binding of BSA on SWNT coated surfaces having various tube densities. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics.
- Published
- 2012
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356. Capacitively coupled radio-frequency discharges in nitrogen at low pressures
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Nathalie Carrasco, Et-touhami Es-sebbar, Eva Kovacevic, Johannes Berndt, Guy Cernogora, Gaëtan Wattieaux, Laifa Boufendi, Luis Marques, Carlos D Pintassilgo, Luís L Alves, Instituto de Plasmas e Fusão Nuclear [Lisboa] (IPFN), Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade Técnica de Lisboa (IST), Centro de Física da Universidade do Minho (CFUM), Universidade do Minho, Departamento de Fisica - Faculdade de Engenharia, Universidade do Porto, Groupe de recherches sur l'énergétique des milieux ionisés (GREMI), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université d'Orléans (UO), PLANETO - LATMOS, Laboratoire Atmosphères, Milieux, Observations Spatiales (LATMOS), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Universidade do Minho = University of Minho [Braga], Universidade do Porto = University of Porto, and Université d'Orléans (UO)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Engineering ,Science & Technology ,Nitrogen ,business.industry ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,Plasma physics ,Plasma ,Radio-frequency ,[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-PLASM-PH]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Plasma Physics [physics.plasm-ph] ,0103 physical sciences ,Atomic physics ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Telecommunications - Abstract
This paper uses experiments and modelling to study capacitively coupled radio-frequency (rf) discharges in pure nitrogen, at 13.56MHz frequency, 0.1–1 mbar pressures and 2–30W coupled powers. Experiments performed on two similar (not twin) setups, existing in the LATMOS and the GREMI laboratories, include electrical and optical emission spectroscopy (OES) measurements. Electrical measurements give the rf-applied and the direct-current-self-bias voltages, the effective power coupled to the plasma and the average electron density. OES diagnostics measure the intensities of radiative transitions with the nitrogen second-positive and first-negative systems, and with the 811.5 nm atomic line of argon (present as an actinometer). Simulations use a hybrid code that couples a two-dimensional time-dependent fluid module, describing the dynamics of the charged particles (electrons and positive ions N+2 and N+4 ), and a zero-dimensional kinetic module, describing the production and destruction of nitrogen (atomic and molecular) neutral species. The coupling between these modules adopts the local mean energy approximation to define space–time-dependent electron parameters for the fluid module and to work out space–time-averaged rates for the kinetic module. The model gives general good predictions for the self-bias voltage and for the intensities of radiative transitions (both average and spatially resolved), underestimating the electron density by a factor of 3–4., This work is supported by a PICS Cooperation Program, financed by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) and by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS). The calculations were performed on SeARCH (Services & Advanced Computing with HTC/HPC) funded by FEDER through the COMPETE program and by the Portuguese FCT under contract CONC-REEQ/443/EEI/2005. Et Es-sebbar thanks the ANR programme (ANR-09-JCJC-0038 contract) for his Post-Doctoral grant.
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- 2012
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357. Dielektrische Eigenschaften von Lebensmitteln
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Pfeiffer, T. and Publica
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radio-frequency ,microwave ,food material ,Hochfrequenz ,dielektrische Eigenschaft ,dielectric property ,Mikrowelle ,Lebensmittel - Abstract
The complex dielectric properties of food materials, that aggravate the prediction of their heating performance in volumetric heating processes, result from the superposition of different influencing factors like chemical composition, water and salt content, structure, temperature and frequency range. In order to receive the dielectric food data necessary for the engineering of microwave or radio-frequency heating processes, techniques and equipment for the measurement of dielectric food properties have been established at the Fh-ILV. As an result of a number of measurement programs on simple food related systems some of the basic physical mechanisms influencing the dielectric properties of high water content foods are explained and examplified with measurements.
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- 1994
358. Underwater Electromagnetic Sensor Networks, Part II: Localization and Network Simulations.
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Zazo J, Macua SV, Zazo S, Pérez M, Pérez-Álvarez I, Jiménez E, Cardona L, Brito JH, and Quevedo E
- Abstract
In the first part of the paper, we modeled and characterized the underwater radio channel in shallowwaters. In the second part,we analyze the application requirements for an underwaterwireless sensor network (U-WSN) operating in the same environment and perform detailed simulations. We consider two localization applications, namely self-localization and navigation aid, and propose algorithms that work well under the specific constraints associated with U-WSN, namely low connectivity, low data rates and high packet loss probability. We propose an algorithm where the sensor nodes collaboratively estimate their unknown positions in the network using a low number of anchor nodes and distance measurements from the underwater channel. Once the network has been self-located, we consider a node estimating its position for underwater navigation communicating with neighboring nodes. We also propose a communication system and simulate the whole electromagnetic U-WSN in the Castalia simulator to evaluate the network performance, including propagation impairments (e.g., noise, interference), radio parameters (e.g., modulation scheme, bandwidth, transmit power), hardware limitations (e.g., clock drift, transmission buffer) and complete MAC and routing protocols. We also explain the changes that have to be done to Castalia in order to perform the simulations. In addition, we propose a parametric model of the communication channel that matches well with the results from the first part of this paper. Finally, we provide simulation results for some illustrative scenarios., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest. The founding sponsors had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; nor in the decision to publish the results.
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- 2016
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359. Fundamental monomeric biomaterial diagnostics by radio frequency signal analysis.
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Ji JH, Shin KS, Kang S, Lee SH, Kang JY, Kim S, and Jun SC
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- Electric Impedance, Equipment Design, Humans, Limit of Detection, Radio Waves, Biosensing Techniques instrumentation, Blood Glucose analysis, Serum Albumin analysis
- Abstract
We present a new diagnostic technique of fundamental monomeric biomaterials that do not rely on any enzyme or chemical reaction. Instead, it only uses radio frequency (RF) signal analysis. The detection and classification of basic biomaterials, such as glucose and albumin, were demonstrated. The device was designed to generate a strong resonance response with glucose solution and fabricated by simple photolithography with PDMS (Polydimethylsiloxane) well. It even was used to detect the level of glucose in mixtures of glucose and albumin and in human serum, and it operated properly and identified the glucose concentration precisely. It has a detection limit about 100μM (1.8mg/dl), and a sensitivity about 58MHz per 1mM of glucose and exhibited a good linearity in human blood glucose level. In addition, the intrinsic electrical properties of biomaterials can be investigated by a de-embedding technique and an equivalent circuit analysis. The capacitance of glucose containing samples exhibited bell-shaped Gaussian dispersion spectra around 2.4GHz. The Albumin solution did not represent a clear dispersion spectra compared to glucose, and the magnitude of resistance and inductance of albumin was higher than that of other samples. Other parameters also represented distinguishable patterns to classify those biomaterials. It leads us to expect future usage of our technique as a pattern-recognizing biosensor., (Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2016
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360. Pancreatic Cancer from Molecular Pathways to Treatment Opinion.
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Karanikas M, Esempidis A, Chasan ZT, Deftereou T, Antonopoulou M, Bozali F, Amarantidis K, and Man YG
- Abstract
Pancreatic cancer is considered one of the most lethal malignances. It has been observed that the five year survival rate is less than 5%. Early diagnosis, understanding the risk factors and investigation of the molecular pathways with targeted therapy are the keys for efficient treatment. Moreover; there are several local treatments for patients with unresectable pancreatic cancer. There are several combined therapies with chemotherapy and radiotherapy, however; a local therapy approach for many patients with poor performance status are in need. For those patients with good performance status new polychemotherapy regimens are used with success and increased survival improvement. Polychemotherapy has been observed to increase the rate of radical resections in some cases. Second line therapy is used for patients with good performance status and metastatic disease. Oxaliplatin-based regimens are mostly used, however; there are several other drugs that are being developed. Unfortunately, targeted therapy has not presented the expected efficiency. Moreover; immunotherapy; another treatment approach for several cancers types has again failed to present positive results for pancreatic cancer. In the current mini review, we will present information from the diagnosis to molecular pathways and targeted treatment.
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- 2016
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361. Short time efficacy and safety of focused monopolar radiofrequency device for labial laxity improvement-noninvasive labia tissue tightening. A prospective cohort study.
- Author
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Fistonić I, Sorta Bilajac Turina I, Fistonić N, and Marton I
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Prospective Studies, Single-Blind Method, Treatment Outcome, Cosmetic Techniques instrumentation, Radiofrequency Therapy, Vulva radiation effects
- Abstract
Background and Objective: To evaluate safety and efficacy of focused monopolar radio frequency (RF) device for non-invasive labia tissue tightening and improvement of labial laxity., Methods: This prospective cohort study participants were 17 female subjects aged between 27 and 56 years with lax skin at the labia area. All subjects received four consecutive treatments at 7-day intervals with RF device (Exilis Protege IntimaR, BTL Industries Inc., Boston, MA). The primary efficacy outcome measure was defined as one or more point improvement on 1-4 scale for vulva appearance determined by three blinded evaluators. Digital photographs were taken at the baseline and 1 month after the last treatment. Sexual gratification was assessed with Female Sexual Functioning Index (FSFI) and patient discomfort by Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)., Results: An average 2.9 (of maximum 4) points improvement rate in vulvar appearance was observed (P < 0.01). Mean of the total FSFI score enhanced from initial 75-87% (P < 0.001). Resultant 4.7 (18%) points increase was achieved. Ninety four percent of subjects reported mild to none discomfort during the treatment. No adverse events during the study course were reported., Conclusion: The present study demonstrates the positive effect of focused monopolar RF device for non-invasive labia tissue tightening. The treatment is effective and safe with high patient satisfaction., (© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2016
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362. Current therapeutic strategies for advanced pancreatic cancer: A review for clinicians.
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Spadi R, Brusa F, Ponzetti A, Chiappino I, Birocco N, Ciuffreda L, and Satolli MA
- Abstract
Pancreatic cancer (PC) would become the second leading cause of cancer death in the near future, despite representing only 3% of new cancer diagnosis. Survival improvement will come from a better knowledge of risk factors, earlier diagnosis, better integration of locoregional and systemic therapies, as well as the development of more efficacious drugs rising from a deeper understanding of disease biology. For patients with unresectable, non-metastatic disease, combined strategies encompassing primary chemotherapy and radiation seems to be promising. In fit patients, new polychemotherapy regimens can lead to better outcomes in terms of slight but significant survival improvement associated with a positive impact on quality of life. The upfront use of these regimes can also increase the rate of radical resections in borderline resectable and locally advanced PC. Second line treatments showed to positively affect both overall survival and quality of life in fit patients affected by metastatic disease. At present, oxaliplatin-based regimens are the most extensively studied. Nonetheless, other promising drugs are currently under evaluation. Presently, in addition to surgery and conventional radiation therapy, new locoregional treatment techniques are emerging as alternative options in the multimodal approach to patients or diseases not suitable for radical surgery. As of today, in contrast with other types of cancer, targeted therapies failed to show relevant activity either alone or in combination with chemotherapy and, thus, current clinical practice does not include them. Up to now, despite the fact of extremely promising results in different tumors, also immunotherapy is not in the actual therapeutic armamentarium for PC. In the present paper, we provide a comprehensive review of the current state of the art of clinical practice and research in PC aiming to offer a guide for clinicians on the most relevant topics in the management of this disease.
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- 2016
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363. Characterization of a neutral atomic hydrogen source developed in the perspective of carbon materials etching study
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Bieber, T., de Poucques, L., Vasseur, J.-L., Hugon, R., Belmahi, M., and Bougdira, J.
- Subjects
- *
ATOMIC hydrogen , *CARBON , *ETCHING , *RADIO frequency , *FLUORESCENCE , *LANGMUIR probes , *MAGNETIC fields - Abstract
Abstract: This paper deals with the characterization of an atomic hydrogen source created in a radio-frequency reactor with a helicon configuration. To achieve this purpose, optical (laser induced fluorescence) and electrical (Langmuir probe) diagnostics are used to monitor the behavior of the species composing the plasma. The influence of pressure, gas composition, and impact of the magnetic fields (in the source and diffusion chambers) are investigated. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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364. Hydrogen Production in a Radio-Frequency Plasma Source Operating on Water Vapor.
- Author
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Nguyen, Son-Ca Viet Thi
- Subjects
- Water Plasma, Radio-frequency
- Abstract
The global energy and climate challenges have motivated development of innovative techniques to satisfy energy demand while minimizing emissions. To this end, hydrogen as an alternative energy carrier in the transportation sector is an attractive option. In addition, there is already a great need for hydrogen gas in several industrial processes such as hydro-cracking of crude oil to produce gasoline and production of ammonia and methanol. The current dominant methods of hydrogen production from fossil fuels are well-developed and have reached relatively high energy efficiencies (up to 85%), but these methods rely on non-renewable natural resources and produce carbon dioxide emissions. This work investigates the feasibility of hydrogen production by dissociating water molecules in a radio-frequency (RF) plasma discharge. In addition to the widespread usage of hydrogen gas, applications of water plasma have permeated in many areas of research, and information on basic behaviors of a water plasma discharge will provide fruitful insights for other researchers. An RF plasma source equipped with a double-helix antenna (m = 1 mode) and an applied axial magnetic field is designed to operate on water vapor. It is shown that water molecules are being dissociated in the discharge. Experimental results show that the rate of hydrogen production increases linearly with RF power in the absence of the applied axial magnetic field. With the magnetic field, the rate of hydrogen production increases from 250 to 500 W, and begins to saturate with RF power. Despite this saturation, it is shown that hydrogen increases with magnetic field strength at a fixed RF power. Further, the rate of hydrogen production increases with water input flow rate up to 100 sccm for a fixed RF power level, and begins to decrease at 125 sccm. This dissertation characterizes the rate of hydrogen production and plasma properties as a function of RF power, applied B-field strength, and water input flow rate. A zero-dimensional kinetics model is used to determine the theoretical energy efficiency.
- Published
- 2009
365. ALGORITHMS FOR LAYOUT-AWARE AND PERFORMANCE MODEL DRIVEN SYNTHESIS OF ANALOG CIRCUITS
- Author
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AGARWAL, ANURADHA
- Subjects
- Analog, Radio-frequency, Circuit Synthesis, Layout Parasitics, Performance Modeling, Parasitic Estimation and Modeling, Layout-Aware Synthesis, Circuit sizing, Parasitic Corners, Yield Optimization, Parasitic Capacitances, Dynamic Performance Macromodel
- Abstract
With the ever increasing complexity of integrated circuits and constantly shrinking device sizes, the need to develop entire dystems on chip (SoC) has received a significant momentum. With this need,comes the responsibility of bringing about mature computer-aided design (CAD) techniques to handle the complexity of designing such systems. Although mature commercial techniques exist for designing the digital components in a system, design automation for the irreplaceable analog and radio-frequency (RF) circuits in a system remains incipient. Circuit sizing is one of the most important and challenging constituents of any analog design process. Given a set of high-level specifications and a circuit topology, sizing aims to determine the device dimensions and biasing information in order to meet the desired specifications. In this dissertation, we address two major problems ailing the sizing process. One of the most important challenges in analog synthesis is to design a circuit which meets the input specifications at the post-layout stage. The other problem we seek to address in this dissertation is the enormous time spent in sizing due to the overhead of running thousands of simulations for performance estimation. Analog and RF circuits are extremely sensitive to layout parasitics. This extreme dependence of the behavior of analog circuits, on layout-induced parasitics, is responsible for several silicon runs before a functional chip can be designed. We propose two techniques to introduce layout awareness during circuit sizing. The first approach is based on developing fast and accurate models of the layout parasitics. The parasitic capacitance models are used inside a circuit sizing framework to estimate the layout parasitics and account for them in the performance evaluation process. This approach relies on procedural layout generators (PLGs) for developing the parasitic models. The second approach proposed for layout-aware design draws a similarity between layout parasitics and process variables in a yield optimization problem. A two-step approach is proposed for identifying the worst case parasitic corners and for sizing in presence of these parasitics. A parasitic robust design is sought for which passes the post-layout validation test. Circuit sizing primarily comprises of two components: a search engine and a performance estimator. Stochastic combinatorial optimization techniques are used for exploring the design space. For each candidate design explored by the search engine, the circuit performance is estimated. Typically, the performance estimation time dominates the overall synthesis time. Most commercial approaches deploy a simulator-in-loop approach to the sizing problem due to the high accuracy desired from the estimation process. We propose two techniques for replacing the simulator with accurate and efficient performance models. Since the performance models allow a very quick evaluation of the circuit performance, their use helps in drastically reducing the time complexity of sizing. Unlike the existing macro-model driven sizing techniques, the proposed approaches guarantee to obtain accurate simulator validated design solutions. We propose a unified system which aims to resolve both the problems of computational complexity of performance estimation and performance closure at the layout stage in the same flow. The proposed system combines the ideas of parasitic modeling, design optimization in presence of worst case parasitics corners and performance macromodeling put forth in this dissertation to create high quality designs efficiently.
- Published
- 2005
366. Recent research trends of radio-frequency biosensors for biomolecular detection.
- Author
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Lee HJ and Yook JG
- Subjects
- Animals, Biosensing Techniques methods, Biotin analysis, Equipment Design, Glucose analysis, Humans, Immunoglobulin G analysis, Nucleic Acid Hybridization methods, Radio Waves, Streptavidin analysis, Transducers, Biosensing Techniques instrumentation
- Abstract
This article reviews radio-frequency (RF) biosensors based on passive and/or active devices and circuits. In particular, we focus on RF biosensors designed for detection of various biomolecules such as biotin-streptavidin, DNA hybridization, IgG, and glucose. The performance of these biosensors has been enhanced by the introduction of various sensing schemes with diverse nanomaterials (e.g., carbon nanotubes, graphene oxide, magnetic and gold nanoparticles, etc.). In addition, the RF biosensing platforms that can be associated with an RF active system are discussed. Finally, the challenges of RF biosensors are presented and suggestions are made for their future direction and prospects., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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367. Treatment of hepatic and pulmonary metastases with radiofrequency.
- Author
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de Baere T and Deschamps F
- Subjects
- Humans, Catheter Ablation, Liver Neoplasms secondary, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Lung Neoplasms secondary, Lung Neoplasms surgery, Metastasectomy methods
- Abstract
Although metastatic disease indicates diffusion of a cancer at a distance from its site of origin, in some cases pulmonary and hepatic metastases are isolated and slowly progressive, making them suitable for local treatment. Thermo-ablation techniques are associated with low morbidity and reduced collateral parenchymal damage; they therefore play an important role in such patients, where the disease is slow and chronic, requiring repeated local treatments. Unlike radiotherapy, a second treatment is possible in the event of local failure., (Copyright © 2014. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.)
- Published
- 2014
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368. Radio-frequency ablation as primary management of well-tolerated sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia in patients with structural heart disease and left ventricular ejection fraction over 30%.
- Author
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Maury P, Baratto F, Zeppenfeld K, Klein G, Delacretaz E, Sacher F, Pruvot E, Brigadeau F, Rollin A, Andronache M, Maccabelli G, Gawrysiak M, Brenner R, Forclaz A, Schlaepfer J, Lacroix D, Duparc A, Mondoly P, Bouisset F, Delay M, Hocini M, Derval N, Sadoul N, Magnin-Poull I, Klug D, Haïssaguerre M, Jaïs P, Della Bella P, and De Chillou C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Catheter Ablation mortality, Death, Sudden, Cardiac etiology, Death, Sudden, Cardiac prevention & control, Defibrillators, Implantable, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Recurrence, Retrospective Studies, Stroke Volume physiology, Tachycardia, Ventricular mortality, Tachycardia, Ventricular physiopathology, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Catheter Ablation methods, Tachycardia, Ventricular surgery
- Abstract
Aims: Patients with well-tolerated sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (SMVT) and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) over 30% may benefit from a primary strategy of VT ablation without immediate need for a 'back-up' implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD)., Methods and Results: One hundred and sixty-six patients with structural heart disease (SHD), LVEF over 30%, and well-tolerated SMVT (no syncope) underwent primary radiofrequency ablation without ICD implantation at eight European centres. There were 139 men (84%) with mean age 62 ± 15 years and mean LVEF of 50 ± 10%. Fifty-five percent had ischaemic heart disease, 19% non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy, and 12% arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. Three hundred seventy-eight similar patients were implanted with an ICD during the same period and serve as a control group. All-cause mortality was 12% (20 patients) over a mean follow-up of 32 ± 27 months. Eight patients (40%) died from non-cardiovascular causes, 8 (40%) died from non-arrhythmic cardiovascular causes, and 4 (20%) died suddenly (SD) (2.4% of the population). All-cause mortality in the control group was 12%. Twenty-seven patients (16%) had a non-fatal recurrence at a median time of 5 months, while 20 patients (12%) required an ICD, of whom 4 died (20%)., Conclusion: Patients with well-tolerated SMVT, SHD, and LVEF > 30% undergoing primary VT ablation without a back-up ICD had a very low rate of arrhythmic death and recurrences were generally non-fatal. These data would support a randomized clinical trial comparing this approach with others incorporating implantation of an ICD as a primary strategy., (Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2014. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2014
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369. Multimodal imaging of subventricular zone neural stem/progenitor cells in the cuprizone mouse model reveals increased neurogenic potential for the olfactory bulb pathway, but no contribution to remyelination of the corpus callosum.
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Guglielmetti C, Praet J, Rangarajan JR, Vreys R, De Vocht N, Maes F, Verhoye M, Ponsaerts P, and Van der Linden A
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- Animals, Cell Movement, Cell Tracking methods, Cuprizone, Demyelinating Diseases chemically induced, Female, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Microscopy, Fluorescence methods, Multimodal Imaging methods, Neural Pathways pathology, Neurogenesis, Cerebral Ventricles pathology, Corpus Callosum pathology, Demyelinating Diseases pathology, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Nerve Fibers, Myelinated pathology, Neural Stem Cells pathology, Olfactory Bulb pathology
- Abstract
Multiple sclerosis is a devastating demyelinating disease of the central nervous system (CNS) in which endogenous remyelination, and thus recovery, often fails. Although the cuprizone mouse model allowed elucidation of many molecular factors governing remyelination, currently very little is known about the spatial origin of the oligodendrocyte progenitor cells that initiate remyelination in this model. Therefore, we here investigated in this model whether subventricular zone (SVZ) neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs) contribute to remyelination of the splenium following cuprizone-induced demyelination. Experimentally, from the day of in situ NSPC labeling, C57BL/6J mice were fed a 0.2% cuprizone diet during a 4-week period and then left to recover on a normal diet for 8weeks. Two in situ labeling strategies were employed: (i) NSPCs were labeled by intraventricular injection of micron-sized iron oxide particles and then followed up longitudinally by means of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and (ii) SVZ NSPCs were transduced with a lentiviral vector encoding the eGFP and Luciferase reporter proteins for longitudinal monitoring by means of in vivo bioluminescence imaging (BLI). In contrast to preceding suggestions, no migration of SVZ NSPC towards the demyelinated splenium was observed using both MRI and BLI, and further validated by histological analysis, thereby demonstrating that SVZ NSPCs are unable to contribute directly to remyelination of the splenium in the cuprizone model. Interestingly, using longitudinal BLI analysis and confirmed by histological analysis, an increased migration of SVZ NSPC-derived neuroblasts towards the olfactory bulb was observed following cuprizone treatment, indicative for a potential link between CNS inflammation and increased neurogenesis., (© 2013.)
- Published
- 2014
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370. The validity and reliability of a novel indoor player tracking system for use within wheelchair court sports.
- Author
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Rhodes J, Mason B, Perrat B, Smith M, and Goosey-Tolfrey V
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- Adult, Athletes, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Geographic Information Systems standards, Movement, Sports, Wheelchairs
- Abstract
The aim of the current study was to investigate the validity and reliability of a radio frequency-based system for accurately tracking athlete movement within wheelchair court sports. Four wheelchair-specific tests were devised to assess the system during (i) static measurements; (ii) incremental fixed speeds; (iii) peak speeds; and (iv) multidirectional movements. During each test, three sampling frequencies (4, 8 and 16 Hz) were compared to a criterion method for distance, mean and peak speeds. Absolute static error remained between 0.19 and 0.32 m across the session. Distance values (test (ii)) showed greatest relative error in 4 Hz tags (1.3%), with significantly lower errors seen in higher frequency tags (<1.0%). Relative peak speed errors of <2.0% (test (iii)) were revealed across all sampling frequencies in relation to the criterion (4.00 ± 0.09 m · s-(1)). Results showed 8 and 16 Hz sampling frequencies displayed the closest-to-criterion values, whilst intra-tag reliability never exceeded 2.0% coefficient of variation (% CV) during peak speed detection. Minimal relative distance errors (<0.2%) were also seen across sampling frequencies (test (iv)). To conclude, the indoor tracking system is deemed an acceptable tool for tracking wheelchair court match play using a tag frequency of 8 or 16 Hz.
- Published
- 2014
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371. Scalable fabrication of ambipolar transistors and radio-frequency circuits using aligned carbon nanotube arrays.
- Author
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Wang Z, Liang S, Zhang Z, Liu H, Zhong H, Ye LH, Wang S, Zhou W, Liu J, Chen Y, Zhang J, and Peng LM
- Published
- 2014
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372. Monitoring tissue inflammation and responses to drug treatments in early stages of mice bone fracture using 50 MHz ultrasound.
- Author
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Chen YC, Lin YH, Wang SH, Lin SP, Shung KK, and Wu CC
- Subjects
- Animals, Early Diagnosis, Fracture Healing drug effects, Mice, Osteitis immunology, Tibial Fractures immunology, Treatment Outcome, Anti-Inflammatory Agents therapeutic use, Cytokines immunology, Osteitis diagnostic imaging, Osteitis drug therapy, Tibial Fractures diagnostic imaging, Tibial Fractures drug therapy, Ultrasonography methods
- Abstract
Bone fracture induces moderate inflammatory responses that are regulated by cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) or 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) for initiating tissue repair and bone formation. Only a handful of non-invasive techniques focus on monitoring acute inflammation of injured bone currently exists. In the current study, we monitored in vivo inflammation levels during the initial 2 weeks of the inflammatory stage after mouse bone fracture utilizing 50 MHz ultrasound. The acquired ultrasonic images were correlated well with histological examinations. After the bone fracture in the tibia, dynamic changes in the soft tissue at the medial-posterior compartment near the fracture site were monitored by ultrasound on the days of 0, 2, 4, 7, and 14. The corresponding echogenicity increased on the 2nd, 4th, and 7th day, and subsequently declined to basal levels after the 14th day. An increase of cell death was identified by the positive staining of deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL) assay and was consistent with ultrasound measurements. The increases of both COX-2 and Leukotriene B4 receptor 1 (BLT1, 5-LO-relative receptor), which are regulators for tissue inflammation, in the immunohistochemistry staining revealed their involvement in bone fracture injury. Monitoring the inflammatory response to various non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) treatments was investigated by treating injured mice with a daily oral intake of aspirin (Asp), indomethacin (IND), and a selective COX-2 inhibitor (SC-236). The Asp treatment significantly reduced fracture-increased echogenicity (hyperechogenicity, p<0.05) in ultrasound images as well as inhibited cell death, and expression of COX-2 and BLT1. In contrast, treatment with IND or SC-236 did not reduce the hyperechogenicity, as confirmed by cell death (TUNEL) and expression levels of COX-2 or BLT1. Taken together, the current study reports the feasibility of a non-invasive ultrasound method capable of monitoring post-fracture tissue inflammation that positively correlates with histological findings. Results of this study also suggest that this approach may be further applied to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of inflammatory processes and to develop therapeutic strategies for facilitating fracture healing., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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373. A highly sensitive and label free biosensing platform for wireless sensor node system.
- Author
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Kim SG, Lee HJ, Lee JH, Jung HI, and Yook JG
- Subjects
- Equipment Design, Limit of Detection, Radio Waves, Sound, Biosensing Techniques instrumentation, DNA, Complementary analysis, Streptavidin analysis
- Abstract
In this paper, we propose a radio-frequency (RF) biosensor platform based on oscillation frequency deviation at 2.4 GHz. Its feasibility is experimentally demonstrated with the well-known biomolecular binding systems such as biotin-streptavidin and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) hybridization. For a basic principle of our biosensing system, the impedance of a resonator with the biomolecular immobilization is at first varied so that the corresponding change results in frequency change of an oscillator. Especially, to enhance the sensitivity of the proposed system, a surface acoustic wave (SAW) filter having a high-Q factor (~2000) is utilized. From the resulting component, even a small change of oscillation frequency can be transformed into a large output amplitude variation. According to the experimental results, it is found that our system shows the low detectable limit (~1 ng/ml) and fast response time (~real-time) for different target biomolecules, i.e. streptavidin and complementary DNA (cDNA). As a result, we find that our device is an effective biosensing system that can be used for a label-free and real-time measurement of the biomolecular binding events., (Copyright © 2013. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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374. Diffusion restriction in the human spinal cord characterized in vivo with high b-value STEAM diffusion imaging.
- Author
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Rangwala NA, Hackney DB, Dai W, and Alsop DC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Nerve Fibers, Myelinated metabolism, Nerve Fibers, Myelinated ultrastructure, Spinal Cord metabolism, Young Adult, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Spinal Cord anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Restricted or hindered motion of water across axonal membranes as characterized with diffusion-weighted (DW) imaging may be a potential marker of axonal damage in white matter (WM) injury due to trauma, neurodegeneration, or other causes. This study sought to determine whether high b-value DW imaging with a stimulated echo (STEAM) sequence could improve the spatially resolved assessment of tissue architecture in the human spinal cord in vivo. Diffusion times from 76 ms to 1000 ms and b-values of up to 14,750 s/mm(2) were used to acquire axial DW images in six healthy volunteers, and four additional healthy volunteers were studied with a protocol focused on high b-value, higher-resolution imaging. Mono-exponential, diffusional kurtosis, and mono-exponential with an additive constant (MEC) models were fit individually to diffusion decay curves obtained at different diffusion times. Diffusion restriction, characterized with the diffusional kurtosis and MEC models, was measured more precisely using higher b-value ranges. DW images at high b-value and fitting parameters using the large range of b-values available at the diffusion time of 1000 ms demonstrated signal and restriction differences between gray and white matter and even across white matter regions. These white matter differences may reflect variations in axonal density, diameter, or alignment. We conclude that high b-value DW imaging with a STEAM sequence on a conventional clinical scanner can provide accurate measures of diffusion hindrance and restriction in human spinal cord in vivo., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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375. Direct design of 2D RF pulses using matrix inversion.
- Author
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Schulte RF and Wiesinger F
- Abstract
Multi-dimensional pulses are frequently used in MRI for applications such as targeted excitation, fat-water separation or metabolic imaging with hyperpolarised (13)C compounds. For the design, the problem is typically separated into the different dimensions. In this work, a method to directly design two-dimensional pulses using the small-tip angle approximation is introduced based on a direct matrix representation. The numerical problem is solved in a single step directly in two dimensions by matrix inversion. Exemplary spectral-spatial excitation and spatio-temporal encoding (SPEN) pulses are designed and validated. The main benefits of the direct design approach include a reduction of artefacts in case of spectral-spatial pulses, a simple and straightforward computer implementation and high flexibility in the pulse design., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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376. Temperature Dependence of the Magnetic Susceptibility of the Organic Free Radical Galvinoxyl
- Author
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Morphew, Sam W.
- Subjects
- electrons, radio-frequency
- Abstract
This thesis examines temperature dependence of magnetic susceptibility of the organic free radical galvinoxyl.
- Published
- 1965
377. Operation and Control of a Radiofrequency Ion Source
- Author
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Paulissen, George T.
- Subjects
- ions, radio-frequency
- Abstract
This thesis examines the operation and control of a radiofrequency ion source.
- Published
- 1953
378. Treatment of hepatic and pulmonary metastases with radiofrequency
- Author
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T. de Baere and Frederic Deschamps
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Tumor cells ,Disease ,Metastasis ,Hepatic ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Respiratory system ,Site of origin ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Metastasectomy ,Cancer ,Local failure ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Radio-frequency ,Catheter Ablation ,Radiology ,Tumour ,business - Abstract
Although metastatic disease indicates diffusion of a cancer at a distance from its site of origin, in some cases pulmonary and hepatic metastases are isolated and slowly progressive, making them suitable for local treatment. Thermo-ablation techniques are associated with low morbidity and reduced collateral parenchymal damage; they therefore play an important role in such patients, where the disease is slow and chronic, requiring repeated local treatments. Unlike radiotherapy, a second treatment is possible in the event of local failure.
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379. ¹³⁹La NMR detection of ferromagnetic clusters far above the Curie temperature in La₀.₇Ca₀.₃Fe₀.₀₉Mn₀.₉₁O₃ spin-glass manganite
- Author
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Ylinen, E., Laiho, R., Matveev, V. V., Zakhvalinskii, V. S., Ylinen, E., Laiho, R., Matveev, V. V., and Zakhvalinskii, V. S.
- Abstract
The dependence of the ¹³⁹La nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spin-echo signal on temperature and on the power of the applied radio-frequency pulse is investigated in zero applied magnetic field in La₀.₇Ca₀.₃Fe₀.₀₉Mn₀.₉₁O₃ (LCFMO) with Curie temperature (Tc) of about 125 K. Plots of the spin-echo signal versus the NMR pulse power reveal two maxima, out of which the highpower component is observed up to temperatures above Tc. It is also found that while the temperature dependence of the NMR signal amplitude follows the value of static magnetization M(T), the NMR frequency, which is related to the local field at La positions, decreases only slowly and the ¹³⁹La NMR signal is preserved at least to 220 K. These results confirm the existence of large ferromagnetic clusters with long life-times above Tc in LCFMO, Petersburg State University
380. Three-Dimensional Multispecies Distribution Functions In A Plasma Boundary With An Oblique Magnetic Field
- Author
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Thompson, Derek S and Thompson, Derek S
381. The validity and reliability of a novel indoor player tracking system for use within wheelchair court sports
- Author
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Rhodes, James M., Mason, Barry S., Perrat, Bertrand, Smith, Martin, Goosey-Tolfrey, Victoria L., Rhodes, James M., Mason, Barry S., Perrat, Bertrand, Smith, Martin, and Goosey-Tolfrey, Victoria L.
- Abstract
The aim of the current study was to investigate the validity and reliability of a radio- frequency based system for accurately tracking athlete movement within the wheelchair court sports. Four wheelchair specific tests were devised to assess the system during i) static measurements ii) incremental fixed speeds iii) peak speeds, and iv) multi-directional movements. During each test, three sampling frequencies (4, 8 & 16 Hz) were compared to a criterion method for distance, mean and peak speeds. Absolute static error remained between 0.19-0.32 m across the session. Distance values (test ii) showed greatest relative error in 4 Hz tags (1.3%), with significantly lower errors seen in higher frequency tags (< 1.0%). Relative peak speed errors of < 2.0% (test iii) were revealed across all sampling frequencies in relation to the criterion (4.00 ± 0.09 m·sˉ¹). Results showed 8 and 16 Hz sampling frequencies displayed the closest to criterion values, whilst intra-tag reliability never exceeded 2.0% coefficient of variation (% CV) during peak speed detection. Minimal relative distance errors (< 0.2%) were also seen across sampling frequencies (test iv). To conclude, the indoor tracking system is deemed an acceptable tool for tracking wheelchair court match-play using a tag frequency of 8 or 16 Hz.
- Full Text
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382. The validity and reliability of a novel indoor player tracking system for use within wheelchair court sports
- Author
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Rhodes, James M., Mason, Barry S., Perrat, Bertrand, Smith, Martin, Goosey-Tolfrey, Victoria L., Rhodes, James M., Mason, Barry S., Perrat, Bertrand, Smith, Martin, and Goosey-Tolfrey, Victoria L.
- Abstract
The aim of the current study was to investigate the validity and reliability of a radio- frequency based system for accurately tracking athlete movement within the wheelchair court sports. Four wheelchair specific tests were devised to assess the system during i) static measurements ii) incremental fixed speeds iii) peak speeds, and iv) multi-directional movements. During each test, three sampling frequencies (4, 8 & 16 Hz) were compared to a criterion method for distance, mean and peak speeds. Absolute static error remained between 0.19-0.32 m across the session. Distance values (test ii) showed greatest relative error in 4 Hz tags (1.3%), with significantly lower errors seen in higher frequency tags (< 1.0%). Relative peak speed errors of < 2.0% (test iii) were revealed across all sampling frequencies in relation to the criterion (4.00 ± 0.09 m·sˉ¹). Results showed 8 and 16 Hz sampling frequencies displayed the closest to criterion values, whilst intra-tag reliability never exceeded 2.0% coefficient of variation (% CV) during peak speed detection. Minimal relative distance errors (< 0.2%) were also seen across sampling frequencies (test iv). To conclude, the indoor tracking system is deemed an acceptable tool for tracking wheelchair court match-play using a tag frequency of 8 or 16 Hz.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
383. The validity and reliability of a novel indoor player tracking system for use within wheelchair court sports
- Author
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Rhodes, James M., Mason, Barry S., Perrat, Bertrand, Smith, Martin, Goosey-Tolfrey, Victoria L., Rhodes, James M., Mason, Barry S., Perrat, Bertrand, Smith, Martin, and Goosey-Tolfrey, Victoria L.
- Abstract
The aim of the current study was to investigate the validity and reliability of a radio- frequency based system for accurately tracking athlete movement within the wheelchair court sports. Four wheelchair specific tests were devised to assess the system during i) static measurements ii) incremental fixed speeds iii) peak speeds, and iv) multi-directional movements. During each test, three sampling frequencies (4, 8 & 16 Hz) were compared to a criterion method for distance, mean and peak speeds. Absolute static error remained between 0.19-0.32 m across the session. Distance values (test ii) showed greatest relative error in 4 Hz tags (1.3%), with significantly lower errors seen in higher frequency tags (< 1.0%). Relative peak speed errors of < 2.0% (test iii) were revealed across all sampling frequencies in relation to the criterion (4.00 ± 0.09 m·sˉ¹). Results showed 8 and 16 Hz sampling frequencies displayed the closest to criterion values, whilst intra-tag reliability never exceeded 2.0% coefficient of variation (% CV) during peak speed detection. Minimal relative distance errors (< 0.2%) were also seen across sampling frequencies (test iv). To conclude, the indoor tracking system is deemed an acceptable tool for tracking wheelchair court match-play using a tag frequency of 8 or 16 Hz.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
384. Radio-frequency induced ground state degeneracy in a Chromium Bose-Einstein condensate
- Author
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Beaufils, Q., Zanon, T., Chicireanu, R., Laburthe-Tolra, B., Marechal, E., Laurent Vernac, C Keller, J., Gorceix, O., Laboratoire de Physique des Lasers (LPL), Université Paris 13 (UP13)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and CPER du MESR et IFRAF
- Subjects
Condensed Matter::Quantum Gases ,Quantum Physics ,radio-frequency ,[PHYS.QPHY]Physics [physics]/Quantum Physics [quant-ph] ,Landé factor ,inelastic collisions ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,Bose-Einstein condensation ,Quantum Physics (quant-ph) ,ultracold atoms ,spinor ,PACS : 67.85.-d, 03.75.Mn , 32.10.Dk - Abstract
We study the effect of strong radio-frequency (rf) fields on a chromium Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC), in a regime where the rf frequency is much larger than the Larmor frequency. We use the modification of the Land\'{e} factor by the rf field to bring all Zeeman states to degeneracy, despite the presence of a static magnetic field of up to 100 mG. This is demonstrated by analyzing the trajectories of the atoms under the influence of dressed magnetic potentials in the strong field regime. We investigate the problem of adiabaticity of the rf dressing process, and relate it to how close the dressed states are to degeneracy. Finally, we measure the lifetime of the rf dressed BECs, and identify a new rf-assisted two-body loss process induced by dipole-dipole interactions., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures
385. First characterization of the SPIDER beam AC component with the Beamlet Current Monitor
- Author
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Basile Pouradier Duteil, Alastair Shepherd, Tommaso Patton, Andrea Rigoni Garola, and Riccardo Casagrande
- Subjects
radio-frequency ,beam optics ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Mechanical Engineering ,beam current ,General Materials Science ,negative-ion source ,spider ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
SPIDER is the full scale prototype for the ITER Heating Neutral Beam source, hosted at the Neutral Beam Test Facility in Padova, Italy. The behavior of the beam must be thoroughly investigated to bring the machine's performance in line with ITER's requirements. In particular, ripples in the beam can affect its divergence. Measuring the AC component of the beam current can therefore help to understand the impact that the oscillations caused by the source power supplies or RF generators have on the beam optics.To minimize the occurrence of electrical discharges, SPIDER was recently operated with a mask designed to close a large number of extraction apertures. As a consequence, the space between each beamlet was substantially increased, allowing for the installation of the Beamlet Current Monitor (BCM) which enables a non-invasive direct measurement of the DC and AC components of the currents of 5 individual beamlets.A first assessment of the beamlet currents' AC components (up to 10 MHz) was performed during SPIDER's first campaign with cesium evaporation. Recurring oscillations were identified in various frequency ranges, with amplitudes reaching up to similar to 7% of the beamlet current DC value. When possible, the ripples were correlated to oscillations due to the RF oscillators and the beatings caused by their mutual coupling, or to SPIDER's power supply systems.
386. Dual-frequency RF front-ends for GNSS receivers
- Author
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Chastellain, Frédéric, Farine, Pierre-André, and Botteron, Cyril
- Subjects
Global Navigation Satellite System ,low-power ,architecture ,Radio-Frequency ,GPS ,receiver ,faible-consommation ,ionosphere ,dual-frequency ,Radio-Fréquence ,L2C ,Système Global de Positionnement par Satellite ,Global Positioning System ,traitement de signaux complexes ,Système de Positionnement Global ,timing ,GNSS ,CMOS ,L2 ,L2CS ,L1 ,front-end ,L1C/A ,complex signal processing ,temps ,ionosphère ,RF ,tête d'entrée ,récepteur - Abstract
The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a trilateration system which allows to compute the position of a receiver from the time the signals need to propagate from the satellites down to the receiver. Since the Selective Availability (SA) was turned off in 2000, the most important source of error is due to the variable delay experienced by the signals when traveling through the ionosphere. Today, the majority of GPS receivers use the L1C/A signal, the only civil signal currently transmitted by a full constellation of satellites, to compute their positions. The United States' GPS is actually only one of several Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) under development, such as the european Galileo or the Japanese Quasi-Zenith Satellite System (QZSS). In the years to come, the constellations of these new GNSS will be fully deployed, providing new modernized signals. The GPS is actually also being modernized and will provide two new civil signals, the first in the L2 band (1227.6 MHz) and the second in the L5 band (1176.45 MHz), as well as an improved version of the L1C/A signal in the L1 band (1575.42 MHz). The first fully available new civil signal will certainly be the GPS civil signal in the L2 band called the L2C signal. The availability of two civil signals in two different bands will give the opportunity to correct the ionospheric error to a great extent! However, receiving two signals located in different bands will add complexity in the receiver, particularly in the radio-frequency (RF) front-end. This is a major issue since, for the mass market, improved performances do usually not justify a higher power consumption and cost. As a consequence, the first objective of this thesis was to design a low-power dual-frequency RF front-end architecture for the L1C/A and L2C signals that could be integrated using standard CMOS technology and which would have a power consumption and performances comparable with that of state-of-the-art single-frequency GPS RF front-ends. Dual-frequency correction of the ionospheric error will also allow to improve the performances of another application of GPS called GPS timing. Indeed, the GPS provides the most precise time reference globally available anywhere on earth! As a consequence, an attractive solution to synchronize telecommunication networks consists to use the time reference provided by the GPS. However, the accuracy provided by single-frequency GPS receiver will soon not be sufficient anymore to be compliant with upcoming telecommunication standards. For this reason, the second objective of this thesis was the development of a dual-frequency RF front-end for an L1C/A + L2C GPS receiver for timing applications.
387. Aspects regarding the processing of semi-manufactured wood in a RF field
- Author
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Leuca, T., Palade, P. A., and Livia Bandici
- Subjects
wood processing ,radio-frequency ,electromagnetic field ,drying ,lcsh:Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,lcsh:TK1-9971 ,thermal field - Abstract
The paper presents a study of electromagnetic field processing of semi-manufactured wood in RF structures at 13.56 MHz. The staggeredthrough-field applicator is used and the advantages ofthis applicator for the semi-manufactured wood processing are highlighted. The benefits over conventional heating and drying methods of RF heating are discussed, and also the advantages overmicrowave heating for this specific application are mentioned. The experimental results, assisted with numerical modelling allow the establishment of optimum parameters for RF wood drying.
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