首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到19条相似文献,搜索用时 125 毫秒
1.
设K为域, L= K(a1;…… ; an) 为K的可分生成的扩域, tr:deg:(L/K) = r。证明了存在有限多个非零n(r + 1) 元 多项式 , 使得对任意 ,只要某一个 ,令 就有 ,结论中多 项式的系数范围控制得足够好。  相似文献   

2.
《学会》2009,(4):25-25
<正>据2009年04月13日《京华时报》报道:北京市社会建设工作领导小组认定本市首批10家市级"枢纽型"社会组织,今后成立社会组织将不会再找行政部门。  相似文献   

3.
<正>2 0 1 5年1月2 0日,由知识产权出版社i智库和人民网知识产权频道联合推出的中国专利排行榜2014年度榜单在京揭晓。"中国专利排行榜"是知识产权出版社i智库与人民网知识产权频道在2 0 1 4年9月9日推出的特色栏目,榜单数据由知识产权出版社i智库专业分析团队分类统计提供,迄今,已经发布了24期中国专利授权量的月度榜  相似文献   

4.
<正>之前,剑桥大学的医学史教授R o y Porter提出了一个问题。他说:"我们人类活得从来没有现在这么长,也从来没有现在这么健康,医学从来没有今天的成绩斐然,但是受到的质疑却越来越多,为什么?"如果要我回答,就是医学面临的走向遇到了一个个难题。美国前段时间发布了一个消息,医院死亡率大概占10%,那就是说10个中有1个是我们治死的。难道是我们的医学出了问题?我们的医生出了问题?不是,我们  相似文献   

5.
<正>为遵循学术期刊编排规范,请作者来稿时注意以下事项:一、关于论文格式1.文稿格式要求规范,按顺序给出:题名(不超过2 0字)、作者名(包括单位、城市、邮编)、摘要(100-300字)、关键词(3-8个)、正文、参考文献。提供文稿中的"中图分类号"和"文献标识码"。2.要求英译项目包括:题名、作者名、单位和邮编、摘要(与中文摘要对应)和关键词。3.文章标题要层次分明,层次一般不超过4级,一级标题用"1"、二级标题用"1.1"、三级标题用"1.1.1"、四级标题用"(1)"表示。  相似文献   

6.
张敬 《知识窗》2012,(6X):65-65
<正>一、对传统高中地理教学的反思1.灌输式教学影响学生的学习兴趣伟大的文学家托尔斯泰曾经说过:"成功的教学需要的不是强制,而是激发学生的学习兴趣。"  相似文献   

7.
<正>人们常说:竹篮打水一场空。下面小编带大家做一个游戏,用丝网就可以托住水,不让水流下去。这个"竹篮"为什么能把水打上来呢?一起做做实验吧!准备材料:丝网1块、剪刀1把、玻璃杯1个、橡皮筋2根、硬塑料板1块、水若干  相似文献   

8.
<正>1.文章组成部分(1)题名。文章题名不超过20个汉字,可以使用副标题。(2)详细注明作者单位、地址、邮政编码、联系手机、电子邮箱及作者的职务、职称、身份证号码。属于自然科学基金资助项目的文章请附注项目名称、年度与编号,本刊将予以优先发表。(3)要有文章摘要及3~8个中文关键词。(4)层次标题。应简短明确,各层次标题用阿拉伯数字连续编码,如"1……","1.1……"等:引言的编码为"0"。  相似文献   

9.
麻辣热词     
<正>1.selfie:n.自拍照2013年8月,"自拍照"——"selfie"一词被收录在了牛津在线词典中。"自拍照"成为2013年最热的词,牛津大学出版社在宣布"自拍照"成为2013年年度词的那篇博客文章里解释道:"如果奥巴马这样的政客或是教皇都很认可它,那么  相似文献   

10.
<正>六年级1班的同学们真听话!宋老师只是宽慰了大家几句,同学们就像羚羊一样在纸上用笔狂奔起来:沙沙沙,沙沙沙……宋老师得意地笑着,心想:"只要我略施小计,他们就是乖乖的好孩子。"  相似文献   

11.
考虑如下用来描述浮游动物-营养物相互作用时滞微分方程模型 其中 是营养物浓度, 是浮游动物种群的度量,并且参数 为正常数. 如果 成立, 则该系统的正平衡点是全局吸引的. 也给出了正平衡点局部稳定的充分条件. (编辑:摘要中有公式,但未能正常显示)  相似文献   

12.
Nowadays, microfluidics is attracting more and more attentions in the biological society and has provided powerful solutions for various applications. This paper reported a microfluidic strategy for aqueous sample sterilization. A well-designed small microchannel with a high hydrodynamic resistance was used to function as an in-chip pressure regulator. The pressure in the upstream microchannel was thereby elevated which made it possible to maintain a boiling-free high temperature environment for aqueous sample sterilization. A 120 °C temperature along with a pressure of 400 kPa was successfully achieved inside the chip to sterilize aqueous samples with E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus inside. This technique will find wide applications in portable cell culturing, microsurgery in wild fields, and other related micro total analysis systems.Microfluidics, which confines fluid flow at microscale, attracts more and more attentions in the biological society.1–4 By scaling the flow domain down to microliter level, microfluidics shows attractive merits of low sample consumption, precise biological objective manipulation, and fast momentum/energy transportation. For example, various cell operations, such as culturing5–7 and sorting,8–10 have already been demonstrated with microfluidic approaches. In most biological applications, sterilization is a key sample pre-treatment step to avoid contamination. However, as far as the author knew, this important pre-treatment operation is generally achieved in an off-chip way, by using high temperature and high pressure autoclave. Actually, microfluidics has already been utilized to develop new solution for high pressure/temperature reactions. The required high pressure/temperature condition was generated either by combining off-chip back pressure regulator and hot-oil bath,11,12 or by integrating pressure regulator, heater, and temperature sensor into a single chip.13 This work presented a microfluidic sterilization strategy by implementing the previously developed continuous flowing high pressure/temperature microfluidic reactor.Figure Figure11 shows the working principle of the present microfluidic sterilization chip. The chip consists of three zones: sample loading (a microchannel with length of 270 mm and width of 40 μm), sterilization (length of 216 mm and width of 100 μm), and pressure regulating (length of 42 mm and width of 5 μm). Three functional zones were separated by two thermal isolation trenches. The sample was injected into the chip by a syringe pump and experienced two-step filtrations (feature sizes of 20 μm and 5 μm, not shown in Figure Figure1)1) at the entrance to avoid the channel clog. All channels had the same depth of 40 μm. According to the Hagen–Poiseuille relationship,15 the pressure regulating channel had a large flow resistance (around 1.09 × 1017 Pa·s/m3, see supplementary S1 for details16) because of its small width, thereby generated a high working pressure in the upstream sterilization channel under a given flow rate. The boiling point of the solution will then be raised up by the elevated pressure in the sterilization zone followed by the Antoine equation.16 By integrating heater/temperature sensors in the pressurized zone, a high temperature environment with temperature higher than 100 °C can thereby be realized for aqueous sample sterilization. The sample was collected from the outlet and cultured at 37 °C for 12 h. Bacterial colony was counted to evaluate the sterilization performance.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Working principle of the present microfluidic sterilization. Only microfluidic channel, heater, and temperature sensor were schematically shown. The varied colour of the microchannel represents the pressure and that of the halation stands for the temperature.Fabrication of this chip has been introduced elsewhere.14 The fabricated chip and the experimental system are shown in Figure Figure2.2. There were two inlets of the chip. While, in the experiment, only one inlet used and connected to the syringe pump. The backup one was blocked manually. The sample load zone was arranged in between of the sterilization zone and the pressure regulating zone based on thermal management consideration. A temperature control system (heater/temperature sensor, power source, and multi-meter) was setup to provide the required high temperature. The heater and the temperature sensor were microfabricated Pt resistors. The temperature coefficient of resistance (TCR) was measured as 0.00152 K−1.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.The fabricated chip and the experimental system. (a) Two chips with a penny for comparison. The left chip was viewed from the heater/temperature sensor side, while the right one was observed from the microchannel side (through a glass substrate). (b) The experimental system.Thermal isolation performance of the present chip before packaging with inlet/outlet was shown in Figure Figure3,3, to show the thermal interference issue. The results indicated that when the sterilization zone was heated up to 140 °C, the pressure regulating zone was about 40 °C. At this temperature, the viscosity of water decreases to 0.653 mPa·s from 1.00 mPa·s (at 20 °C), which will make the pressure in the sterilization zone reduced from 539 kPa (calculated at 20 °C and flow rate of 4 nl/s) to 387 kPa. The boiling point will then decrease to 142.8 °C, which will guarantee a boiling-free sterilization. In the cases without the thermal isolation trenches, the temperature of the pressure regulating zone reached as high as 75 °C because of the thermal interference from the sterilization zone, as shown in Figure Figure3.3. The pressure in the sterilization zone was then reduced to 268 kPa (calculated at flow rate of 4 nl/s) and the boiling temperature was around 130 °C, which was lower than the set sterilization temperature. Detail calculation can be found in supplementary S2.16Open in a separate windowFIG. 3.The temperature distribution of the chips (before packaged) with and without thermal isolation trenches (powered at 1 W). The data were extracted from the central lines of infrared images, as shown as inserts.Bacterial sterilization performance of the present chip was tested and the experimental results were shown in Figure Figure4.4. E. coli with initial concentration of 106/ml was pumped into and flew through the chip with the sterilization temperatures varied from 25 °C to 120 °C at flow rates of 2 nl/s and 4 nl/s. The outflow was collected and inoculated onto the SS agar plate evenly with inoculation loops. The population of bacteria in the outflow was counted based on the bacterial colonies after incubation at 37 °C for 12 h. Typical bacterial colonies were shown in Figure Figure4.4. The low flow rate case showed a better sterilization performance because of the longer staying period in the sterilization channel. The population of E. coli was around 1.25 × 104/ml after a 432 s-long, 70 °C sterilization (at flow rate of 2 nl/s). While at the flow rate of 4 nl/s, the cultivation result indicated the population was around 3.8 × 104/ml because the sterilization time was shorten to 216 s. A control case, where the solution flew through an un-heated chip at 2 nl/s, was conducted to investigate the effect of the shear stress on the sterilization performance (see the supplementary S3 for details16). As listed in Table TableI,I, the results indicated that the shear stress did not show any noticeable effect on the bacterial sterilization. When the chip was not heated, i.e., the case with the largest shear stress because of the highest viscosity of fluid, the bacterial cultivation was nearly the same as the off-chip results (no stress). The temperature has the most significant effect on the sterilization performance. No noticeable bacteria proliferation was observed in the cases with the sterilization temperature higher than 100 °C, as shown in Figure Figure44.

Table I.

The E. coli cultivation results under different flow rates and sterilization temperatures. a
 25 °C70 °C100 °C120 °C25 °C b
2 nl/s1.89/+++1.38/+1.16/−1.04/−0/+++
4 nl/s3.78/+++2.76/+2.32/−2.08/−0/+++
Open in a separate windowaData in the table are shear stress (Pa)/population of bacteria, where “+++” indicates a large proliferation, “+” means small but noticeable proliferation, “−” represents no proliferation.bOff-chip control group.Open in a separate windowFIG. 4.Sterilization performance of the present chip with E. coli and S. aureus as test bacteria. All the original population was 106/ml. Inserted images showed the images of the culture disk after bacteria incubation.Sterilization of another commonly encountered bacterium, Staphylococcus aureus, with initial population of 106/ml was also tested in the present chip, as shown in Figure Figure4.4. Similarly, no noticeable S. aureus proliferation was found when the sterilization temperature was higher than 100 °C.In short, we demonstrated a microfluidic sterilization strategy by utilizing a continuous flowing high temperature/pressure chip. The population of E. coli or S. aureus was reduced from 106/ml to an undetectable level when the sterilization temperature of the chip was higher than 100 °C. The chip holds promising potential in developing portable microsystem for biological/clinical applications.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号