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Développement de techniques optiques pour la caractérisation de brouillards de gouttes dans les foyers aéronautiques / Development of optical techniques to characterize droplet sprays in aeronautical combustion chambersBrettar, Jonathan 17 December 2015 (has links)
L’optimisation des chambres de combustion est généralement réalisée à l'aide d’outils desimulation numérique. Lorsque le carburant est injecté sous forme liquide, la qualité des simulationsdépend en partie de la définition des conditions aux limites imposées pour cette phase à proximité del'injecteur (diamètre, vitesse et flux volumique des gouttes, vitesse de glissement entre phases). Cesconditions aux limites sont généralement définies à partir d'une analyse expérimentale dans desconditions réalistes d’injection, qui fait appel, dans le meilleur des cas, à l’utilisation del’Anémogranulomètre Phase Doppler (PDA). Cependant, cette technique ponctuelle est coûteuse entemps pour une caractérisation globale de l’injecteur et fournit une mesure des flux volumiques avecdes limitations. Il est également difficile d’accéder à des grandeurs telles que la vitesse de la phasegazeuse en présence des gouttes. Pour répondre à cette problématique, il paraît judicieux de mettre enœuvre des techniques de diagnostic optique spatialement résolues. Cette étude consiste à développer des techniques optiques de champ couplant des approches basées sur la diffusion de Mie, sur l'émission fluorescente des gouttes ou de traceurs et utilisant des algorithmes de type PIV, pour caractériser de manière simultanée et quantitative la granulométrie, la vitesse et le flux volumique de la phase dispersée, ainsi que la vitesse de la phase continue dans les brouillards de gouttes au sein d’une configuration réaliste de foyer aéronautique. Une attentionparticulière est portée à l'étude de la précision de la mesure. Ainsi, des comparaisons sont effectuéesavec des bases de données complètes obtenues à l’aide du PDA. L'analyse de ces résultats estconfrontée aux modèles de l'optique physique régissant les phénomènes de fluorescence et dediffusion de la lumière par des particules à l’aide de simulations. Cette démarche nous permetd'interpréter efficacement les résultats obtenus par imagerie directe et de définir les paramètresd'acquisition et de traitement assurant une précision optimale des mesures. / The optimization of combustion chambers is generally carried out using numerical simulation tools.When fuel is injected in liquid form, the simulation quality depends on the boundary conditionsimposed to this phase close to the injector (diameter, velocity and volume flux of the droplets, slipvelocity between phases). These boundary conditions are usually set from an experimental analysisunder realistic conditions of injection, which in the best case uses Phase Doppler Anemo-granulometry(PDA). However, this point measurement technique is time consuming for an overall injectorcharacterization and provides a measurement of the volume flux with some limitations. It is alsodifficult to access variables such as the velocity of the gas phase in the presence of droplets. Toaddress this problem, it seems appropriate to implement spatially resolved optical diagnostictechniques. This study consists in the development of optical field techniques which combine approaches based onMie scattering, fluorescent emission from droplets or tracers and use PIV algorithms to characterizesimultaneously and quantitatively size, velocity and volume flux of the dispersed phase, and velocityof the continuous phase in droplet sprays in a realistic configuration of aeronautical injector. Aparticular attention is given to the study of the measurement accuracy. Thus, comparisons are carriedout with complete databases obtained with the PDA. The analysis of these results is faced withphysical optics models governing phenomena of fluorescence and light scattering by particles usingsimulations. This approach allows us to effectively interpret the results obtained by direct imaging anddefine acquisition and processing parameters ensuring optimum accuracy.
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Zvýšení efektivity výrobní linky za použití metody lean (TPS) / Increase of line efficiency using lean (TPS) methodMatulík, Jan January 2009 (has links)
This dissertation deals with analysis and follow-up suggestion of efficiency improvement on the production line in DAIKIN DEVICE CZECH REPUBLIC Ltd. Mentioned steps are performed with the help of production philosophy called Lean production or TPS (Toyota Production System) and production procedures like Just in Time, Jidoka and Kaizen. The target of this work is to find out and eliminate inefficiencies of manufacturing process, design an improvement project (saving cost, safeness, reduction of working positions etc.). Perform evaluation of this project and suggest testing procedure for follow-up improvement in the future.
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Teacher Perceptions of Reading Intervention Conducted by Teacher Candidates in a Professional Development School (PDS) PartnershipKennedy, Christopher S. 01 October 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Application Of Virus Induced Gene Silencing Of Brachypodium Distachyon, A Model Organism For CropsDemircan, Turan 01 June 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Grass family is most important family in plant kingdom due to intensive usage of crops in agriculture. To date, molecular biology researches on grass family have had limitations because of inappropriate characteristics of barley and wheat to conduct experiments on them. Brachypodium distachyon that belongs to grass family has recently emerged as a model organism for crops. It shares common characteristics for a model plant due to its small genome, small physical plant size, a short lifecycle, and less demanding growth requirements / as other model organisms / Arabidopsis thaliana, Oryza sativa, and Zea mays (Draper et al. 2001). Especially after appreciating, the genetic distance of O. sativa to grasses (Garvin et al. 2008), it become a key organism to understand complicated genomic organization of agriculturally valuable grasses. Virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) is one of the revolutionary methods allowing a rapid and effective loss of a gene function through RNA interference (Holzberg et al. 2002 / Liu et al. 2008). Barley stripe mosaic virus (BSMV) is still the most effective vector used in monocot gene silencing. It has a tripartite RNA genome having a wide range of infection ability for monocots including barley, oat, wheat, and maize as host (Holzberg et al. 2002 / Scofield 2005). In this thesis, Phytoene desaturase (PDS) gene of Brachypodium distachyon was silenced via BSMV mediated VIGS. Additionally, with Green fluorescence protein (GFP) bearing BSMV transcripts, GFP expression was observed under fluorescent microscope. To our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating a VIGS via BSMV in Brachypodium distachyon. The success of virus induced gene silencing method in Brachypodium distachyon, will be a new convenient tool for evaluating functions of crop genes in this model organism.
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Identification of quantitative trait loci control l ing the requirement for chilling in vegetative budbreak in apple (malus x domestica borkh.)Van Dyk, Maria Magdalena January 2008 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / The domesticated apple (Malus x domestica Borkh.) has been distributed into diverse climatic conditions worldwide for commercial production of fruit. Apple trees need exposure to cold temperatures, referred to as chill unit (CU) accumulation during winter, in order for budbreak to occur promptly and uniformly after winter. In warmer production areas the application of dormancy breaking chemicals has enabled successful production of high chilling requiring apple cultivars in suboptimal environmental conditions. In the Western Cape region of South Africa it is common orchard practice to apply dormancy breaking chemicals after winter in order to stimulate vegetative growth. If this is not done prolonged dormancy symptoms (PDS) are experienced which include extended rest, less
synchronised breaking of buds and reduced branching. An increasing awareness of both global warming and the negative effects associated with the use of chemical sprays (for both pest and disease resistance and growth regulation) has resulted in the need to breed cultivars better adapted to current and future environmental conditions. The breeding of new cultivars using conventional breeding methods is
a time consuming process, especially in perennial tree species with a long
juvenile phase such as apple. The implementation of marker-assistedbreeding
(MAB) and selection (MAS) will enable the selection of favourable genotypes at a very early seedling stage. Although markers linked to genes involved in disease resistance for a variety of known apple pathogens have been identified and are already in use in breeding programs, the genetic determinants of dormancy related characteristics residing within the bud itself iii (endodormancy) are poorly understood. This hampers the genetic improvement of such characters. Although this study focused on time of initial vegetative budbreak IVB, there are various other characteristics that can be associated with dormancy, such as position and number of budbreak and budbreak duration.
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Investigation of G-quadruplex and Small Molecule Interactions at the Single Molecule LevelMaleki, Parastoo 06 December 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Whole Exome Sequencing Reveals Homozygous Mutations in RAI1, OTOF, and SLC26A4 Genes Associated with Nonsyndromic Hearing Loss in Altaian Families (South Siberia)Сhurbanov, Alexander Y., Karafet, Tatiana M., Morozov, Igor V., Mikhalskaia, Valeriia Yu., Zytsar, Marina V., Bondar, Alexander A., Posukh, Olga L. 15 April 2016 (has links)
Hearing loss (HL) is one of the most common sensorineural disorders and several dozen genes contribute to its pathogenesis. Establishing a genetic diagnosis of HL is of great importance for clinical evaluation of deaf patients and for estimating recurrence risks for their families. Efforts to identify genes responsible for HL have been challenged by high genetic heterogeneity and different ethnic-specific prevalence of inherited deafness. Here we present the utility of whole exome sequencing (WES) for identifying candidate causal variants for previously unexplained nonsyndromic HL of seven patients from four unrelated Altaian families (the Altai Republic, South Siberia). The WES analysis revealed homozygous missense mutations in three genes associated with HL. Mutation c.2168A>G (SLC26A4) was found in one family, a novel mutation c.1111G>C (OTOF) was revealed in another family, and mutation c.5254G>A (RAI1) was found in two families. Sanger sequencing was applied for screening of identified variants in an ethnically diverse cohort of other patients with HL (n = 116) and in Altaian controls (n = 120). Identified variants were found only in patients of Altaian ethnicity (n = 93). Several lines of evidences support the association of homozygosity for discovered variants c.5254G>A (RAI1), c.1111C>G (OTOF), and c.2168A>G (SLC26A4) with HL in Altaian patients. Local prevalence of identified variants implies possible founder effect in significant number of HL cases in indigenous population of the Altai region. Notably, this is the first reported instance of patients with RAI1 missense mutation whose HL is not accompanied by specific traits typical for Smith-Magenis syndrome. Presumed association of RAI1 gene variant c.5254G>A with isolated HL needs to be proved by further experimental studies.
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Théorie et applications des systèmes polyphasiques dispersés aux cultures cellulaires en chémostat/Theory and applications of polyphasic dispersed systems to chemostat cellular culturesThierie, Jacques GE 05 September 2005 (has links)
Résumé Les systèmes microbiologiques naturels (colonne d’eau), semi-naturels (station d’épuration), mais surtout industriels ou de laboratoire (bioréacteurs) sont communément représentés par des modèles mathématiques destinés à l’étude, à la compréhension des phénomènes ou au contrôle des processus (de production, par exemple).
Dans l’énorme majorité des cas, lorsque les cellules (procaryotes ou eucaryotes) mises en jeu dans ces systèmes sont en suspension, le formalisme de ces modèles non structurés traite le système comme s’il était homogène. Or, en toute rigueur, il est clair que cette approche n’est qu’une approximation et que nous avons à faire à des phénomènes hétérogènes, formés de plusieurs phases (solide, liquide, gazeuse) intimement mélangées. Nous désignons ces systèmes comme « polyphasiques dispersés » (SPD). Ce sont des systèmes thermodynami-quement instables, (presque) toujours ouverts.
La démarche que nous avons entreprise consiste à examiner si le fait de considérer des systèmes dits « homogènes » comme des systèmes hétérogènes (ce qu’ils sont en réalité) apporte, malgré une complication du traitement mathématique, un complément d’information significatif et pertinent.
La démarche s’est faite en deux temps :
· Une étape purement théorique, destinée à établir de manière rigoureuse et générale les bilans de matière pour chaque composé du système dans chacune de ces phases.
· Une étape appliquée, visant à démontrer, au travers d’exemples concrets, la validité du concept et de la démarche.
Pour l’étude des applications, pour diverses raisons, nous avons choisi d’étudier un bioréacteur ouvert « simple », le chémostat. Les bilans généraux dérivés à la première étape ont donc été appliqués à ce réacteur et plusieurs exemples, tirés de la littérature, pour la plupart, ont été traités dans le cadre des SPD.
Les principaux résultats exposés dans le travail concernent :
- sur le plan général, la pertinence d’une partition des systèmes en plusieurs phases, ce qui fait apparaître à la fois des flux d’échange interphasiques (qui n’apparaissent pas dans les systèmes dits monophasiques) et la possibilité de représenter le système à plusieurs niveaux de description.
- quant aux applications, outre quelques petits exemples simples, nous proposons 1) un nouveau mécanisme pour représenter la dissipation de l’énergie cellulaire (un domaine encore très controversé), grâce à une approche implicite (c’est-à-dire, sans hypothèses particulières sur la forme des cinétiques intracellulaires) et 2) un modèle simple, original et innovant pour expliquer les signaux chimiques intercellulaires, les phénomènes de seuil et le branchement métabolique respiro-fermentatif en général et chez Saccharomyces cerevisiae en particulier, un mécanisme d’intérêt fondamental et industriel (levuristes et fermentations alcooliques). Abstract.
Natural microbiological systems (rivers, seas, …), semi-natural (wastewater treatment plants), but especially industrial or lab-scale systems (bioreactors) are commonly represented by mathematical models intended for the study, the understanding of phenomena or for the control of processes (production, for example).
In almost in every case, when the cells (prokaryotic or eukaryotic) concerned in these systems are in suspension, the formalism of these unstructured models treats the system as if it were homogeneous. However, in any rigor, this approach is clearly only an approximation and we have to deal with heterogeneous phenomena, formed of several phases (solid, liquid, gas) closely mixed. We refer to these systems as “polyphasic dispersed systems” (PDS). They are thermodynamically unstable systems, and are (practically) always open.
The approach we undertook consists in examining if treating apparent «homogeneous» systems as heterogeneous systems (what they actually are) brings, in spite of some mathematical complications, further significant and relevant information’s.
We proceeded in two steps:
· A purely theoretical stage, intended to establish in a rigorous and general way the mass balances for each compound in each phases of the system.
· A applied stage, aiming at showing, through concrete examples, the soundness of the concept and of the method.
Concerning the applications, for several reasons, we chose to study a “simple” open bioreactor: the chemostat. The general balances previously derived in a general way were hence applied to this reactor and a number of examples, mainly obtained from the literature, were treated within the PDS framework.
The principal results presented in this work concern:
- on the general level, the importance of partitioning the system in different phases, enlightening at the same time interphasic exchange flows (which do not appear in the systems known as monophasic) and the possibility of representing the system on several levels of description.
- concerning the applications, in addition to some small simple examples, we propose
1) a new mechanism representing the cellular energy dissipation (a still very controversial field), using an implicit approach (i.e., without particular assumptions about the form of the intracellular kinetics) and
2) a simple, original and inventive model explaining cellular chemical signaling, threshold phenomena and a general metabolic switch occurring during respirofermentative transition. The latter was especially tested on Saccharomyces cerevisiae data to interpret the Crabtree effect in yeast, a mechanism of fundamental and industrial importance (in connection with baker’s yeast production and alcoholic fermentations).
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Determination Of Genes Involved In Yellow Rust Diesease Of WheatBozkurt, Osman 01 March 2007 (has links) (PDF)
It is important to understand the underlying plant defense mechanisms in order to establish best strategies to reduce losses due to diseases in cereals. The current available information is mostly on model organisms and their plant-pathogen interactions. However, this study is focused on the identification of genes involved in the resistance mechanism of one of the most devastating diseases of wheat, yellow rust. The strategy undertaken was to use differential display method (DD) together with microarray technology, on yellow rust differential lines of wheat (Avocet-Yr1 and Avocet-Yr10) infected with the virulent and avirulent Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici races (Pst: PST17, PST45, 169E136 and 232E137) together with appropriate control infections. DD primer combinations of ninety allowed the detection of fourteen differentially expressed genes which were also confirmed by real-time QRT-PCR analysis. All of but one were found to be novel sequences in wheat genome. Among those, two very important genes were identified as full ORF including 5&rsquo / and 3&rsquo / end untranslated regions (UTR) / namely cyclophilin like protein
(putative antifungal activity) and ubiquitin conjugating enzyme (E2). The sequence homology analysis of the cloned gene fragments reveled that the genes detected have roles in ubiquitinylation, programmed cell death (apoptosis), putative antifungal activities, disease resistance, pathogen related responses, including a few with no known function.
In addition to DD analysis, using wheat Affymetrix &ldquo / GeneChip&rdquo / , we identified 93 differentially expressed ESTs of wheat in response to avirulent pathogen attack. We also investigated the differential expression profiles of wheat leaves during the virulent infections and determined 75 differentially regulated ESTs. 1Selected ESTs were further analyzed using QRT-PCR analysis and 15 were confirmed to be differentially regulated.
For the further characterization of the identified genes, such as determination of their putative roles in disease response, functional studies have to be performed. For this purpose, BSMV (Barley Stripe Mosaic Virus) mediated virus induced gene silencing (VIGS) method is optimized in this thesis for wheat. We have successfully managed to silence the endogenous PDS gene (Phytoene desaturase) of wheat which can be used as a positive control for the monitoring of silencing of the genes we have identified. Our results show that BSMV mediated VIGS can be used efficiently and effectively to silence wheat genes that we identified through differential display and microarray analysis and can be used to study the functions of those genes
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The perceptions of principals on staff reduction in schoolsSchoeman, Daniel Wilhelmus 04 June 2008 (has links)
This research project examines the experiences of school principals when implementing the staff-reduction process of the rationalisation policy stipulated by the National Department of Education in 1994. The implementation of this policy has its origins in the Transformation policy of the National government after the first democratic election in South Africa in 1994. The aim of the rationalisation policy is to bring about equity and affirmative action in the staff provision in schools. Achieving this is a collective agreement between the National Education Department and the teachers’ unions where the decision was made that the teacher:learner ratio would be 1:35 in secondary schools and 1:40 in primary schools. The aim of this research is to determine what principals experience during the staff-reduction process(es) and what impact it would have on the principal as the manager of the institution. The researcher also intends to examine the influence that staff reduction has on the working conditions of the principal as well as how this process affects the teaching and learning culture in a school. Ultimately the researcher intends to make recommendations to assist principals that are affected by staff reduction. The research concentrates on a selected group of principals, regardless of race, gender or religion (including principals from secondary, middle and primary schools) who are currently busy with their Masters Degree in Education Leadership and Management at the University of Pretoria. A qualitative research methodology is used to exemplify the perceptions and experiences of principals. The dissertation is divided into five chapters. Chapter One provides an overview and orientation of the study. The focus is the problem statement and the exposition of the aims of the research. Chapter Two concentrates on the literature study that is supported by the collection of empirical data with specific reference to the rationalisation process and the resulting staff reduction process in some schools. Chapter Three discusses the research design and data collection instruments. The focus is on the individual interviews (face to face) done with principals of schools where they air their views regarding the rationalisation process, staff reduction and the impact that the abovementioned has on the teaching and learning process in schools. Transcriptions are made of the audio recordings of the interviews and field notes have also been included as background information for the interviews. In Chapter Four the analysis of the collective interviewed data is done and the empirical data is discussed. Chapter Five is a summary of the research. In this chapter the important findings are discussed and suitable recommendations are made. / Dissertation (MEd (Educational Leadership))--University of Pretoria, 2008. / Education Management and Policy Studies / unrestricted
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