attached membrane
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2021 ◽  
Vol 263 (3) ◽  
pp. 3699-3707
Author(s):  
Juan Carlos Rodríguez Vercher ◽  
Jesús Alba ◽  
Romina del Rey

The use of membranes attached to sound absorbing materials, with the aim of modifying its absorption properties, is quite a usual practice in acoustic conditioning applications. The behavior of the final composition formed by the sound absorbing base material and the attached membrane can serve to characterize the effect of the membrane, if the properties of the base material are known. This can be of great interest for several reasons. Firstly, the difficulty to characterize the materials separately, due to the thinness of the membranes. Secondly, the effect of the binding method used between the absorbing material and the membrane (glue, seams, etc.) can modify the properties of the membrane. This work presents a model that enables us to determine the acoustic impedance of the membranes from an initial analysis of the base material and a second analysis of the composition formed by the base material with the membrane. These analyses are carried out in an impedance tube by following the ISO 10534-2 standard and the results obtained allow modeling the attached membrane effect.


RSC Advances ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 3069-3080 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paolo Dessì ◽  
Estefania Porca ◽  
Johanna Haavisto ◽  
Aino-Maija Lakaniemi ◽  
Gavin Collins ◽  
...  

A mesophilic (37 °C) and a thermophilic (55 °C) two-chamber microbial fuel cell (MFC) were studied and compared for their power production from xylose and the anode-attached, membrane-attached and planktonic microbial communities involved.


2016 ◽  
Vol 933 ◽  
pp. 97-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wan Li ◽  
Xiangfeng Chen ◽  
Y.-L. Elaine Wong ◽  
Y.-L. Winnie Hung ◽  
Ze Wang ◽  
...  

1993 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 884-893 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. W. Meech ◽  
G. O. Mackie

1. In the motor system of the jellyfish, Aglantha digitale, there are eight giant axons connected by chemical synapses to a muscle epithelium. The simplicity of this structure makes it possible to assess the contribution of different ion conductances in the axon membrane to the two forms of swimming that provide the behavioral output of the system. In situ recordings from large clusters of ion channels provide a means of studying these membrane conductances in isolation so that the features that permit them to perform their behavioral function may be identified. 2. In Aglantha motor axons, low-amplitude, low-threshold spikes are associated with slow swimming, whereas escape swimming depends on a higher-threshold, overshooting action potential. The action potential was abolished by a sodium-free (choline-containing) bathing medium but was resistant to tetrodotoxin (0.09 mM; 3 x 10(-5) g/ml). It was prolonged by tetraethylammonium (TEA) ions (50 mM) but little affected by changes in holding potential in the range of -51 to -82 mV. The low-threshold spikes were unaffected by sodium-free saline containing TEA (30 mM). They were inactivated by holding the membrane potential at -51 mV. Average axon resting potentials were -63 +/- 6 (SD) mV (n = 17). 3. Shortened axons studied with the two-electrode voltage-clamp technique had a transient inward current with a low threshold for activation (about -60 mV). The inward current was fully inactivated at -51 mV; it was present in sodium-free saline and abolished by Mg2+ (120 mM) just like the low-threshold spike. 4. Calcium-dependent low-threshold spikes and sodium action potentials coexist in the same axons but may be elicited separately because an outward current limits the peak of the low-threshold spike to a level below the threshold of the action potential (about -20 mV). 5. Analysis of ensemble currents showed that axon-attached membrane patches contained clusters of different voltage-dependent potassium channels. Three channel classes were distinguished by prepulse inactivation experiments. All three channels were found to inactivate, but they had different voltage-dependencies and different inactivation kinetics (fast, intermediate, or slow). Recovery from inactivation was slow in each case (time constant 2–10 s). 6. All axon-attached membrane patches were found to contain one or two of the three classes of potassium channel. Channels with intermediate kinetics were found less frequently and may have been present at lower density.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


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