53 research outputs found
Before and After the Commentators: An Essay in Periodization.
L'articolo considera il significato storico e filosofico dei commentatori neoplatonici di Aristotele. Gli autori situano il recente Sourcebook sui commentatori edito da Richard Sorbji in un contesto più ampio, che include il contributo dei commentatori nella formazione della filosofia tardo-antica e la loro posterità nella tradizione filosofica islamica. Dopo una sezione introduttiva (1) sullo stato attuale della ricerca in questo ambito, gli autori affrontano i temi seguenti: (2) Plotino, i commentatori e lo sviluppo del pensiero tardo antico; (3) il Sourcebook e la filosofia islamica. Riccardo Chiaradonna è co-autore della sezione (1) e autore della sezione (2), dove la ricezione dei trattati di scuola aristotelici è presentata come una caratteristica fondamentale nella transizione dalla filosofia post-ellenistica a quella tardo-antica. Plotino ha un ruolo cruciale in questo processo e l'assimilazione neoplatonica dei trattati di Aristotele non avrebbe avuto luoro senza il suo contributo.This article considers the historical and philosophical significance of the Neoplatonic commentators on Aristotle. The authors set Richard Sorabji's recent Sourcebook on the commentators within a wider backgroung, which covers the commentators' contribution in the shaping of late antique philosophy and their posterity in the Islamic philosophical tradition. After an introductory section (1) regarding the current status of research in this area, the authors tackle the following issues: (2) Plotinus, the commentators and the development of late antique thought; (3) the Sourcebook and Islamic Philosophy. Riccardo Chiaradonna is co-author of section (1) and author of section (2), where the reception of Aristotle's school treatises is set out as a key feature in the transition from Post Hellenistic to Late Antique philosophy. Plotinus has a pivotal position in this process and the Neoplatonic incorporation of Aristotle's treatises would have not taken place without Plotinus' contribution
Polymer multimode waveguide optical and electronic PCB manufacturing
The paper describes the research in the £1.3 million IeMRC Integrated Optical and Electronic Interconnect PCB Manufacturing (OPCB) Flagship Project in which 8 companies and 3 universities carry out collaborative research and which was formed and is technically led by the author. The consortium’s research is aimed at investigating a range of fabrication techniques, some established and some novel, for fabricating polymer multimode waveguides from several polymers, some formulations of which are being developed within the project. The challenge is to develop low cost waveguide manufacturing techniques compatible with commercial PCB manufacturing and to reduce their alignment cost. The project aims to take the first steps in making this hybrid optical waveguide and electrical copper track printed circuit board disruptive technology widely available by establishing and incorporating waveguide design rules into commercial PCB layout software and transferring the technology for fabricating such boards to a commercial PCB manufacturer. To focus the research the project is designing an optical waveguide backplane to tight realistic constraints, using commercial layout software with the new optical design rules, for a demonstrator into which 4 daughter cards are plugged, each carrying an aggregate of 80 Gb/s data so that each waveguide carries 10 Gb/s
Double diffusive convection in a porous medium due to partial heating at bottom of vertical plate
Innovative optical and electronic interconnect printed circuit board manufacturing research
An overview of the £1.3 million EPSRC and
company matched funded Innovative electronics
Manufacturing Research Centre (IeMRC) Flagship
project between 3 UK universities and 10 companies
entitled "Integrated Optical and Electronic Interconnect
PCB Manufacturing". The project aims to develop of
optical waveguide design rules, layout software,
fabrication methods compatible with commercial
production, characterisation techniques and optical
connector design to provide a supply chain for Polymer
Multimode Optical Waveguide Printed Circuit Boards
(OPCB) for 10 Gb/s board-to-board interconnections
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MoO 2 Cocatalytic Fe(II)/Fe(III) for the Activation of Peroxymonosulfate with Enhanced Oxidation Performance
Metallic Active Sites on MoO2(110) Surface to Catalyze Advanced Oxidation Processes for Efficient Pollutant Removal
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Metallic Active Sites on MoO2(110) Surface to Catalyze Advanced Oxidation Processes for Efficient Pollutant Removal
Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) based on sulfate radicals (SO4⋅-) suffer from low conversion rate of Fe(III) to Fe(II) and produce a large amount of iron sludge as waste. Herein, we show that by using MoO2 as a cocatalyst, the rate of Fe(III)/Fe(II) cycling in PMS system accelerated significantly, with a reaction rate constant 50 times that of PMS/Fe(II) system. Our results showed outstanding removal efficiency (96%) of L-RhB in 10 min with extremely low concentration of Fe(II) (0.036 mM), outperforming most reported SO4⋅--based AOPs systems. Surface chemical analysis combined with density functional theory (DFT) calculation demonstrated that both Fe(III)/Fe(II) cycling and PMS activation occurred on the (110) crystal plane of MoO2, whereas the exposed active sites of Mo(IV) on MoO2 surface were responsible for accelerating PMS activation. Considering its performance, and non-toxicity, using MoO2 as a cocatalyst is a promising technique for large-scale practical environmental remediation
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