RESUMEN
Second generation biofuel crop Miscanthus x giganteus (Mxg) was studied as a candidate for petroleum hydrocarbons (PHs) contaminated soil phytomanagement. The soil was polluted by diesel in wide concentration gradient up to 50 gâ kg-1 in an ex-situ pot experiment. The contaminated soil/plant interactions were investigated using plant biometric and physiological parameters, soil physico-chemical and microbial community's characteristics. The plant parameters and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators showed an inhibitory effect of diesel contamination; however much lower than expected from previously published results. Moreover, lower PHs concentrations (5 and 10 gâ kg-1) resulted in positive reinforcement of electron transport as a result of hormesis effect. The soil pH did not change significantly during the vegetation season. The decrease of total organic carbon was significantly lower in planted pots. Soil respiration and dehydrogenases activity increased with the increasing contamination indicating ongoing PHs biodegradation. In addition, microbial biomass estimated by phospholipid fatty acids increased only at higher PHs concentrations. Higher dehydrogenases values were obtained in planted pots compared to unplanted. PHs degradation followed the first-order kinetics and for the middle range of contamination (10-40 gâ kg-1) significantly lower PHs half-lives were determined in planted than unplanted soil pointing on phytoremediation. Diesel degradation was in range 35-70 % according to pot variant. Results confirmed the potential of Mxg for diesel contaminated soils phytomanagement mainly in PHs concentrations up to 20 gâ kg-1 where phytoremediation was proved, and biomass yield was reduced only by 29 %.
Asunto(s)
Petróleo , Contaminantes del Suelo , Biodegradación Ambiental , Contaminantes del Suelo/análisis , Poaceae/metabolismo , Plantas/metabolismo , Hidrocarburos/metabolismo , Suelo , Oxidorreductasas/metabolismoRESUMEN
We milled a sub-wavelength diffraction grating on the facet of a large mode area fiber. The diffraction grating had different reflectivities for TE and TM polarized light. It was tested in a thulium-doped fiber laser where it functioned as a low reflectivity output mirror integrated with an intracavity polarizer. Compared to the laser with a perpendicularly cleaved output fiber, the laser with diffraction grating had a slightly increased threshold power and the same slope efficiency. The beam quality factor M2 was not impaired. Polarization extinction ratios of about 20 dB that were observed at low laser powers dropped to 10 dB at high powers.
RESUMEN
Type A aortic dissection involves the separation of the wall of the ascending aorta into a true lumen and a false lumen. The finding of an aortic dissection in a patient experiencing mild to moderate symptoms for several weeks may be surprising for clinicians, given the severity of the underlying process. Here, we present an 88-year-old patient who was admitted to our hospital due to orthopnea and leg swelling for the past two to three weeks and was found to have a chronic dissection of the ascending aorta, complicated by hemopericardium and tamponade. The existing literature very rarely reports chronic type A aortic dissection with tamponade on presentation.