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1.
Environ Pollut ; 345: 123490, 2024 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38336137

ABSTRACT

The transport of floating macroplastics (>2.5 cm) can be impacted by variations in hydrometeorological forcing. Several studies have demonstrated that river discharge, wind, and tides can either accelerate or impede the downstream travel path of plastic. However, there remains a substantial gap in our understanding of the impact of river geomorphological complexity on this process. In this context, the role that river bifurcations play in driving plastic dynamics under different hydrometeorological conditions is largely unexplored. Here, we show that specific plastic item categories react differently to the transport drivers, and bifurcation areas can function both as a retention and release site of plastic litter. We found that hard polyolefin appears to be the most responsive plastic to changes in flow discharge (ρ≈0.40, p≈0.01). Absolute wind velocity magnitude does not correlate to plastic transport. We explored correlations of the various plastic items types with wind vector components in all directions. Multilayer plastics correlated highest to the wind vector component that is most effective in driving plastics from an urban area to the river (ρ≈0.57, p≈0.0001). On a monthly scale, the bifurcation area retained up to 50% of the incoming upstream plastic flux. At other times, an additional 30% was released in the same area. Our results demonstrate how bifurcations distribute different plastic items types downstream under varied hydrometeorological conditions. These yields underscore the importance of assessing floating plastic transport in specific plastic item categories and taking river geomorphological complexity into account.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Plastics , Plastics/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Rivers , Wind , Waste Products/analysis
2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(37): 34385-34393, 2019 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31449744

ABSTRACT

The recent demonstration of ferroelectricity in ultrathin HfO2 has kickstarted a new wave of research into this material. HfO2 in the orthorhombic phase can be considered the first and only truly nanoscale ferroelectric material that is compatible with silicon-based nanoelectronics applications. In this article, we demonstrate the ferroelectric control of the magnetic properties of cobalt deposited on ultrathin aluminum-doped, atomic layer deposition-grown HfO2 (tHfO2 = 6.5 nm). The ferroelectric effect is shown to control the shape of the magnetic hysteresis, quantified here by the magnetic switching energy. Furthermore, the magnetic properties such as the remanence are modulated by up to 41%. We show that this modulation does not only correlate with the charge accumulation at the interface but also shows an additional component associated with the ferroelectric polarization switching. An in-depth analysis using first order reversal curves shows that the coercive and interaction field distributions of cobalt can be modulated up to, respectively, 5.8% and 10.5% with the ferroelectric polarization reversal.

3.
Sensors (Basel) ; 10(4): 3480-503, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22319308

ABSTRACT

Better insights into bird migration can be a tool for assessing the spread of avian borne infections or ecological/climatologic issues reflected in deviating migration patterns. This paper evaluates whether low budget permanent cameras such as webcams can offer a valuable contribution to the reporting of migratory birds. An experimental design was set up to study the detection capability using objects of different size, color and velocity. The results of the experiment revealed the minimum size, maximum velocity and contrast of the objects required for detection by a standard webcam. Furthermore, a modular processing scheme was proposed to track and follow migratory birds in webcam recordings. Techniques such as motion detection by background subtraction, stereo vision and lens distortion were combined to form the foundation of the bird tracking algorithm. Additional research to integrate webcam networks, however, is needed and future research should enforce the potential of the processing scheme by exploring and testing alternatives of each individual module or processing step.


Subject(s)
Animal Migration , Birds/physiology , Internet , Photography , Algorithms , Animals , Ecology/methods , Models, Biological , Software
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