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Institution

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

GovernmentSofia, Bulgaria
About: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences is a government organization based out in Sofia, Bulgaria. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Coupling constant. The organization has 17989 authors who have published 36276 publications receiving 642820 citations. The organization is also known as: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences,簡稱:BAS & Balgarska Akademiya na Naukite.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the catalytic performance of gold-supported titania nanotubes (Au/TNTs) was evaluated for the first time in water-gas shift reaction (WGSR) at wide temperature range (140-300 °C) and has been compared with Au/surfactant-templatedmesoporous titania and Au/Al 2 O 3 catalysts under the same operating conditions.
Abstract: Titanium oxide nanotubes (TNTs) have been synthesized via the reaction of TiO 2 crystalline powders of either anatase or rutile phase and NaOH aqueous solution. Their application as an active supports of gold particles prepared by deposition–precipitation (DP) method is investigated. The TNT supports and the gold catalysts were characterized by a range of methods including powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), N 2 adsorption analysis and temperature programmed reduction (TPR). The catalytic activity of gold-supported titania nanotubes (Au/TNTs) was evaluated for the first time in water-gas shift reaction (WGSR) at wide temperature range (140–300 °C) and has been compared with Au/surfactant-templated-mesoporous-titania and Au/Al 2 O 3 catalysts under the same operating conditions. We try to establish a correlation between the catalytic performance of Au/TNTs and the nature of the support.

192 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a slab model is proposed for developing the height of the mixed layer capped by stable air aloft, which is closed by relating the consumption of energy (potential and kinetic) at the top of a mixed layer to the production of convective and mechanical turbulent kinetic energy within the mixed layers.
Abstract: A slab model is proposed for developing the height of the mixed layer capped by stable air aloft. The model equations are closed by relating the consumption of energy (potential and kinetic) at the top of the mixed layer to the production of convective and mechanical turbulent kinetic energy within the mixed layer. By assuming that the temperature difference at the top of the mixed layer instantaneously adjusts to the actual meteorological conditions without regard to the initial temperature difference that prevailed, the model is reduced to a single differential equation which easily can be solved numerically. When the mixed layer is shallow or the atmosphere nearly neutrally stratified, the growth is controlled mainly by mechanical turbulence. When the layer is deep, its growth is controlled mainly by convective turbulence. The model is applied on a data set of the evolution of the height of the mixed layer in the morning hours, when both mechanical and convective turbulence contribute to the growth process. Realistic mixed-layer developments are obtained.

192 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that the difference in CRPS between sleep stages exceeds the difference between young and elderly, suggesting that sleep regulation has a significantly stronger effect on cardiorespiratory coupling than healthy aging.
Abstract: Integrated physiological systems, such as the cardiac and the respiratory system, exhibit complex dynamics that are further influenced by intrinsic feedback mechanisms controlling their interaction. To probe how the cardiac and the respiratory system adjust their rhythms, despite continuous fluctuations in their dynamics, we study the phase synchronization of heartbeat intervals and respiratory cycles. The nature of this interaction, its physiological and clinical relevance, and its relation to mechanisms of neural control is not well understood. We investigate whether and how cardiorespiratory phase synchronization (CRPS) responds to changes in physiological states and conditions. We find that the degree of CRPS in healthy subjects dramatically changes with sleep-stage transitions and exhibits a pronounced stratification pattern with a 400% increase from rapid eye movement sleep and wake, to light and deep sleep, indicating that sympatho-vagal balance strongly influences CRPS. For elderly subjects, we find that the overall degree of CRPS is reduced by approximately 40%, which has important clinical implications. However, the sleep-stage stratification pattern we uncover in CRPS does not break down with advanced age, and surprisingly, remains stable across subjects. Our results show that the difference in CRPS between sleep stages exceeds the difference between young and elderly, suggesting that sleep regulation has a significantly stronger effect on cardiorespiratory coupling than healthy aging. We demonstrate that CRPS and the traditionally studied respiratory sinus arrhythmia represent different aspects of the cardiorespiratory interaction, and that key physiologic variables, related to regulatory mechanisms of the cardiac and respiratory systems, which influence respiratory sinus arrhythmia, do not affect CRPS.

192 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the Mittag{Leer (M{L) functions have been compared with generalized operators of integration and dierention of the so-called Gelfond{Leontiev-type and Borel{Laplace-type integral transforms.

191 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Data from DES and GnRHa treatments are interpreted as providing evidence for direct modulation of Sertoli cell (maturational) development by DES, and testis weight and daily sperm production were reduced in adulthood, but spermatogenesis was grossly normal.
Abstract: Diethylstilbestrol (DES) was administered neonatally (Days 2-12; 10 microg on alternate days) to rats, and developmental changes in Sertoli cell function were evaluated at 18, 25, and 35 days of age and compared to those observed in rats administered a GnRH antagonist (GnRHa; Days 2 and 5; 10 mg/kg) or a vehicle (controls). DES and GnRHa treatments resulted in similar reductions in both Sertoli cell numbers (40% for DES, 48% for GnRHa) and suppression of testicular growth at 18 and 25 days, though by 35 days the suppression was more pronounced (p 60% reduction in testis weight with many Sertoli cell-only tubules and very low daily sperm production. Taken together, these data are interpreted as providing evidence for direct modulation of Sertoli cell (maturational) development by DES.

191 citations


Authors

Showing all 18074 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Dimitri Bourilkov134148996884
Eduardo De Moraes Gregores133145492464
Georgi Sultanov132149393318
Plamen Iaydjiev131128587958
Pedro G Mercadante129133186378
Jordan Damgov129119585490
Roumyana Hadjiiska126100373091
Mircho Rodozov12497270519
Cesar Augusto Bernardes12496570889
Viktor Matveev123121273939
Ayda Beddall12081667063
Andrey Marinov11989357183
Mariana Vutova11760656698
Lester Packer11275163116
Patrick Couvreur11167856735
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202345
2022137
20211,323
20201,465
20191,285
20181,248