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In a changing world facing several direct or indirect anthropogenic challenges the freshwater resources are endangered in quantity and quality. An excessive supply of nutrients, for example, can cause disproportional phytoplankton development and oxygen deficits in large rivers, leading to failure of the aims requested by the Water Framework Directive (WFD). Such problems can be observed in many European river catchments including the Elbe basin, and effective measures for improving water quality status are highly appreciated.
In water resources management and protection, modelling tools can help to understand the dominant nutrient processes and to identify the main sources of nutrient pollution in a watershed. They can be effective instruments for impact assessments investigating the effects of changing climate or socio-economic conditions on the status of surface water bodies, and for testing the usefulness of possible protection measures. Due to the high number of interrelated processes, ecohydrological model approaches containing water quality components are more complex than the pure hydrological ones, and their setup and calibration require more efforts. Such models, including the Soil and Water Integrated Model (SWIM), still need some further development and improvement.
Therefore, this cumulative dissertation focuses on two main objectives: 1) the approach-related objectives aiming in the SWIM model improvement and further development regarding nutrient (nitrogen and phosphorus) process description, and 2) the application-related objectives in meso- to large-scale Elbe river basins to support adaptive river basin management in view of possible future changes. The dissertation is based on five scientific papers published in international journals and dealing with these research questions.
Several adaptations were implemented in the model code to improve the representation of nutrient processes including a simple wetland approach, an extended by ammonium nitrogen cycle in the soils, as well as a detailed in-stream module, simulating algal growth, nutrient transformation processes and oxygen conditions in the river reaches, mainly driven by water temperature and light. Although this new approaches created a highly complex ecohydrological model with a large number of additional calibration parameters and rising uncertainty, the calibration and validation of the SWIM model enhanced by the new approaches in selected subcatchment and the entire Elbe river basin delivered satisfactory to good model results in terms of criteria of fit. Thus, the calibrated and validated model provided a sound base for the assessment of possible future changes and impacts in climate, land use and management in the Elbe river (sub)basin(s).
The new enhanced modelling approach improved the applicability of the SWIM model for the WFD related research questions, where the ability to consider biological water quality components (such as phytoplankton) is important. It additionally enhanced its ability to simulate the behaviour of nutrients coming mainly from point sources (e.g. phosphate phosphorus). Scenario results can be used by decision makers and stakeholders to find and understand future challenges and possible adaptation measures in the Elbe river basin.
In dieser Arbeit steht die Entwicklung einer Sensorplattform für biochemische Anwendungen, welche auf einem optischen Detektionsprinzips beruht, im Vordergrund. Während der Entwicklung wurden zwei komplementäre Konzeptideen behandelt, zum einen ein Sensor, der auf photonischen Kristallen und Wellenleiterstrukturen basiert und zum anderen einen faserbasierten Sensor, der chemisch modifizierte Faser-Bragg-Gitter enthält. Das optische Detektionsprinzip in beiden Sensorideen ist die resultierende Brechungsindexänderung als messbare physikochemische Kenngröße.
Das aus der Natur bekannte Phänomen der photonischen Kristalle, das u. a. bei Opalen und bei Schmetterlingen zu finden ist, wurde bereits 1887 von Lord Rayleigh beschrieben. Er beschrieb die optischen Eigenschaften von periodischen mehrschichtigen Filmen, welche als vereinfachtes Modell eines eindimensionalen photonischen Kristalls verstanden werden können. Die Periodizität der Brechungsindexänderung resultiert in einem optischen Filter für Frequenzen in einem bestimmten spektralen Bereich, weshalb dann dort keine Lichtausbreitung mehr möglich ist. Wird dieses System aber durch eine Defektstelle in der Brechungsindexperiodizität gestört, sodass daraus zwei perfekt periodische Systeme entstehen, ist die Lichtausbreitung für eine bestimmte Frequenz dennoch möglich. In der Folge resultiert daraus ein schmalbandiges Signal im Transmissionsspektrum. Die erlaubte Frequenz ist dabei u. a. abhängig vom Brechungsindexunterschied des periodischen Systems, d.h. Veränderung des Brechungsindexes einer Schicht führt zu einer spektralen Verschiebung der erlaubten Frequenz, dadurch kann dieses Sensorkonzept für biochemische Sensorik ausgenutzt werden [1]. Diese Entwicklung des auf photonischen Kristallen basierenden Sensors war eine Kooperation mit dem Industriepartner „Nanoplus GmbH“. In der Doktorarbeit wurden Simulationen und praktischen Arbeiten zur Designentwicklung des Sensors und die Arbeiten an einem ersten Modellaufbau für die biochemischen Anwendungen durchgeführt.
Für den faserbasierten Sensor wurden Faser-Bragg-Gitter in den Faserkern hineingeschrieben. Hill et al. entdeckten 1978, dass solche Gitterstrukturen genau wie photonische Kristalle als optische Filter fungieren [2]. Die Gitter bestehen dabei aus Änderungen des Brechungsindexes im Faserkern. Im Laufe der nächsten vierzig Jahren wurden verschiedene Einschreibetechniken und Gitterstrukturen entwickelt, weshalb die Eigenschaften der jeweiligen Gitterstrukturen variieren. Eine solche Gitterstruktur sind u. a. die Faser-Bragg-Gitter, deren Gitterperiode, d. h. die Abstände der Brechungsindexmodifikationen, sich im Nanometer- bis Mikrometerbereich befinden. Aufgrund der kleinen Gitterperiode wird eine rückwärtsführende Welle im Kern für eine bestimmte Frequenz bzw. Wellenlänge, der Bragg-Wellenlänge, erzeugt. Im Endeffekt resultiert daraus ein schmalbandiges Signal sowohl im Transmissionsspektrum, als auch im Reflexionsspektrum. Die Resonanzwellenlänge ist dabei proportional zu der Gitterperiode und dem effektiven Brechungsindex, welcher vom Brechungsindex des Kerns und des kernumgebenen Materials abhängig ist. Letztlich eignet sich diese Technik für physikochemische Sensorik. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden die Gitter mit Hilfe einer relativen neuen Herstellungsmethode in die Fasern geschrieben [3]. Anschließend stand die Entwicklung eines Biosensors im Vordergrund, wobei zunächst ein Protokoll zum Ätzen der Faser mit Flusssäure entwickelt worden ist, dass das System sensitiv zum umgebenen Brechungsindex macht. Am Ende wurde ein Modellaufbau realisiert, indem ein Modellsystem, hier die Detektion vom C-reaktiven Protein mittels spezifischen einzelsträngigen DNS-Aptameren, erfolgreich getestet und quantifiziert worden ist.
1 Mandal, S.; Erickson, D. Nanoscale Optofluidic Sensor Arrays. Opt. Express 2008, 16 (3), 1623–1631.
2 Hill, K. O.; Fujii, Y.; Johnson, D. C.; Kawasaki, B. S. Photosensitivity in Optical Fiber Waveguides: Application to Reflection Filter Fabrication. Appl. Phys. Lett. 1978, 32 (10), 647–649.
3 Martínez, A.; Dubov, M.; Khrushchev, I.; Bennion, I. Direct Writing of Fibre Bragg Gratings by Femtosecond Laser. Electron. Lett. 2004, 40 (19), 1170.
Poly(vinylidene fluoride-trifluoroethylene) (P(VDF-TrFE)) ferroelectric thin films of different molar ratio have been studied with regard to data memory applications. Therefore, films with thicknesses of 200 nm and less have been spin coated from solution. Observations gained from single layers have been extended to multilayer capacitors and three terminal transistor devices.
Besides conventional hysteresis measurements, the measurement of dielectric non-linearities has been used as a main tool of characterisation. Being a very sensitive and non-destructive method, non-linearity measurements are well suited for polarisation readout and property studies. Samples have been excited using a high quality, single-frequency sinusoidal voltage with an amplitude significantly smaller than the coercive field of the samples. The response was then measured at the excitation frequency and its higher harmonics. Using the measurement results, the linear and non-linear dielectric permittivities ɛ₁, ɛ₂ and ɛ₃ have been determined. The permittivities have been used to derive the temperature-dependent polarisation behaviour as well as the polarisation state and the order of the phase transitions.
The coercive field in VDF-TrFE copolymers is high if compared to their ceramic competitors. Therefore, the film thickness had to be reduced significantly. Considering a switching voltage of 5 V and a coercive field of 50 MV/m, the film thickness has to be 100 nm and below. If the thickness becomes substantially smaller than the other dimensions, surface and interface layer effects become more pronounced. For thicker films of P(VDF-TrFE) with a molar fraction of 56/44 a second-order phase transition without a thermal hysteresis for an ɛ₁(T) temperature cycle has been predicted and observed. This however, could not be confirmed by the measurements of thinner films. A shift of transition temperatures as well as a temperature independent, non-switchable polarisation and a thermal hysteresis for P(VDF-TrFE) 56/44 have been observed. The impact of static electric fields on the polarisation and the phase transition has therefore been studied and simulated, showing that all aforementioned phenomena including a linear temperature dependence of the polarisation might originate from intrinsic electric fields.
In further experiments the knowledge gained from single layer capacitors has been extended to bilayer copolymer thin films of different molar composition. Bilayers have been deposited by succeeding cycles of spin coating from solution. Single layers and their bilayer combination have been studied individually in order to prove the layers stability. The individual layers have been found to be physically stable. But while the bilayers reproduced the main ɛ₁(T) properties of the single layers qualitatively, quantitative numbers could not be explained by a simple serial connection of capacitors. Furthermore, a linear behaviour of the polarisation throughout the measured temperature range has been observed. This was found to match the behaviour predicted considering a constant electric field.
Retention time is an important quantity for memory applications. Hence, the retention behaviour of VDF-TrFE copolymer thin films has been determined using dielectric non-linearities. The polarisation loss in P(VDF-TrFE) poled samples has been found to be less than 20% if recorded over several days. The loss increases significantly if the samples have been poled with lower amplitudes, causing an unsaturated polarisation. The main loss was attributed to injected charges. Additionally, measurements of dielectric non-linearities have been proven to be a sensitive and non-destructive tool to measure the retention behaviour.
Finally, a ferroelectric field effect transistor using mainly organic materials (FerrOFET) has been successfully studied. DiNaphtho[2,3-b:2',3'-f]Thieno[3,2-b]Thiophene (DNTT) has proven to be a stable, suitable organic semiconductor to build up ferroelectric memory devices. Furthermore, an oxidised aluminium bottom electrode and additional dielectric layers, i.e. parylene C, have proven to reduce the leakage current and therefore enhance the performance significantly.
Amorphous calcium carbonate(ACC) is a wide spread biological material found in many organisms, such as sea Urchins and mollusks, where it serves as either a precursor phase for the crystalline biominerals or is stabilized and used in the amorphous state. As ACC readily crystallizes, stabilizers such as anions, cations or macromolecules are often present to avoid or delay unwanted crystallization. Furthermore, additives often control the properties of the materials to suit the specific function needed for the organism. E.g. cystoliths in leaves that scatter light to optimize energy uptake from the sun or calcite/aragonite crystals used in protective shells in mussels and gastropods. Lifetime of the amorphous phase is controlled by the kinetic stability against crystallization. This has often been linked to water which plays a role in the mobility of ions and hence the probability of forming crystalline nuclei to initiate crystallization. However, it is unclear how the water molecules are incorporated within the amorphous phase, either as liquid confined in pores, as structural water binding to the ions or as a mixture of both. It is also unclear how this is perturbed when additives are added, especially Mg2+, one the most common additives found in biogenic samples. Mg2+ are expected to have a strong influence on the water incorporated into ACC, given the high energy barrier to dehydration of magnesium ions compared to calcium ions in solution.
During the last 10-15 years, there has been a large effort to understand the local environment of the ions/molecules and how this affects the properties of the amorphous phase. But only a few aspects of the structure have so far been well-described in literature. The reason for this is partly caused by the low stability of ACC if exposed to air, where it tends to crystallize within minutes and by the limited quantities of ACC produced in traditional synthesis routes. A further obstacle has been the difficulty in modeling the local structure based on experimental data. To solve the problem of stability and sample size, a few studies have used stabilizers such as Mg2+ or OH- and severely dehydrated samples so as to stabilize the amorphous state, allowing for combined neutron and x-ray analysis to be performed. However, so far, a clear description of the local environments of water present in the structure has not been reported.
In this study we show that ACC can be synthesized without any stabilizing additives in quantities necessary for neutron measurements and that accurate models can be derived with the help of empirical-potential structural refinement. These analyses have shown that there is a wide range of local environments for all of the components in the system suggesting that the amorphous phase is highly inhomogeneous, without any phase separation between ions and water. We also showed that the water in ACC is mainly structural and that there is no confined or liquid-like water present in the system. Analysis of amorphous magnesium carbonate also showed that there is a large difference in the local structure of the two cations and that Mg2+ surprisingly interacts with significantly less water molecules then Ca2+ despite the higher dehydration energy. All in all, this shows that the role of water molecules as a structural component of ACC, with a strong binding to cat- and anions probably retard or prevents the crystallization of the amorphous phase.
Future magnetic recording industry needs a high-density data storage technology. However, switching the magnetization of small bits requires high magnetic fields that cause excessive heat dissipation. Therefore, controlling magnetism without applying external magnetic field is an important research topic for potential applications in data storage devices with low power consumption. Among the different approaches being investigated, two of them stand out, namely i) all-optical helicity dependent switching (AO-HDS) and ii) ferroelectric control of magnetism. This thesis aims to contribute towards a better understanding of the physical processes behinds these effects as well as reporting new and exciting possibility for the optical and/or electric control of magnetic properties. Hence, the thesis contains two differentiated chapters of results; the first devoted to AO-HDS on TbFe alloys and the second to the electric field control of magnetism in an archetypal Fe/BaTiO3 system.
In the first part, the scalability of the AO-HDS to small laser spot-sizes of few microns in the ferrimagnetic TbFe alloy is investigated by spatially resolving the magnetic contrast with photo-emission electron microscopy (PEEM) and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD). The results show that the AO-HDS is a local effect within the laser spot size that occurs in the ring-shaped region in the vicinity of thermal demagnetization. Within the ring region, the helicity dependent switching occurs via thermally activated domain wall motion. Further, the thesis reports on a novel effect of thickness dependent inversion of the switching orientation. It addresses some of the important questions like the role of laser heating and the microscopic mechanism driving AO-HDS.
The second part of the thesis focuses on the electric field control of magnetism in an artificial multiferroic heterostructure. The sample consists of an Fe wedge with thickness varying between 0:5 nm and 3 nm, deposited on top of a ferroelectric and ferroelastic BaTiO3 [001]-oriented single crystal substrate. Here, the magnetic contrast is imaged via PEEM and XMCD as a function of out-of-plane voltage. The results show the evidence of the electric field control of superparamagnetism mediated by a ferroelastic modification of the magnetic anisotropy. The changes in the magnetoelastic anisotropy drive the transition from the superparamagnetic to superferromagnetic state at localized sample positions.
Die vorliegende Arbeit behandelt die Synthese und Charakterisierung von funktionalisierten Alkydharzen und die photoinduzierte Polymerisation dieser unter Einsatz einer Quecksilberdampflampe oder einer UV LED mit unterschiedlicher Lichtintensität. Der Fokus dieser Arbeit bestand in der gezielten Substitution der internalen Doppelbindungen der Fettsäureester durch reaktivere Gruppen, wie Acrylate oder Methacrylate, welche für Alkydharze in dieser Form so in der Literatur nicht beschrieben sind. Untersuchungen des Polymerisationsverhaltens dieser funktionalisierten Harze wurden mit der Photo DSC durchgeführt, wobei Bis – (4 – methoxybenzoyl) diethylgermanium als Photoinitiator diente. Die Ergebnisse haben gezeigt, dass die Harze radikalisch polymerisiert werden können und eine geringere Abhängigkeit von der Umgebungsatmosphäre (Luftsauerstoff bzw. Stickstoff) vorliegt. Dies ist so in der Literatur für funktionalisierte Alkydharze nicht bekannt. Abmischungen von unterschiedlichen Monomeren und funktionalisierten Harzen bewirkten eine Steigerung der Viskosität sowie eine Verringerung der Sauerstoffinhibierung im Zuge der photoinduzierten Polymerisation unter Luftsauerstoff für die Quecksilberdampflampe und der UV LED.
Zur Untersuchung der sauerstoffinhibierenden Wirkung der Harze sind Synthesen unterschiedlicher, funktionalisierter Ölsäuremethylester als Modellsubstanzen durchgeführt worden. Ein verbessertes Polymerisationsverhalten und eine geringe Abhängigkeit von der Umgebungsatmosphäre konnte für die Modelle nachgewiesen werden. Zur Aufklärung des verbesserten Polymerisationsverhaltens sind gezielt Substituenten (Imidazol, Brom, Alkohol, Acetat) in den funktionalisierten Ölsäuremethylester eingebaut worden, um den Einfluss dieser aufzuzeigen. Im Rahmen dieser Synthesen sind neuartige Strukturen synthetisiert worden, welche so in der Literatur nicht beschrieben sind. Die Gegenüberstellung der Polymerisationszeit, der Umsatz der (Meth-)Acrylatgruppen sowie die Zeit zum Erreichen der maximalen Polymerisationsgeschwindigkeit unter Verwendung von unterschiedlichen UV Lichtquellen hat einen Einfluss der Substituenten auf das Polymerisationsverhalten gezeigt.
Various ways of preparing enantiomerically pure 2-amino[6]helicene derivatives were explored. Ni(0) mediated cyclotrimerization of enantiopure triynes provided (M)- and (P)-7,8-bis(p-tolyl)hexahelicene-2-amine in >99% ee as well as its benzoderivative in >99% ee. The stereocontrol was found to be inefficient for a 2- aminobenzo[6]helicene congener with an embedded five-membered ring. Helically chiral imidazolium salts bearing one or two helicene moieties have been synthesized and applied in enantioselective [2+2+2] cyclotrimerization catalyzed by an in situ formed Ni(0)-NHC complex. The synthesis of the first helically chiral Pd- and Ru-NHC complexes and their application in enantioselective catalysis was demonstrated. The latter shows promising results in enantioselective olefin metathesis reactions. A mechanistic proposal for asymmetric ring closing metathesis is provided.
Thematic role assignment and word order preferences in the child language acquisition of Tagalog
(2018)
A critical task in daily communications is identifying who did what to whom in an utterance, or assigning the thematic roles agent and patient in a sentence. This dissertation is concerned with Tagalog-speaking children’s use of word order and morphosyntactic markers for thematic role assignment. It aims to explain children’s difficulties in interpreting sentences with a non-canonical order of arguments (i.e., patient-before-agent) by testing the predictions of the following accounts: the frequency account (Demuth, 1989), the Competition model (MacWhinney & Bates, 1989), and the incremental processing account (Trueswell & Gleitman, 2004). Moreover, the experiments in this dissertation test the influence of a word order strategy in a language like Tagalog, where the thematic roles are always unambiguous in a sentence, due to its verb-initial order and its voice-marking system. In Tagalog’s voice-marking system, the inflection on the verb indicates the thematic role of the noun marked by 'ang.' First, the possible basis for a word order strategy in Tagalog was established using a sentence completion experiment given to adults and 5- and 7-year-old children (Chapter 2) and a child-directed speech corpus analysis (Chapter 3). In general, adults and children showed an agent-before-patient preference, although adults’ preference was also affected by sentence voice. Children’s comprehension was then examined through a self-paced listening and picture verification task (Chapter 3) and an eye-tracking and picture selection task (Chapter 4), where word order (agent-initial or patient-initial) and voice (agent voice or patient voice) were manipulated. Offline (i.e., accuracy) and online (i.e., listening times, looks to the target) measures revealed that 5- and 7-year-old Tagalog-speaking children had a bias to interpret the first noun as the agent. Additionally, the use of word order and morphosyntactic markers was found to be modulated by voice. In the agent voice, children relied more on a word order strategy; while in the patient voice, they relied on the morphosyntactic markers. These results are only partially explained by the accounts being tested in this dissertation. Instead, the findings support computational accounts of incremental word prediction and learning such as Chang, Dell, & Bock’s (2006) model.
How can interactive devices connect with users in the most immediate and intimate way? This question has driven interactive computing for decades. Throughout the last decades, we witnessed how mobile devices moved computing into users’ pockets, and recently, wearables put computing in constant physical contact with the user’s skin. In both cases moving the devices closer to users allowed devices to sense more of the user, and thus act more personal. The main question that drives our research is: what is the next logical step?
Some researchers argue that the next generation of interactive devices will move past the user’s skin and be directly implanted inside the user’s body. This has already happened in that we have pacemakers, insulin pumps, etc. However, we argue that what we see is not devices moving towards the inside of the user’s body, but rather towards the body’s biological “interface” they need to address in order to perform their function.
To implement our vision, we created a set of devices that intentionally borrow parts of the user’s body for input and output, rather than adding more technology to the body.
In this dissertation we present one specific flavor of such devices, i.e., devices that borrow the user’s muscles. We engineered I/O devices that interact with the user by reading and controlling muscle activity. To achieve the latter, our devices are based on medical-grade signal generators and electrodes attached to the user’s skin that send electrical impulses to the user’s muscles; these impulses then cause the user’s muscles to contract.
While electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) devices have been used to regenerate lost motor functions in rehabilitation medicine since the 1960s, in this dissertation, we propose a new perspective: EMS as a means for creating interactive systems.
We start by presenting seven prototypes of interactive devices that we have created to illustrate several benefits of EMS. These devices form two main categories: (1) Devices that allow users eyes-free access to information by means of their proprioceptive sense, such as the value of a variable in a computer system, a tool, or a plot; (2) Devices that increase immersion in virtual reality by simulating large forces, such as wind, physical impact, or walls and heavy objects.
Then, we analyze the potential of EMS to build interactive systems that miniaturize well and discuss how they leverage our proprioceptive sense as an I/O modality. We proceed by laying out the benefits and disadvantages of both EMS and mechanical haptic devices, such as exoskeletons.
We conclude by sketching an outline for future research on EMS by listing open technical, ethical and philosophical questions that we left unanswered.
Um die gegenwärtige Transformation der Öffentlichkeit im digitalen Zeitalter erfassen zu können, ist in der Öffentlichkeitstheorie eine erweiterte Perspektive notwendig, die nicht nur den massenmedialen Diskurs, sondern auch die Veränderung sozialer Praktiken und institutioneller Strukturen in den Blick nimmt. Das Ziel dieses Buches besteht darin, die Grundlagen einer solchen Perspektive auf die Theorie digitaler Öffentlichkeiten zu entwickeln. Im vorgeschlagenen Ansatz wird Öffentlichkeit im Anschluss an John Dewey als Prozess verstanden. In seiner prozessualen und funktionalen Bestimmung von Öffentlichkeit liegt eine besondere Originalität, die seinen Ansatz von anderen Öffentlichkeitskonzeptionen unterscheidet. Das Buch liefert sowohl eine systematische Rekonstruktion und Interpretation der Philosophie John Deweys als auch einen Vorschlag zur gesellschaftstheoretischen Deutung des digitalen Wandels.