Energy-water-environment nexus is very important to attain COP21 goal, maintaining environment temperature increase below 2 o C, but unfortunately two third share of CO2 emission has already been used and the remaining will be exhausted by 2050. A number of technological developments in power and desalination sectors improved their efficiencies to save energy and carbon emission but still they are operating at 35% and 10% of their thermodynamic limits. Research in desalination processes contributing to fuel World population for their improved living standard and to reduce specific energy consumption and to protect environment. Recently developed highly efficient nature-inspired membranes (aquaporin & graphene) and trend in thermally driven cycle's hybridization could potentially lower then energy requirement for water purification. This paper presents a state of art review on energy, water and environment interconnection and future energy efficient desalination possibilities to save energy and protect environment.
While many public cloud providers offer pay-as-you-go computing, their varying approaches to infrastructure, virtualization, and software services lead to a problem of plenty. To help customers pick a cloud that fits their needs, we develop CloudCmp, a systematic comparator of the performance and cost of cloud providers. CloudCmp measures the elastic computing, persistent storage, and networking services offered by a cloud along metrics that directly reflect their impact on the performance of customer applications. CloudCmp strives to ensure fairness, representativeness, and compliance of these measurements while limiting measurement cost. Applying CloudCmp to four cloud providers that together account for most of the cloud customers today, we find that their offered services vary widely in performance and costs, underscoring the need for thoughtful provider selection. From case studies on three representative cloud applications, we show that CloudCmp can guide customers in selecting the best-performing provider for their applications.
Nine imipenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates were found to contain a variety of metallo--lactamase genes, including bla IMP-1 , bla IMP-7 , bla VIM-2 , bla VIM-6 , and the novel bla IMP-26 . Multilocus sequence typing showed a diversity of sequence types. Comparison with isolates from an earlier study showed that the epidemic clones from 2000 have not become established.Carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an increasing problem worldwide. While many underlying mechanisms may account for carbapenem resistance in this species, the possession of metallo--lactamase (MBL) genes is of particular concern because these enzymes are able to hydrolyze all -lactam antimicrobials with the exception of aztreonam. In addition, these genes may be mobilized and transferred between different species of bacteria. We conducted a study in 2008 to investigate if there were any changes in the epidemiology of P. aeruginosa isolates containing MBL genes in our hospital compared to results from an earlier survey carried out in 2000 (3).Of 2,552 nonduplicate P. aeruginosa organisms isolated in 2008, 123 isolates were imipenem resistant. Of these, 11 were positive for MBL production by imipenem-EDTA disk diffusion (5). Nine of these yielded a product by multiplex PCR for MBL genes (2). The individual MBL genes were then amplified and sequenced. The clonal relationship between isolates with MBL genes was determined by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of chromosomal DNA restricted with SpeI (3). The PFGE band patterns were analyzed with Bionumerics (Applied Maths NV, Sint-Martens-Latem, Belgium), and all strains with more than 85% similarity were considered to belong to the same clone. All strains were further subjected to multilocus sequence typing (MLST) (1). Because it is a nucleic acid sequence-based method, MLST is able to characterize bacterial types in an unambiguous fashion and establish evolutionary relationships between strains better than band-based methods like PFGE. Representative MBL-producing P. aeruginosa isolates from the 2000 survey were also subjected to PFGE and MLST. MLST profiles were submitted to eBURST V3 (http://eburst.mlst.net/) on 10 March 2010. Isolates sharing six out of seven alleles were assigned to the same BURST group and can be considered to belong to the same clonal complex descended from a common founder genotype. The PFGE, MBL gene sequence, and MLST results are summarized in Fig. 1.In our previous study, 21 of 2,094 (1.0%) of all nonduplicate P. aeruginosa isolates in our hospital had MBL genes (3). With the exception of one isolate with bla IMP-7 , all other isolates had bla IMP-1 and belonged to one of two PFGE clones. Isolates belonging to clone A had sequences identical to that of the original bla IMP-1 first reported in Japan. Four representatives of clone A isolated from our hospital in 2000 had sequence type 964 (ST964) by MLST. Isolates belonging to clone B isolated in 2000 had sequences for variant bla IMP-1 (bla IMP-1v ) with four silent mutations. Three represent...
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