A severe cyanobacterial bloom in the mainstem of a large Chinese river was first reported from China. The Qiantang River is the longest river in the Zhejiang province, southeast China. It provides drinking water supply to ~ 16 million people, including Hangzhou city. Fifteen sites along the Qiantang River (including upper, middle (Fuchunjiang Reservoir), and lower reaches and tributaries) were sampled between August 13 and September 9, 2016 to conduct a preliminary examination of the outbreak of Microcystis blooms. Laboratory investigation revealed that Microcystis spp. are dominant in the Fuchunjiang Reservoir (an overflow reservoir on the mainstem of the Qiantang River) with an extremely high cell density of 2.3 × 10 cells/L, leading to a severe bloom in the mainstem of the Qiantang River. Investigations of the meteorological, hydrological, and nutrient characteristics associated with the bloom indicated that extremely dry (6.8 mm rainfall from August 13 to September 9, 2016) and hot (32 consecutive days of temperatures > 30 °C from July 20 to August 31, 2016) weather might be the key factors triggering the bloom. Additionally, the extremely low flow of the tributary, Lanjiang River (142 ± 56 m/s from August 13 to September 9), and its high nutrient background, favored the bloom. While nutrient reductions are important, the most immediate and effective management approach might be to implement appropriate minimal flow conditions to mitigate the blooms.
Temperature and wavelength dependence of energy transfer (ET) process between quantized states and surface trap states of CdSe quantum dots was investigated, respectively. The experimental results demonstrate that the photoluminescence (PL) intensity of the quantized states decreases with respect to the trap state emission, especially at lower temperatures. The observed ET process between quantized states and trap states which is influenced by the thermal population behavior. At the same temperature, the silver films can greatly enhance the energy transfer (ET) rate from the quantized states to trap states due to surface plasmonic coupling effect.
This article presents an experimental investigation on sand deformation above a group of two plate anchors using a digital image correlation (DIC) technique. The test setup developed for this study includes a test frame with loading and deformation measurement, a computer connected to a high-resolution camera and equipped with DIC software, and a test mold to host scale model anchor plates. A series of physical model tests were conducted under different configurations, including different embedment depths, anchor spacings, and sand densities. Based on the sand displacement fields obtained from DIC, it was found that anchor group efficiency occurs when there is an overlap in soil displacement fields. This overlap is influenced by the combination of embedment depth, sand density, and anchor spacing. There is a critical spacing that defines the spacing at which group anchors act individually. An empirical formula is proposed for the relationship between group efficiency and critical spacing for sand at different density conditions. The formula compares favorably with experimental results published in the literature.
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