• Title/Summary/Keyword: concentration measure

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A Case Study of Spatial CAD Education in Blended Learning Environment (혼합형 학습(Blended Learning) 환경에서의 공간디자인 CAD 수업 사례연구)

  • Hwang, Ji Hyoun;Lim, Haewon
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.21 no.10
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    • pp.115-126
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    • 2021
  • The purpose of this study is to closely analyze the case of blended-learning in order to provide a diverse and flexible learning environment while maintaining the nature of face-to-face classes, and to identify the learning environment that supports blended-learning in each class step and the educational experience of students. The experience and satisfaction of blended learning were investigated in various ways: course evaluation, LMS activity evaluation, and questionnaire before and after the class. As a result, the blended-learning is better than the traditional face-to-face classes, in providing real-time feedback, opportunities for various interactions, and textual conversations, anytime and anywhere. In addition, as a result of the preliminary survey, as a measure to solve the opinion that concentration was reduced due to problems such as networks and felt uncomfortable in the communication part, the theory and lectures of the design practice class were conducted non-face-to-face. The individual Q&A and feedback were conducted face-to-face and non-face-to-face. As a result of the follow-up survey, it was found that concentration and efficiency could be improved. This opens up possibilities for active use of the online environment in design practice classes.

Evaluation on the Potential of 18 Species of Indoor Plants to Reduce Particulate Matter

  • Jeong, Na Ra;Kim, Kwang Jin;Yoon, Ji Hye;Han, Seung Won;You, Soojin
    • Journal of People, Plants, and Environment
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    • v.23 no.6
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    • pp.637-646
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    • 2020
  • Background and objective: The main objective of this study is to measure the amount of particulate matter (PM) reduction under different characteristics of leaves in 18 different species of indoor plants. Methods: First, a particular amount of PM was added to the glass chambers (0.9×0.86×1.3 m) containing the indoor plant (height = 40 ± 20 cm), and the PM concentration were measured at 2-hour intervals. The experiment with the same conditions was conducted in the empty chamber as the control plot. Results: The range of PM reduction per unit leaf area of 18 species of experimental plants was 3.3-286.2 ㎍·m-2 leaf, total leaf area was 1,123-4,270 cm2, and leaf thickness was 0.14-0.80 mm and leaf size 2.27-234.47 cm2. As time passed, the concentration of PM decreased more in the chamber with plants than in the empty chamber. Among the 18 indoor plants, the ones with the greatest reduction in PM2.5 in 2 hours and 4 hours of exposure to PM2.5 were Pachira aquatica and Dieffenbachia amoena. As the exposure time of PM increased, the efficiency of reducing PM2.5 was higher in plants with medium-sized leaves than plants with large or small leaves. The effect of reducing PM2.5 was higher in linear leaves than round or lobed leaves. Plants with high total leaf area did not have advantage in reducing PM because the leaves were relatively small and there were many overlapping parts between leaves. In the correlation between leaf characteristics and PM 2.5 reductions, all leaf area and leaf thickness showed a negative and leaf size showed a positive correlation with PM reduction. Conclusion: The PM reduction effect of plants with medium-sized leaves and long linear leaves was relatively high. Moreover, plants with a large total leaf area without overlapping leaves will have advantaged in reducing PM. Plants are effective in reducing PM, and leaf characteristics are an important factor that affects PM reduction.

Safety and efficacy of target controlled infusion administration of propofol and remifentanil for moderate sedation in non-hospital dental practice

  • Douglas Lobb;Masoud MiriMoghaddam;Don Macalister;David Chrisp;Graham Shaw;Hollis Lai
    • Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.19-28
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    • 2023
  • Background: Fearful and anxious patients who find dental treatment intolerable without sedative and analgesic support may benefit from moderate sedation. Target controlled infusion (TCI) pumps are superior to bolus injection in maintaining low plasma and effect-site concentration variability, resulting in stable, steady-state drug concentrations. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of moderate sedation with remifentanil and propofol using TCI pumps in non-hospital dental settings. Methods: A prospective chart review was conducted on 101 patients sedated with propofol and remifentanil using TCI pumps. The charts were completed at two oral surgeons and one general dentist's office over 6 months. Hypoxia, hypotension, bradycardia, and over-sedation were considered adverse events and were collected using Tracking and Reporting Outcomes of Procedural Sedation (TROOPS). Furthermore, patient recovery time, sedation length, drug dose, and patient satisfaction questionnaires were used to measure sedation effectiveness. Results: Of the 101 reviewed sedation charts, 54 were of men, and 47 were of women. The mean age of the patients was 40.5 ±18.7 years, and their mean BMI was 25.6 ± 4.4. The patients did not experience hypoxia, bradycardia, and hypotension during the 4694 min of sedation. The average minimum Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) and heartbeats were 75.1 mmHg and 60.4 bpm, respectively. 98% of patients agreed that the sedation technique met their needs in reducing their anxiety, and 99% agreed that they were satisfied with the sedation 24 hours later. The average sedation time was 46.9 ± 55.6 min, and the average recovery time was 12.4 ± 4.4 min. Remifentanil and propofol had mean initial effect-site concentration doses of 0.96 µ/.ml and 1.0 ng/ml respectively. The overall total amount of drug administered was significantly higher in longer sedation procedures compared to shorter ones, while the infusion rate decreased as the procedural stimulus decreased. Conclusion: According to the results of this study, no patients experienced adverse events during sedation, and all patients were kept at a moderate sedation level for a wide range of sedation times and differing procedures. The results showed that TCI pumps are safe and effective for administering propofol and remifentanil for moderate sedation in dentistry.

In-situ Calibration of Membrane Type Dissolved Oxygen Sensor for CTD (CTD용 박막형 용존산소 센서의 현장 교정)

  • DONG-JIN KANG;YESEUL KIM
    • The Sea:JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN SOCIETY OF OCEANOGRAPHY
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.41-50
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    • 2023
  • Dissolved oxygen sensors have characteristics in which data drift occurs over time. Therefore, in-situ calibration of the dissolved oxygen sensor is essential to accurately measure the concentration of dissolved oxygen in seawater. In order to provide a method for in-situ calibration, appropriate number of samples for calibration, and laboratory calibration interval of the dissolved oxygen sensor, the dissolved oxygen sensor values were compared with the measured values by titration on a total of 133 samples from three different cruises in the Indian Ocean, Pacific Ocean, and East Sea over a period of about one year. As a result, it is preferable to calibrate the sensor value using the correlation of a straight line obtained by directly comparing the final concentration value given by the sensor and the measured value. For the accurate calibration, at least 30 samples must be used to enable in-situ calibration within an accuracy range of about 1%. In addition, it is recommended that a laboratory calibration should perform within 1 year for the membrane type dissolved oxygen sensor for CTD to achieve a performance of 70% or more.

PM10 β-ray attenuation samplers (β-ray absorption method) equivalence evaluation and comparatively observed study (PM10 연속자동측정기(β-ray) 등가성평가 및 비교관측 연구)

  • WonSeok Jung;Hee-Jung Ko;Wonick Seo;Jiyoung Jeong;Sang Min Oh;Kyung-On Boo
    • Particle and aerosol research
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    • v.19 no.1
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    • pp.13-20
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    • 2023
  • The Asian dust observation network operates β-ray attenuation samplers to measure PM10 concentrations. In addition, equivalence evaluation and accuracy inspection(Precision Tests) are conducted every year for the reliability of data. β-ray attenuation samplers(16 units) were comparatively observed from May to June 2020 and from July to December 2021. During the observation period, the average daily temperature was the lowest at 6.4℃ in December and the highest at 27.3℃ in August. The average daily humidity ranged from 60% to 100%, but the average daily humidity was over 75% from July to September. The minimum value of the PM10 Gravimetric method was 5.0 ㎍/m3, the maximum value was 53.4 ㎍/m3, and the average value was 17.8 ㎍/m3. The equivalence evaluation results of the PM10 Gravimetric method and β-ray attenuation samplers satisfied the criteria (slope: 1±0.1, intercept: 0±0.5). A relative error analysis between the PM10 Gravimetric method and β-ray attenuation samplers equipment showed that the relative error increased when the concentration was low and the temperature and humidity were high. In addition, in the β-ray attenuation samplers 5-minute interval observation data in May 2020, a relatively large Standard devication was shown as an average maximum ±23.4 ㎍/m3 and a minimum ±15.2 ㎍/m3. At standard deviations of 10% and 90%, equipment with high variability (deviation) was measured at 6 ㎍/m3and 61 ㎍/m3, and equipment with low variability was measured at 12 ㎍/m3 and 47 ㎍/m3. It was confirmed that concentration differences occurred due to differences in variability for each equipment.

Analysis of Radioactivity Concentration at Beaches in the Yeongnam Region, Republic of Korea (대한민국 영남지역 해수욕장의 방사능 농도 분석)

  • Jeong-Ho An;Jin-Gu Kang;Jun-Su Kim;Bo-Yeon Kim;Ja-Young Baek;Min-Su Seol;Seul-Ki Cho;Ye-Eun Kim;Yu-Min Lee;Jong-Soo Choi;Jae-Hwan Cho
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Radiology
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    • v.17 no.7
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    • pp.1197-1205
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    • 2023
  • In this study, the spectrum due to radioactivity contained sand samples from famous beaches in the Yeongnam region was measured. The sand samples were from eight famous beaches in Yeongnam region and were placed into a high-purity germanium detector (HPGe) using with an electric field, which is a semiconductor detector and subjected to a precision analysis of the gamma-rays emitted from the radionuclides in the sand by using a multichannel analyzer (MCA). To measure the concentration of the radionuclides, we obtained a spectrum by analyzing the gamma-rays emitted from the radionuclides for a measurement time of 8,000 seconds. As a result of analyzing the spectrum table, Tl-208 had the highest radioactivity at all eight beaches: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and H. In conclusion, radionuclides detected in sand samples from beaches in the Yeongnam region are natural radionuclides, but they can affect the inside of the human body. Therefore, there is a need for continuous investigation.

A Study on the Tracking of Count-Based Volumetric Changes in Nuclear Medicine Imaging (핵의학 영상에서 계수기반 체적변화 추적에 관한 고찰)

  • Ji-Hyeon Kim;Jooyoung Lee;Hoon-Hee Park
    • The Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.57-69
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    • 2024
  • Purpose: Quantitative analysis through count measurement in nuclear medicine planar images is limited by analysis techniques that are useful for obtaining various clinical information or by organ overlap or artifacts in actual clinical practice. On the other hand, the use of SPECT tomography images is quantitative analysis using volume rather than planar, which is not only free from problems such as projection overlap, but also has excellent quantitative accuracy. In the use of developing SPECT quantitative analysis technology, this study aims to compare the accuracy of quantitative analysis between ROI of the conventional planar images and VOI of the SPECT tomographic images in evaluating the count change happened by the volume change of the source. Materials and Methods: A 99mTcO4- source(200.17 MBq) was filled with sterilized water in the syringe to create a phantom with an inner diameter volume of 60 cc, and a planar image and a SPECT image were obtained by reducing the volume by 15 cc (25%) respectively. ROI and VOI(threshold: 1~45%, 5% interval) were set for each image obtained to estimate true count and measure the total count, and compared with the preseted volumetric change rate(%). Results: When volume changes of 25%, 50%, and 75% occurred in the initial volume of 60 cc(100%) of the phantom, the average count changes of the measured planar image were 26.8%, 53.2%, 77.5%, and the average count changes of the SPECT image were 24.4%, 50.9%, and 76.8%. In this case, the VOI size(cm3) set showed an average change rate of 25.4%, 51.1%, and 76.6%. The highest threshold value for the accuracy of radioactive concentration by VOI size (average error -1.03%) was 35%, and the VOI size of the same threshold had an error of -17.1% on average compared to the actual volume. Conclusion: On average, the count-based volumetric change rate in nuclear medicine images was able to track changes more accurately using VOI than ROI, but there was no significant difference with relatively similar value. However, the accuracy of radioactive concentration according to individual VOI sizes did not match, but it is considered that a relatively accurate quantitative analysis can be expected when the size of VOI is set smaller than the actual volume.

Preliminary Study on Effect of the Field Correlation Factor for Increasing of the Accuracy in a Direct Reading Instruments on Photoionization Detector for Total Volatile Organic Compounds (총휘발성유기화합물 측정 직독식장비 정확도 향상을 위한 현장보정계수 활용 연구)

  • Sungho Kim;Gwangyong Yi;Sujin Kim;Hae Dong Park
    • Journal of Korean Society of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene
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    • v.34 no.1
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    • pp.67-76
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    • 2024
  • Objectives: Direct reading instruments (DRIs) are widely used by industrial hygienists and other experts for preliminary survey and identifying source locations in many industrial fields. Photoionization detectors (PIDs), which are a form of hand-held portable DRIs, have been used for a variety of airborne vaporized chemicals, especially evaporated hydrocarbon solvents. The benefits of PIDs are high sensitivity between each chemical, competitive price, and portability. With the goal of increasing the accuracy of logged PID concentrations, previous studies have performed tests for the assessment of single chemical compounds, not mixtures. The purpose of this preliminary study was to measure mixtures with a PID and charcoal tube at the same time and compare the accuracy between them. Methods: A chamber test was implemented with different mixtures of hydrocarbon chemicals (acetone, isopropyl alcohol, toluene, m-xylene) and levels in the range of 14 to 864 ppm. Three PIDs and charcoal tubes were connected to the chamber and measured the chemical mixtures simultaneously. A comparison of accuracy and the PID group of concentrations with manufacture correction factor (M_CF) and field correction factor (F_CF) applied was performed. Results: The accuracy of the PID concentrations data-logged from the PID did not meet the accuracy criteria except for the mixture level B and C logged from PID No. 2, which was 18% of all tests for meeting accuracy criteria. The mean and standard deviation (SD) of concentration (ppm) of the charcoal tube followed by each mixtures' level were 10.37±0.26, 155.33±5.28, 300.80±11.65, and 774.93±22.65, respectively. When applying F_CF into the PID concentrations, the accuracy increased by nearly 82%. However, in the case of M_CF, none met the accuracy criterion. Between the PID there were differences of logged concentrations. Conclusions: In this preliminary study, the concentration of a logged PID with F_CF applied was a better way to increase accuracy compared to applying M_CF. We suggest that additional research is necessary to consider environmental factors such as temperature and humidity.

Skin permeability of the biosynthetic galactosylated 2-phenoxyethanol (생합성된 galactosylated 2-phenoxyethanol의 피부 투과도)

  • Su-Hong Kim;Sun-Beom Kwon;Jun-Sub Kim;Gi-Seong Moon;Kyung-hwan Jung;Hyang-Yeol Lee
    • Journal of the Korean Applied Science and Technology
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    • v.41 no.1
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2024
  • The safety of cosmetic ingredients is considered paramount. In order to enhance safety, a novel preservative, PE-gal, was bio-synthesized by utilizing the Escherichia coli enzyme 𝛽-galactosidase on the conventional preservative 2-phenoxyethanold (PE). The skin absorption of the bio-synthesized product, PE-gal, intended for use in cosmetics, was evaluated for permeability using the Franz Diffusion Cell Assay system, comparing it with the conventinal preservative PE. When using samples of the same mass concentration, the Flux and Kp values of PE increased over time, indicating a gradual increase in permeability. However, PE-gal did not exhibit sufficient permeability to measure. This suggests that the skin permeability of PE is higher than that of the PE-gal saccharide. According to Marzulli et al., when confirming the degree of permeation using Kp values, the permeation rate of PE was measured as "slow" at a concentration of 1mg/mL. Thus, the transdermal permeability of the divedened form of PE-gal was significantly lower compared to PE.

Comparative Analysis of Particulate Matter, Black Carbon, and Noise Levels Before and After Installation of a Safety Wall in a Pedestrian Walkway within an Urban Tunnel (도심터널 보행로 안전벽 설치 전후의 미세먼지, 블랙카본, 소음 수준 비교)

  • Myoungho Lee;Jongmin Park;Sohyun Kang;Jeongyeon Park;Taehong Kwon;Chungsik Yoon
    • Journal of Korean Society of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.214-221
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    • 2024
  • Objectives: People using pedestrian walkways within tunnels may be exposed to environmental hazards that can have adverse effects on their health. This study aimed to measure changes in the levels of particulate matter (PM10), black carbon (BC), and noise after the installation of safety walls on pedestrian walkways within tunnels. Methods: Measurements were taken at the entrances on both sides of a tunnel and at the central point, both before and after the installation of pedestrian safety walls. Additionally, measurements were conducted by distinguishing between non-rush hour and rush hour periods to account for variations in the number of vehicles using the tunnel. A SidePak was used for PM10 measurements, an aethalometer for BC, and a sound level meter for noise. Results: PM10 showed the highest concentrations at the center of the tunnel at both pre- and post-installation of safety walls, as well as during rush hour periods. After the installation, the concentration at the center was 31.09 ± 14.02 ㎍/m3 (19.44 ± 8.02% increase). During rush hour, BC concentration reached 2.28 ± 1.55 ㎍/m3, indicating a 26.71 ± 13.19% increase compared to non-rush hour. As for noise, installation of safety walls reduced noise levels about 3 - 6 dB (8.10 ± 3.31% decrease). Conclusions: It was confirmed that installing safety walls on pedestrian walkways within the tunnel can reduce noise levels. However, the interior of a tunnel is a poorly ventilated environment, and exposure levels vary depending on the length of the tunnel. Therefore, the development of safety measures related to this issue is warranted, and further research on harmful substances within the tunnel should be conducted.