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26 pages, 7199 KiB  
Article
Investigation of Fresh, Mechanical, and Durability Properties of Rubberized Fibre-Reinforced Concrete Containing Macro-Synthetic Fibres and Tyre Waste Rubber
by Nusrat Jahan Mim, Mizan Ahmed, Xihong Zhang, Faiz Shaikh, Ahmed Hamoda, Vipulkumar Ishvarbhai Patel and Aref A. Abadel
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2778; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152778 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
The growing disposal of used tyres and plastic waste in landfills poses a significant environmental challenge. This study investigates the potential of utilizing used tyre rubber and macro-synthetic fibres (MSFs) made from recycled plastics in fibre-reinforced rubberized concrete (RuFRC). Various percentages of tyre [...] Read more.
The growing disposal of used tyres and plastic waste in landfills poses a significant environmental challenge. This study investigates the potential of utilizing used tyre rubber and macro-synthetic fibres (MSFs) made from recycled plastics in fibre-reinforced rubberized concrete (RuFRC). Various percentages of tyre rubber shreds were used to replace coarse aggregates, calculated as 10%, 20%, and 30% of the volume of fine aggregates; fibre dosages (0%, 0.25%, 0.5%, 0.75%, and 1% by volume) were incorporated into the mix, and a series of physical, mechanical, and durability properties were evaluated. The results show that, as the fibre and rubber content increased, the slump of RuFRC decreased, with the lowest value obtained for concrete with 1% fibre and 30% rubber. The density of RuFRC decreases as the rubber percentage increases due to air voids and increased porosity caused by the rubber. The strength properties of RuFRC were found to decline with the increase in the rubber content, with mixes containing 30% rubber exhibiting reductions of about 60% in compressive strength, 27% in tensile strength, and 13% in flexural strength compared to the control specimen. Durability testing revealed that an increased rubber content led to higher water absorption, water penetration, and chloride ion permeability, with 30% rubber showing the highest values. However, lower rubber content (10%) and higher fibre dosages improved the durability characteristics, with water absorption reduced by up to 5% and shrinkage strains lowered by about 7%, indicating better compaction and bonding. These results indicate that RuFRC with moderate rubber and higher fibre content offers a promising balance between sustainability and performance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Materials, and Repair & Renovation)
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19 pages, 14381 KiB  
Article
Temperature and Humidity Anomalies During the Summer Drought of 2022 over the Yangtze River Basin
by Dengao Li, Er Lu, Dian Yuan and Ruisi Liu
Atmosphere 2025, 16(8), 942; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16080942 (registering DOI) - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
In the summer of 2022, central and eastern China experienced prolonged extreme high temperatures and severe drought, leading to significant economic losses. To gain a more profound understanding of this drought event and furnish a reference for forecasting similar events in the future, [...] Read more.
In the summer of 2022, central and eastern China experienced prolonged extreme high temperatures and severe drought, leading to significant economic losses. To gain a more profound understanding of this drought event and furnish a reference for forecasting similar events in the future, this study examines the circulation anomalies associated with the drought. Employing a diagnostic method focused on temperature and moisture anomalies, this study introduces a novel approach to quantify and compare the relative significance of moisture transport and warm air dynamics in contributing to the drought. This study examines the atmospheric circulation anomalies linked to the drought event and compares the relative contributions of water vapor transport and warm air activity in causing the drought, using two parameters defined in the paper. The results show the following: (1) The West Pacific Subtropical High (WPSH) was more intense than usual and extended westward, consistently controlling the Yangtze River Basin. Simultaneously, the polar vortex area was smaller and weaker, the South Asian High area was larger and stronger, and it shifted eastward. These factors collectively led to weakened water vapor transport conditions and prevailing subsiding air motions in the Yangtze River Basin, causing frequent high temperatures. (2) By defining Iq and It to represent the contributions of moisture and temperature to precipitation, we found that the drought event in the Yangtze River Basin was driven by both reduced moisture supplies in the lower troposphere and higher-than-normal temperatures, with temperature playing a dominant role. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Meteorology)
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20 pages, 2633 KiB  
Article
Urban Air Quality Management: PM2.5 Hourly Forecasting with POA–VMD and LSTM
by Xiaoqing Zhou, Xiaoran Ma and Haifeng Wang
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2482; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082482 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
The accurate and effective prediction of PM2.5 concentrations is crucial for mitigating air pollution, improving environmental quality, and safeguarding public health. To address the challenge of strong temporal correlations in PM2.5 concentration forecasting, this paper proposes a novel hybrid model that integrates the [...] Read more.
The accurate and effective prediction of PM2.5 concentrations is crucial for mitigating air pollution, improving environmental quality, and safeguarding public health. To address the challenge of strong temporal correlations in PM2.5 concentration forecasting, this paper proposes a novel hybrid model that integrates the Particle Optimization Algorithm (POA) and Variational Mode Decomposition (VMD) with the Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) network. First, POA is employed to optimize VMD by adaptively determining the optimal parameter combination [k, α], enabling the decomposition of the original PM2.5 time series into subcomponents while reducing data noise. Subsequently, an LSTM model is constructed to predict each subcomponent individually, and the predictions are aggregated to derive hourly PM2.5 concentration forecasts. Empirical analysis using datasets from Beijing, Tianjin, and Tangshan demonstrates the following key findings: (1) LSTM outperforms traditional machine learning models in time series forecasting. (2) The proposed model exhibits superior effectiveness and robustness, achieving optimal performance metrics (e.g., MAE: 0.7183, RMSE: 0.8807, MAPE: 4.01%, R2: 99.78%) in comparative experiments, as exemplified by the Beijing dataset. (3) The integration of POA with serial decomposition techniques effectively handles highly volatile and nonlinear data. This model provides a novel and reliable tool for PM2.5 concentration prediction, offering significant benefits for governmental decision-making and public awareness. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental and Green Processes)
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15 pages, 961 KiB  
Article
Analysis of Chemical Composition and Odor Characteristics in Particleboards Decorated by Resin-Impregnated Paper, Polypropylene Film and Polyvinyl Chloride Film
by Liming Zhu, Minghui Yang, Lina Tang, Qian Chen, Xiaorui Liu, Xianwu Zou, Yuejin Fu and Bo Liu
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 2145; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17152145 - 5 Aug 2025
Abstract
Analysis of changes in TVOC and VOCs chemical composition or odor characteristics of particleboard before and after decoration treatment with resin-impregnated paper (RIP), polypropylene (PP) film and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) film were studied. The effects of these three decoration treatments on masking or [...] Read more.
Analysis of changes in TVOC and VOCs chemical composition or odor characteristics of particleboard before and after decoration treatment with resin-impregnated paper (RIP), polypropylene (PP) film and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) film were studied. The effects of these three decoration treatments on masking or suppressing the release of VOCs and odorants from particleboard were explored. The substances that were covered or suppressed and newly introduced before and after processing were identified to provide a basis for reducing the odor emissions of PVC-, PP- and RIP-decorated particleboard. Taking undecorated particleboard and particleboard treated by three types of decorative materials as research subjects, the air permeability of the three decorative materials was tested using the Gurley Permeability Tester. TVOC emissions from the boards were evaluated using the 1 m3 environmental chamber method. Qualitative and quantitative analyses of the samples were conducted via thermal desorption–gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (TD-GCMS). The contribution of odor substances was determined using odor activity value (OAV). The results indicated that the permeability from high to low was PVC film, PP film and RIP. Compared with undecorated particleboard, the TVOC emissions of PVC-decorated boards decreased by 93%, PP-decorated particleboard by 83% but the TVOC emissions of RIP-decorated particleboard increased by 67%. PP decoration treatment masked or suppressed the release of 20 odor substances but introduced xylene, which can increase potentially the health risks for PP-decorated particleboard. PVC decoration treatment masked or suppressed 19 odor substances, but it introduced 12 new compounds, resulting in an overall increase in TVOC emissions. RIP treatment did not introduce new odor substances. After PP film and RIP treatments, both the variety of VOCs released and the number of key odor-contributing compounds and modifying odorants decreased. In contrast, the number of modifying odorants and potential odorants increased after PVC treatment. VOC emissions were effectively masked or suppressed by three decoration treatments, same as the release of substances contributing to overall odor of particleboard was reduced. Among them, PP and RIP decorative materials demonstrate better effects. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Eco-Friendly Supramolecular Polymeric Materials, 2nd Edition)
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30 pages, 9610 KiB  
Article
Can the Building Make a Difference to User’s Health in Indoor Environments? The Influence of PM2.5 Vertical Distribution on the IAQ of a Student House over Two Periods in Milan in 2024
by Yong Yu, Marco Gola, Gaetano Settimo and Stefano Capolongo
Atmosphere 2025, 16(8), 936; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16080936 (registering DOI) - 4 Aug 2025
Abstract
This study investigates indoor and outdoor air quality monitoring in a student dormitory located in northern Milan (Italy) using low-cost sensors. This research compares two monitoring periods in June and October 2024 to examine common PM2.5 vertical patterns and differences at the [...] Read more.
This study investigates indoor and outdoor air quality monitoring in a student dormitory located in northern Milan (Italy) using low-cost sensors. This research compares two monitoring periods in June and October 2024 to examine common PM2.5 vertical patterns and differences at the building level, as well as their influence on the indoor spaces at the corresponding positions. In each period, around 30 sensors were installed at various heights and orientations across indoor and outdoor spots for 2 weeks to capture spatial variations around the building. Meanwhile, qualitative surveys on occupation presence, satisfaction, and well-being were distributed in selected rooms. The analysis of PM2.5 data reveals that the building’s lower floors tended to have slightly higher outdoor PM2.5 concentrations, while the upper floors generally had lower PM2.5 indoor/outdoor (I/O) ratios, with the top-floor rooms often below 1. High outdoor humidity reduced PM infiltration, but when outdoor PM fell below 20 µg/m3 in these two periods, indoor sources became dominant, especially on the lower floors. Air pressure I/O differences had minimal impact on PM2.5 I/O ratios, though slightly positive indoor pressure might help prevent indoor PM infiltration. Lower ventilation in Period-2 possibly contributed to more reported symptoms, especially in rooms with higher PM from shared kitchens. While outdoor air quality affects IAQ, occupant behavior—especially window opening and ventilation management—remains crucial in minimizing indoor pollutants. Users can also manage exposure by ventilating at night based on comfort and avoiding periods of high outdoor PM. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Air Quality in Metropolitan Areas and Megacities (Second Edition))
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17 pages, 838 KiB  
Article
A Scintillation Hodoscope for Measuring the Flux of Cosmic Ray Muons at the Tien Shan High Mountain Station
by Alexander Shepetov, Aliya Baktoraz, Orazaly Kalikulov, Svetlana Mamina, Yerzhan Mukhamejanov, Kanat Mukashev, Vladimir Ryabov, Nurzhan Saduyev, Turlan Sadykov, Saken Shinbulatov, Tairzhan Skokbayev, Ivan Sopko, Shynbolat Utey, Ludmila Vildanova, Nurzhan Yerezhep and Valery Zhukov
Particles 2025, 8(3), 73; https://doi.org/10.3390/particles8030073 - 4 Aug 2025
Abstract
For further investigation of the properties of the muon component in the core regions of extensive air showers (EASs), a new underground hodoscopic set-up with a total sensitive area of 22 m2 was built at the Tien Shan High Mountain Cosmic Ray [...] Read more.
For further investigation of the properties of the muon component in the core regions of extensive air showers (EASs), a new underground hodoscopic set-up with a total sensitive area of 22 m2 was built at the Tien Shan High Mountain Cosmic Ray Station. The hodoscope is based on a set of large-sized scintillation charged particle detectors with an output signal of analog type. The installation ensures a (5–8) GeV energy threshold of muon registration and a ∼104 dynamic range for the measurement of the density of muon flux. A program facility was designed that uses modern machine learning techniques for automated search for the typical scintillation pulse pattern in an oscillogram of a noisy analog signal at the output of the hodoscope detector. The program provides a ∼99% detection probability of useful signals, with a relative share of false positives below 1%, and has a sufficient operation speed for real-time analysis of incoming data. Complete verification of the hardware and software tools was performed under realistic operation conditions, and the results obtained demonstrate the correctness of the proposed method and its practical applicability to the investigation of the muon flux in EASs. In the course of the installation testing, a preliminary physical result was obtained concerning the rise of the multiplicity of muon particles around an EAS core in dependence on the primary EAS energy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Experimental Physics and Instrumentation)
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37 pages, 7429 KiB  
Article
Study on the Influence of Window Size on the Thermal Comfort of Traditional One-Seal Dwellings (Yikeyin) in Kunming Under Natural Wind
by Yaoning Yang, Junfeng Yin, Jixiang Cai, Xinping Wang and Juncheng Zeng
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2714; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152714 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 174
Abstract
Under the dual challenges of global energy crisis and climate change, the building sector, as a major carbon emitter consuming 33% of global primary energy, has seen its energy efficiency optimization become a critical pathway towards achieving carbon neutrality goals. The Window-to-Wall Ratio [...] Read more.
Under the dual challenges of global energy crisis and climate change, the building sector, as a major carbon emitter consuming 33% of global primary energy, has seen its energy efficiency optimization become a critical pathway towards achieving carbon neutrality goals. The Window-to-Wall Ratio (WWR), serving as a core parameter in building envelope design, directly influences building energy consumption, with its optimized design playing a decisive role in balancing natural daylighting, ventilation efficiency, and thermal comfort. This study focuses on the traditional One-Seal dwellings (Yikeyin) in Kunming, China, establishing a dynamic wind field-thermal environment coupled analysis framework to investigate the impact mechanism of window dimensions (WWR and aspect ratio) on indoor thermal comfort under natural wind conditions in transitional climate zones. Utilizing the Grasshopper platform integrated with Ladybug, Honeybee, and Butterfly plugins, we developed parametric models incorporating Kunming’s Energy Plus Weather meteorological data. EnergyPlus and OpenFOAM were employed, respectively, for building heat-moisture balance calculations and Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD) simulations, with particular emphasis on analyzing the effects of varying WWR (0.05–0.20) on temperature-humidity, air velocity, and ventilation efficiency during typical winter and summer weeks. Key findings include, (1) in summer, the baseline scenario with WWR = 0.1 achieves a dynamic thermal-humidity balance (20.89–24.27 °C, 65.35–74.22%) through a “air-permeable but non-ventilative” strategy, though wing rooms show humidity-heat accumulation risks; increasing WWR to 0.15–0.2 enhances ventilation efficiency (2–3 times higher air changes) but causes a 4.5% humidity surge; (2) winter conditions with WWR ≥ 0.15 reduce wing room temperatures to 17.32 °C, approaching cold thresholds, while WWR = 0.05 mitigates heat loss but exacerbates humidity accumulation; (3) a symmetrical layout structurally constrains central ventilation, maintaining main halls air changes below one Air Change per Hour (ACH). The study proposes an optimized WWR range of 0.1–0.15 combined with asymmetric window opening strategies, providing quantitative guidance for validating the scientific value of vernacular architectural wisdom in low-energy design. Full article
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19 pages, 1370 KiB  
Article
Airborne-Platform-Assisted Transmission and Control Separation for Multiple Access in Integrated Satellite–Terrestrial Networks
by Chaoran Huang, Xiao Ma, Xiangren Xin, Weijia Han and Yanjie Dong
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4732; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154732 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 246
Abstract
Currently, the primary random access protocol for satellite communications is Irregular Repetition Slotted ALOHA (IRSA). This protocol leverages interference cancellation and burst repetition based on probabilistic distributions, achieving up to 80% channel utilization in practical use. However, it faces three significant issues: (1) [...] Read more.
Currently, the primary random access protocol for satellite communications is Irregular Repetition Slotted ALOHA (IRSA). This protocol leverages interference cancellation and burst repetition based on probabilistic distributions, achieving up to 80% channel utilization in practical use. However, it faces three significant issues: (1) low channel utilization with smaller frame sizes; (2) drastic performance degradation under heavy load, where channel utilization can be lower than that of traditional Slotted ALOHA; and (3) even under optimal load and frame sizes, up to 20% of the valuable satellite channel resources are still wasted despite reaching up to 80% channel utilization. In this paper, we propose the Separated Transmission and Control ALOHA (STCA) protocol, which introduces a space–air–ground layered network and separates the access control process from the satellite to an airborne platform, thus preventing collisions in satellite channels. Additionally, the airborne-platform estimates the load to ensure maximum access rates. Simulation results demonstrate that the STCA protocol significantly outperforms the IRSA protocol in terms of channel utilization. Full article
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22 pages, 1556 KiB  
Article
Long-Term Performance of Passive Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) Samplers for Indoor Air
by John H. Zimmerman, Brian Schumacher, Christopher C. Lutes, Brian Cosky and Heidi Hayes
Environments 2025, 12(8), 267; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments12080267 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 272
Abstract
The reliability of passive samplers in measuring volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in indoor air depends on whether the uptake rate is constant given the environmental conditions and sampler exposure duration. The first phase of this study evaluated the performance of charcoal-based, solvent-extracted passive [...] Read more.
The reliability of passive samplers in measuring volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in indoor air depends on whether the uptake rate is constant given the environmental conditions and sampler exposure duration. The first phase of this study evaluated the performance of charcoal-based, solvent-extracted passive samplers (e.g., Radiello® 130 passive samplers with white diffusive bodies) over exposure periods ranging from 1 week to 1 year in a test house with known vapor intrusion (VI). Chloroform %Bias values exceeded the ±30% acceptance criterion after 4 weeks exposure. Benzene, hexane, and trichloroethylene (TCE) concentrations were within the acceptance criterion for up to three months. Toluene and tetrachloroethylene (PCE), the two least volatile compounds, demonstrated uniform uptake rates over one year. In the second phase of this study, testing of the longer exposure times of 6 months and 1 year were evaluated with three additional passive samplers: Waterloo Membrane SamplerTM (WMSTM), SKC 575 with secondary diffusive cover, and Radiello® 130 passive samplers with yellow diffusive bodies. The SKC 575 and Radiello® 130 passive samplers produced acceptable results (%Bias ≤ 30%) over the 6-month exposure period, while the WMSTM sampler results favored petroleum hydrocarbon more than chlorinated solvent uptake. After the 1-year exposure period, the passive sampler performances were acceptable under specific conditions of this study. The results suggest that all three samplers can produce acceptable results over exposure time periods beyond 30 days and up to a year for some compounds. Full article
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34 pages, 2947 KiB  
Article
Optimization and Empirical Study of Departure Scheduling Considering ATFM Slot Adherence
by Zheng Zhao, Siqi Zhao, Yahao Zhang and Jie Leng
Aerospace 2025, 12(8), 683; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace12080683 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 142
Abstract
Departure punctuality (KPI01) and ATFM slot adherence (KPI03) have been emphasized by the International Civil Aviation Organization as key performance indicators (KPIs) in the Global Air Navigation Plan. To address the inherent conflict between these two objectives in departure scheduling, a multi-objective optimization [...] Read more.
Departure punctuality (KPI01) and ATFM slot adherence (KPI03) have been emphasized by the International Civil Aviation Organization as key performance indicators (KPIs) in the Global Air Navigation Plan. To address the inherent conflict between these two objectives in departure scheduling, a multi-objective optimization model is proposed that aims to simultaneously enhance departure punctuality, ATFM slot adherence, and taxiing efficiency. A simulated annealing algorithm based on a resource transmission mechanism was developed to solve the model effectively. Based on full-scale operational data from Nanjing Lukou International Airport in June 2023, the empirical results confirm the model’s effectiveness in two primary dimensions: (1) Significant improvement in taxiing efficiency: The average unimpeded taxi-out time was reduced by 6.4% (from 17.2 to 16.1 min). The number of flights with taxi-out times exceeding 30 min decreased by 58%. For representative taxi routes (e.g., stand 118 to runway 6), the excess taxi-out time was reduced by 82.3% (from 5.61 to 1.10 min). (2) Enhanced operational punctuality: Departure punctuality improved by 10.7% (from 67.9% to 78.7%), while ATFM slot adherence increased by 31.2% (from 64.6% to 95.8%). This study presents an innovative departure scheduling approach and offers a practical framework for improving collaborative operational efficiency among airports, air traffic management units, and airlines. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Air Traffic and Transportation)
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16 pages, 2260 KiB  
Article
From Shale to Value: Dual Oxidative Route for Kukersite Conversion
by Kristiina Kaldas, Kati Muldma, Aia Simm, Birgit Mets, Tiina Kontson, Estelle Silm, Mariliis Kimm, Villem Ödner Koern, Jaan Mihkel Uustalu and Margus Lopp
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2421; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082421 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 277
Abstract
The increasing need for sustainable valorization of fossil-based and waste-derived materials has gained interest in converting complex organic matrices such as kerogen into valuable chemicals. This study explores a two-step oxidative strategy to decompose and valorize kerogen-rich oil shale, aiming to develop a [...] Read more.
The increasing need for sustainable valorization of fossil-based and waste-derived materials has gained interest in converting complex organic matrices such as kerogen into valuable chemicals. This study explores a two-step oxidative strategy to decompose and valorize kerogen-rich oil shale, aiming to develop a locally based source of aliphatic dicarboxylic acids (DCAs). The method combines air oxidation with subsequent nitric acid treatment to enable selective breakdown of the organic structure under milder conditions. Air oxidation was conducted at 165–175 °C using 1% KOH as an alkaline promoter and 40 bar oxygen pressure (or alternatively 185 °C at 30 bar), targeting 30–40% carbon conversion. The resulting material was then subjected to nitric acid oxidation using an 8% HNO3 solution. This approach yielded up to 23% DCAs, with pre-oxidation allowing a twofold reduction in acid dosage while maintaining efficiency. However, two-step oxidation was still accompanied by substantial degradation of the structure, resulting in elevated CO2 formation, highlighting the need to balance conversion and carbon retention. The process offers a possible route for transforming solid fossil residues into useful chemical precursors and supports the advancement of regionally sourced, sustainable DCA production from unconventional raw materials. Full article
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26 pages, 11108 KiB  
Article
Warming in the Maternal Environment Alters Seed Performance and Genetic Diversity of Stylosanthes capitata, a Tropical Legume Forage
by Priscila Marlys Sá Rivas, Fernando Bonifácio-Anacleto, Ivan Schuster, Carlos Alberto Martinez and Ana Lilia Alzate-Marin
Genes 2025, 16(8), 913; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes16080913 (registering DOI) - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 321
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Global warming and rising CO2 concentrations pose significant challenges to plant systems. Amid these pressures, this study contributes to understanding how tropical species respond by simultaneously evaluating reproductive and genetic traits. It specifically investigates the effects of maternal exposure to [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Global warming and rising CO2 concentrations pose significant challenges to plant systems. Amid these pressures, this study contributes to understanding how tropical species respond by simultaneously evaluating reproductive and genetic traits. It specifically investigates the effects of maternal exposure to warming and elevated CO2 on progeny physiology, genetic diversity, and population structure in Stylosanthes capitata, a resilient forage legume native to Brazil. Methods: Maternal plants were cultivated under controlled treatments, including ambient conditions (control), elevated CO2 at 600 ppm (eCO2), elevated temperature at +2 °C (eTE), and their combined exposure (eTEeCO2), within a Trop-T-FACE field facility (Temperature Free-Air Controlled Enhancement and Free-Air Carbon Dioxide Enrichment). Seed traits (seeds per inflorescence, hundred-seed mass, abortion, non-viable seeds, coat color, germination at 32, 40, 71 weeks) and abnormal seedling rates were quantified. Genetic diversity metrics included the average (A) and effective (Ae) number of alleles, observed (Ho) and expected (He) heterozygosity, and inbreeding coefficient (Fis). Population structure was assessed using Principal Coordinates Analysis (PCoA), Analysis of Molecular Variance (AMOVA), number of migrants per generation (Nm), and genetic differentiation index (Fst). Two- and three-way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) were used to evaluate factor effects. Results: Compared to control conditions, warming increased seeds per inflorescence (+46%), reduced abortion (−42.9%), non-viable seeds (−57%), and altered coat color. The germination speed index (GSI +23.5%) and germination rate (Gr +11%) improved with warming; combined treatments decreased germination time (GT −9.6%). Storage preserved germination traits, with warming enhancing performance over time and reducing abnormal seedlings (−54.5%). Conversely, elevated CO2 shortened GSI in late stages, impairing germination efficiency. Warming reduced Ae (−35%), He (−20%), and raised Fis (maternal 0.50, progeny 0.58), consistent with the species’ mixed mating system; A and Ho were unaffected. Allele frequency shifts suggested selective pressure under eTE. Warming induced slight structure in PCoA, and AMOVA detected 1% (maternal) and 9% (progeny) variation. Fst = 0.06 and Nm = 3.8 imply environmental influence without isolation. Conclusions: Warming significantly shapes seed quality, reproductive success, and genetic diversity in S. capitata. Improved reproduction and germination suggest adaptive advantages, but higher inbreeding and reduced diversity may constrain long-term resilience. The findings underscore the need for genetic monitoring and broader genetic bases in cultivars confronting environmental stressors. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Genetics and Breeding of Forage)
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19 pages, 5284 KiB  
Article
Integrating Dark Sky Conservation into Sustainable Regional Planning: A Site Suitability Evaluation for Dark Sky Parks in the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area
by Deliang Fan, Zidian Chen, Yang Liu, Ziwen Huo, Huiwen He and Shijie Li
Land 2025, 14(8), 1561; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081561 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 347
Abstract
Dark skies, a vital natural and cultural resource, have been increasingly threatened by light pollution due to rapid urbanization, leading to ecological degradation and biodiversity loss. As a key strategy for sustainable regional development, dark sky parks (DSPs) not only preserve nocturnal environments [...] Read more.
Dark skies, a vital natural and cultural resource, have been increasingly threatened by light pollution due to rapid urbanization, leading to ecological degradation and biodiversity loss. As a key strategy for sustainable regional development, dark sky parks (DSPs) not only preserve nocturnal environments but also enhance livability by balancing urban expansion and ecological conservation. This study develops a novel framework for evaluating DSP suitability, integrating ecological and socio-economic dimensions, including the resource base (e.g., nighttime light levels, meteorological conditions, and air quality) and development conditions (e.g., population density, transportation accessibility, and tourism infrastructure). Using the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA) as a case study, we employ Delphi expert consultation, GIS spatial analysis, and multi-criteria decision-making to identify optimal DSP locations and prioritize conservation zones. Our key findings reveal the following: (1) spatial heterogeneity in suitability, with high-potential zones being concentrated in the GBA’s northeastern, central–western, and southern regions; (2) ecosystem advantages of forests, wetlands, and high-elevation areas for minimizing light pollution; (3) coastal and island regions as ideal DSP sites due to the low light interference and high ecotourism potential. By bridging environmental assessments and spatial planning, this study provides a replicable model for DSP site selection, offering policymakers actionable insights to integrate dark sky preservation into sustainable urban–regional development strategies. Our results underscore the importance of DSPs in fostering ecological resilience, nighttime tourism, and regional livability, contributing to the broader discourse on sustainable landscape planning in high-urbanization contexts. Full article
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22 pages, 5830 KiB  
Article
Design of and Experimental Study on Drying Equipment for Fritillaria ussuriensis
by Liguo Wu, Jiamei Qi, Liping Sun, Sanping Li, Qiyu Wang and Haogang Feng
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8427; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158427 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 131
Abstract
To address the problems of the time consumption, labor intensiveness, easy contamination, uneven drying, and impact on the medicinal efficacy of Fritillaria ussuriensis in the traditional drying method, the hot-air-drying characteristics of Fritillaria ussuriensis were studied. The changes in the moisture ratio and [...] Read more.
To address the problems of the time consumption, labor intensiveness, easy contamination, uneven drying, and impact on the medicinal efficacy of Fritillaria ussuriensis in the traditional drying method, the hot-air-drying characteristics of Fritillaria ussuriensis were studied. The changes in the moisture ratio and drying rate of Fritillaria ussuriensis under different hot-air-drying conditions (45 °C, 55 °C, 65 °C) were compared and analyzed. Six common mathematical models were used to fit the moisture change law, and it was found that the cubic model was the most suitable for describing the drying characteristics of Fritillaria ussuriensis. The R2 values after fitting under the three temperature conditions were all greater than 0.99, and the maximum was achieved at 45 °C. Based on the principle of hot-air drying, a drying device for Fritillaria ussuriensis with a processing capacity of 15 kg/h was designed. It adopted a thermal circulation structure of inner and outer drying ovens, with the heating chamber separated from the drying chamber. The structural parameters were optimized based on Fluent simulation analysis. After optimization, the temperature of each layer was stable at 338 K ± 2 K, and the pressure field and velocity field were evenly distributed. The drying process parameters of Fritillaria ussuriensis were optimized based on response surface analysis, and the optimal process parameters were obtained as follows: inlet temperature: 338 K (65 °C), inlet air velocity: 3 m/s, and drying time: 10 h. The simulation results showed that the predicted moisture content of Fritillaria ussuriensis under the optimal working conditions was 12.58%, the temperature difference of Fritillaria ussuriensis at different positions was within 0.8 °C, and the humidity deviation was about 1%. A prototype of the drying device was built, and the drying test of Fritillaria ussuriensis was carried out. It was found that the temperature and moisture content of Fritillaria ussuriensis were consistent with the simulation results and met the design requirements, verifying the rationality of the device structure and the reliability of the simulation model. This design can significantly improve the distribution of the internal flow field and temperature field of the drying device, improve the drying quality and production efficiency of Fritillaria ussuriensis, and provide a technical reference for the Chinese herbal medicine-drying industry. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mechanical Engineering)
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28 pages, 3635 KiB  
Article
Optimizing Energy Performance of Phase-Change Material-Enhanced Building Envelopes Through Novel Performance Indicators
by Abrar Ahmad and Shazim Ali Memon
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2678; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152678 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 703
Abstract
Over recent decades, phase-change materials (PCMs) have gained prominence as latent-heat thermal energy storage systems in building envelopes because of their high energy density. However, only PCMs that complete a full daily charge–discharge cycle can deliver meaningful energy and carbon-emission savings. This simulation [...] Read more.
Over recent decades, phase-change materials (PCMs) have gained prominence as latent-heat thermal energy storage systems in building envelopes because of their high energy density. However, only PCMs that complete a full daily charge–discharge cycle can deliver meaningful energy and carbon-emission savings. This simulation study introduces a methodology that simultaneously optimizes PCM integration for storage efficiency, indoor thermal comfort, and energy savings. Two new indicators are proposed: overall storage efficiency (ECn), which consolidates heating and cooling-efficiency ratios into a single value, and the performance factor (PF), which quantifies the PCM’s effectiveness in maintaining thermal comfort. Using EnergyPlus v8.9 coupled with DesignBuilder, a residential ASHRAE 90.1 mid-rise apartment was modeled in six warm-temperate (Cfb) European cities for the summer period from June 1 to August 31. Four paraffin PCMs (RT-22/25/28/31 HC, 20 mm thickness) were tested under natural and controlled ventilation strategies, with windows opening 50% when outdoor air was at least 2 °C cooler than indoors. Simulation outputs were validated against experimental cubicle data, yielding a mean absolute indoor temperature error ≤ 4.5%, well within the ±5% tolerance commonly accepted for building thermal simulations. The optimum configuration—RT-25 HC with temperature-controlled ventilation—achieved PF = 1.0 (100% comfort compliance) in all six cities and delivered summer cooling-energy savings of up to 3376 kWh in Paris, the highest among the locations studied. Carbon-emission reductions reached 2254 kg CO2-e year−1, and static payback periods remained below the assumed 50-year building life at a per kg PCM cost of USD 1. The ECn–PF framework, therefore, provides a transparent basis for selecting cost-effective, energy-efficient, and low-carbon PCM solutions in warm-temperate buildings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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