Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mònica Martínez is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mònica Martínez.


Waste Management | 2013

Aggregate material formulated with MSWI bottom ash and APC fly ash for use as secondary building material

R. del Valle-Zermeño; J. Formosa; J.M. Chimenos; Mònica Martínez; Ana Inés Fernández

The main goal of this paper is to obtain a granular material formulated with Municipal Solid Waste Incineration (MSWI) bottom ash (BA) and air pollution control (APC) fly ash to be used as secondary building material. Previously, an optimum concrete mixture using both MSWI residues as aggregates was formulated. A compromise between the environmental behavior whilst maximizing the reuse of APC fly ash was considered and assessed. Unconfined compressive strength and abrasion resistance values were measured in order to evaluate the mechanical properties. From these results, the granular mixture was not suited for certain applications owing to the high BA/APC fly ash content and low cement percentages used to reduce the costs of the final product. Nevertheless, the leaching test performed showed that the concentrations of all heavy metals were below the limits established by the current Catalan legislation for their reutilization. Therefore, the material studied might be mainly used in embankments, where high mechanical properties are not needed and environmental safety is assured.


Water Research | 2015

Reagent use efficiency with removal of nitrogen from pig slurry via struvite: a study on magnesium oxide and related by-products

M.S. Romero-Güiza; Stephan Tait; S. Astals; R. del Valle-Zermeño; Mònica Martínez; J. Mata-Alvarez; J.M. Chimenos

Controlled struvite formation has been attracting increasing attention as a near mature technology to recover nutrients from wastewater. However, struvite feasibility is generally limited by the high cost of chemical reagents. With the aim to understand and control reagent use efficiency, experiments and equilibrium model simulations examined inorganic nitrogen (TAN) removal from pig manure via struvite with added magnesium and phosphate reagents. Four industrial magnesium oxide (MgO), a commercial product and three by-products from magnesite calcination, were tested with phosphate added as a highly soluble potassium salt. TAN removal extents with the MgOs ranged from 47 to 72%, with the highest grade MgO providing the greatest extent of TAN removal. However, model analysis showed that all the MgO reagents were poorly soluble (only about 40% of added magnesium actually dissolved). The model results suggested that this poor dissolution was due to kinetic limitations, not solubility constraints. A further set of additional reagents (termed stabilization agents) were prepared by pre-treating the MgO reagents with phosphoric acid, and were tested separately as a source of both magnesium and phosphate. Results showed that acid pre-treatment of moderate to highly reactive MgOs (soft to medium-burnt) primarily formed bobierrite as the stabilizing agent, whereas the pre-treatment of very low reactivity MgOs (dead-burnt) mostly formed newberyite. The newberyite stabilizing agents achieved very high TAN removal extents of about 80%, which is significant, considering that these were formed from dead-burnt/low-grade MgOs. However, the bobierrite stabilizing agents achieved a substantially lower TAN removal extent than their medium-to-high reactivity precursor MgOs. Again, model analysis showed that the bobierrite stabilizing agents were poorly soluble, due to kinetic limitations, not solubility constraints. In contrast, the model suggested that the newberyite stabilizing agents almost completely dissolved to very effectively form struvite. A mechanism was proposed by which conditions near a dissolving reagent particle surface causes unwanted struvite nucleation onto and overgrowth of the reagent particle, inhibiting further dissolution and markedly reducing reagent efficiency. The findings of the study could have implications for reagent efficiency with struvite in general, even when using other solid reagents such as magnesium hydroxide or other MgOs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Expression and Regulation of the Lipoprotein Lipase Gene in Human Adrenal Cortex

Bart Staels; Geneviève Martin; Mònica Martínez; Caroline Albert; Julia Peinado-Onsurbe; Régis Saladin; Dean W. Hum; Manuel Reina; Senén Vilaró; Johan Auwerx

Lipoprotein lipase (LPL), an enzyme which hydrolyzes triglycerides and participates in the catabolism of remnant lipoproteins, plays a crucial role in energy and lipid metabolism. The goal of this study was to analyze the expression and regulation of the LPL gene in human adrenals. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction amplification and sequence analysis demonstrated the presence of LPL mRNA in fetal and adult human adrenal cortex. Furthermore, the human adrenocortical carcinoma cell line, NCI-H295, expresses LPL mRNA and protein, which is localized to the outer cellular membrane as demonstrated by immunofluorescence confocal microscopy and can be released in the medium by heparin addition. To asses whether the LPL gene is regulated by agents regulating adrenal steroidogenesis, NCI-H295 cells were treated with activators of second messenger systems. Whereas the calcium-ionophore A23187 did not affect LPL gene expression, treatment with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate decreased LPL mRNA levels in a time- and dose-dependent manner. This decrease after phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate was associated with diminished heparin-releasable LPL mass and activity in the culture medium. Addition of the cAMP analog 8-Br-cAMP to NCI-H295 cells resulted in a rapid, but transient dose-dependent induction of LPL mRNA. Treatment with the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide gradually induced, whereas simultaneous addition of cAMP and cycloheximide superinduced LPL mRNA levels. Nuclear run-on analysis indicated that the effects of cAMP and cycloheximide occurred at the transcriptional and post-transcriptional level, respectively. Transient co-transfection assays demonstrated that the first 230 base pairs of the proximal LPL promoter contain a cAMP-responsive element activated by protein kinase A and transcription factors belonging to the CREB/CREM family. These data indicate that LPL is expressed in human adrenal cortex and regulated in NCI-H295 adrenocortical carcinoma cells by activators of the protein kinase A and protein kinase C second messenger pathways in a manner comparable to P450scc, which catalyzes the first step in adrenal steroidogenesis. These observations suggest a role for LPL in adrenal energy and/or lipid metabolism and possibly in steroidogenesis.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2008

Yield strength, Shear Stress and Toughness of YBCO samples textured by Bridgman technique

J.J. Roa; Emilio Jiménez-Piqué; X.G. Capdevila; Mònica Martínez; M. Segarra

Mechanical properties of the orthorhombic phase of YBa2Cu3O7-δ (Y-123) at room temperature have been investigated at different applied loads using nanoindentation technique. The study was carried out for several monodomains on the (001) planes for textured Bridgman samples with dispersed Y2BaCuO5 (Y-211) particles as pinning centers. The yield strength (σys), shear stress (τm) and toughness (KIC) of Y123/Y211composite was determined at different applied loads. First and second mechanical properties have been calculated though the Hertz equations and the last one with Lawn et al. equations. Finally, the ultra-low imprints obtained by nanoindentation have been correlated with parameters obtained by Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscope (FE-SEM).


Journal of Materials Engineering and Performance | 2014

Mechanical Characterization of Copper-Copper Wires Joined by Friction Welding Using Instrumented Indentation Technique

Miguel Morales; E. Xuriguera; Mònica Martínez; J. A. Padilla; J. Molera; N. Ferrer; M. Segarra; F. Espiell

Abstract Friction welding samples of both the fire-refined high-conductivity (FRHC) and electrolytically tough pitch (ETP) copper alloy wires have been mechanically characterized by instrumented indentation technique and tensile test. Hardness profiles in the perpendicular direction to the weld interface, in both the central and peripheral zones, of the as-welded FRHC-FRHC and ETP-ETP samples have been investigated at nano-/micrometric scale. The microstructures of welds have been observed using both the optical microscopy and scanning electronic microscopy. The results show the typical friction welding zones: the interface zone, the thermo-mechanically affected zone (TMAZ), and the transition zone between the TMAZ and the base metal zone (BMZ) that present a microstructure and hardness close to the base metal. No presence of a heat-affected zone is observed. Although both welds show the same tendency in hardness distribution, FHRC-FHRC weld presents a TMAZ narrower than ETP-ETP one, which produces a stronger drop in hardness with increasing of the distance from welding central line, and a higher difference in hardness between the central and peripheral zones. The tensile tests of ETP-ETP welds showed that all samples broke by the BMZ that is far away from the interface of the welded joint, while the most of the FRHC-FRHC welds are broken at the TMAZ region at low strengths. These appreciable differences in mechanical properties for the FHRC-FHRC welds are probably generated by a stronger variation in their microstructural properties. Therefore, it may justify the welding failures in the FHRC-FHRC weld at the typical tensile stress for an industrial cold-drawn process of wires.


Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells | 2010

Selection of materials with potential in sensible thermal energy storage

Ana Inés Fernández; Mònica Martínez; M. Segarra; Ingrid Martorell; Luisa F. Cabeza


Renewable & Sustainable Energy Reviews | 2016

Types, methods, techniques, and applications for microencapsulated phase change materials (MPCM): A review

Jessica Giro-Paloma; Mònica Martínez; Luisa F. Cabeza; A. Inés Fernández


Applied Energy | 2013

Physico-chemical and mechanical properties of microencapsulated phase change material

Jessica Giro-Paloma; Gerard Oncins; Camila Barreneche; Mònica Martínez; A. Inés Fernández; Luisa F. Cabeza


Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells | 2012

Selection and characterization of recycled materials for sensible thermal energy storage

Maria Elena Navarro; Mònica Martínez; Antoni Gil; A.I. Fernández; Luisa F. Cabeza; R. Olives; Xavier Py


Nanotechnology | 2007

Nanohardness and Young’s modulus of YBCO samples textured by the Bridgman technique

J.J. Roa; X.G. Capdevila; Mònica Martínez; F. Espiell; M. Segarra

Collaboration


Dive into the Mònica Martínez's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Segarra

University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. Espiell

University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J.J. Roa

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge