Twelve normolipidic healthy human subjects were fed a diet with or without additional soybean phytosterols for 4 weeks in a crossover design. The order of the treatments was randomized. Phytosterols were added to the diet blended in butter. The dietary ratio cholesterol:phytosterols was 0.7 during the control period (436 mg cholesterol/day and 29 mg phytosterols/day) and 1.88 during the phytosterols period (410 mg cholesterol/day and 740 mg phytosterols/day). Blood cholesterol was 10% lower after subjects consumed the phytosterol-enriched diet than when they consumed the control diet (p < 0.001), which was due to a 15 % LDL cholesterol decrease (p < 0.001). The HDL cholesterol:LDL cholesterol ratio was markedly enhanced (+25%) (p < 0.01). These findings suggest that a significant lowering of plasma total and LDL cholesterol can be effected by a modest dietary intake of soybean phytosterols.
This present study was designed to evaluate the performances of five alternative solvents (alcohols: ethanol, isopropanol and terpenes: D-limonene, a-pinene, p-cymene) compared to n-hexane in rapeseed oil extraction. The extracted oils were quantitatively and qualitatively analyzed to compare the solvents' performances in terms of kinetics, fatty acid compositions, lipid yields, and classes. Moreover, micronutrients in extracted oils were also respectively quantified by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and gas chromatography (GC). In addition, the interactions between alternative solvents and rapeseed oil have been theoretically studied with the Hansen solubility methodology to get a better comprehension of dissolving mechanisms. The results indicated that pcymene could be the most promising solvent for n-hexane substitution with higher lipid yield and good selectivity, despite the micronutrient contents were relatively low.
We investigate the influence of thermal conditions during solid phase epitaxial regrowth (SPER) on the electrical activation level of boron in preamorphized silicon, both with respect to heating ramp rates and the use of low temperature preanneals. Enhancement of electrically active boron concentration by 36% is observed for activation with the fastest ramp rate (487°C∕s) compared to the slowest one (1°C∕s). An important clustering pathway occurs within the amorphous silicon phase (during low temperature preanneal) prior to completion of the SPER process. In these junctions boron deactivation during isochronal post-annealing is almost independent on the maximum boron activation level.
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