Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Life Sciences (12)
- Engineering (9)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (9)
- Environmental Sciences (8)
- Physics (5)
-
- Water Resource Management (3)
- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (2)
- Natural Resources and Conservation (2)
- Sustainability (2)
- Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology (2)
- Animal Sciences (1)
- Aquaculture and Fisheries (1)
- Astrophysics and Astronomy (1)
- Chemistry (1)
- Civil and Environmental Engineering (1)
- Electrical and Computer Engineering (1)
- Environmental Engineering (1)
- Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment (1)
- Environmental Monitoring (1)
- Fresh Water Studies (1)
- Natural Resources Management and Policy (1)
- Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology (1)
- Power and Energy (1)
- Systems Biology (1)
- The Sun and the Solar System (1)
- Publication
-
- Professor Pascal Perez (4)
- Gordon Wallace (3)
- Leah Maree Gibbs (3)
- Prof. Stephanie Tristram-Nagle Ph.D. (3)
- Dr Maureen Edwards (2)
-
- Long D Nghiem (2)
- Professor Noel Cressie (2)
- Associate Professor Mark Nelson (1)
- Associate Professor Robert Graham Clark (1)
- Daniel D Snow (1)
- Daryl McPhee (1)
- Dr Mark Freeman (1)
- Dr Ngamta Thamwattana (1)
- Dr Ricardo Vasquez Padilla (1)
- Gabriel Leiner (1)
- Hontas F Farmer (1)
- Irvine W. Wei (1)
- Josip Horvat (1)
- Neil Dufty (1)
- Oleg Lavrentovich (1)
- Peter Palffy-Muhoray (1)
- Professor Caroline A Sullivan (1)
- Robert Clark (1)
- Robert Gorkin III (1)
- Robert Weiner (1)
- Ronald J. Duchovic (1)
- Tor Hundloe (1)
- File Type
Articles 1 - 30 of 39
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Prospective Doctoral Statement For The University Of Southern California's School Of Cinematic Arts Media Arts + Practice Program, Gabriel Leiner
Prospective Doctoral Statement For The University Of Southern California's School Of Cinematic Arts Media Arts + Practice Program, Gabriel Leiner
Gabriel Leiner
After visiting L.A. again and seeing the beautiful fountains on the University of Southern California's campus I am filled with all kinds of ideas about the future and brimming with energy. To all those at the University of Southern California's Cinematic Arts Department, thanks for reading my ideas over the past couple years and helping me to evolve and become a better person and a better writer. Starting a position as a doctoral student in the Media Arts + Practice Program in 2016 is an exciting opportunity. I've got a really positive outlook about Kiss The Water.
Performance Analysis Of A Rankine Cycle Integrated With The Goswami Combined Power And Cooling Cycle, Ricardo Vasquez Padilla, Antonio Ramos Archibold, Gokmen Demirkaya, Saeb Besarati, D Yogi Goswami, Muhammad M. Rahman, Elias L. Stefanakos
Performance Analysis Of A Rankine Cycle Integrated With The Goswami Combined Power And Cooling Cycle, Ricardo Vasquez Padilla, Antonio Ramos Archibold, Gokmen Demirkaya, Saeb Besarati, D Yogi Goswami, Muhammad M. Rahman, Elias L. Stefanakos
Dr Ricardo Vasquez Padilla
Improving the efficiency of thermodynamic cycles plays a fundamental role in reducing the cost of solar power plants. These plants work normally with Rankine cycles which present some disadvantages due to the thermodynamic behavior of steam at low pressures. These disadvantages can be reduced by introducing alternatives such as combined cycles which combine the best features of each cycle. In this paper, a combined Rankine–Goswami cycle (RGC) is proposed and a thermodynamic analysis is conducted. The Goswami cycle, used as a bottoming cycle, uses ammonia–water mixture as the working fluid and produces power and refrigeration while power is the primary …
2014-15 Central West State Of The Environment Report, Neil Dufty
2014-15 Central West State Of The Environment Report, Neil Dufty
Neil Dufty
Wildlife Of The Gold Coast Wetlands, Shelley Burgin, Daryl Mcphee
Wildlife Of The Gold Coast Wetlands, Shelley Burgin, Daryl Mcphee
Daryl McPhee
Extract: Water in the landscape of the Gold Coast is dominated by marine and marine-influenced systems. The most obvious are the in-shore waters abutting the Gold Coast's world-famous beaches and estuaries. Little more than a glance at a map of the city also reveals the extensive canal estates built to take advantage of the marine waters, and indeed expand them. The waters of the rivers mix with the ocean's waters in the estuaries. These ecosystems are valuable nursery areas for marine wildlife, particularly, but not restricted to, fishes of commercial and recreational value.
The Impact On The Gold Coast's Terrestrial Environments, Tor Hundloe
The Impact On The Gold Coast's Terrestrial Environments, Tor Hundloe
Tor Hundloe
Extract: We tend to think of the Gold Coast as a water environment. As tourists know, it sits on the shore of the vast Pacific Ocean. That is why most come. They have seen the magnificent photographs. If not perched on flattened dunes looking east to the ocean, a significant part of the urban Gold Coast environment is located around natural and human-made water environments. Of these we will say little here, other than to note their extent. The focus of this chapter is the city's terrestrial environments, reporting on and ultimately, after describing the environments, discussing what proportion of …
Optical Sensing System Based On Wireless Paired Emitter Detector Diode Device And Ionogels For Lab-On-A-Disc Water Quality Analysis, Monika Czugala, Robert Gorkin Iii, Thomas Phelan, Jennifer Gaughran, Vincenzo Curto, Jens Ducree, Dermot Diamond, Fernando Benito-Lopez
Optical Sensing System Based On Wireless Paired Emitter Detector Diode Device And Ionogels For Lab-On-A-Disc Water Quality Analysis, Monika Czugala, Robert Gorkin Iii, Thomas Phelan, Jennifer Gaughran, Vincenzo Curto, Jens Ducree, Dermot Diamond, Fernando Benito-Lopez
Robert Gorkin III
This work describes the first use of a wireless paired emitter detector diode device (PEDD) as an optical sensor for water quality monitoring in a lab-on-a-disc device. The microfluidic platform, based on an ionogel sensing area combined with a low-cost optical sensor, is applied for quantitative pH and qualitative turbidity monitoring of water samples at point-of-need. The autonomous capabilities of the PEDD system, combined with the portability and wireless communication of the full device, provide the flexibility needed for on-site water testing. Water samples from local fresh and brackish sources were successfully analysed using the device, showing very good correlation …
The Potlib Library Of Potential Energy Functions And A New Global Analytic Pes For The H + O2 Reaction, Ronald Duchovic
The Potlib Library Of Potential Energy Functions And A New Global Analytic Pes For The H + O2 Reaction, Ronald Duchovic
Ronald J. Duchovic
No abstract provided.
Effects Of Ether Vs. Ester Linkage On Lipid Bilayer Structure And Water Permeability., S. Deren Guler, D. Dipon Ghosh, Jianjun Pan, John Mathai, Mark Zeidel, John Nagle, Stephanie Tristram-Nagle
Effects Of Ether Vs. Ester Linkage On Lipid Bilayer Structure And Water Permeability., S. Deren Guler, D. Dipon Ghosh, Jianjun Pan, John Mathai, Mark Zeidel, John Nagle, Stephanie Tristram-Nagle
Prof. Stephanie Tristram-Nagle Ph.D.
The structure and water permeability of bilayers composed of the ether-linked lipid, dihexadecylphosphatidylcholine (DHPC), were studied and compared with the ester-linked lipid, dipalmitoylphosphaditdylcholine (DPPC). Wide angle X-ray scattering on oriented bilayers in the fluid phase indicate that the area per lipid A is slightly larger for DHPC than for DPPC. Low angle X-ray scattering yields A=65.1A(2) for DHPC at 48 degrees C. LAXS data provide the bending modulus, K(C)=4.2x10(-13)erg, and the Hamaker parameter H=7.2x10(-14)erg for the van der Waals attractive interaction between neighboring bilayers. For the low temperature phases with ordered hydrocarbon chains, we confirm the transition from a tilted …
Structure And Water Permeability Of Fully Hydrated Diphytanoylpc., Stephanie Tristram-Nagle, Dong Joo Kim, Nadia Akhunzada, Norbert Kucerka, John Mathai, John Katsaras, Mark Zeidel, John Nagle
Structure And Water Permeability Of Fully Hydrated Diphytanoylpc., Stephanie Tristram-Nagle, Dong Joo Kim, Nadia Akhunzada, Norbert Kucerka, John Mathai, John Katsaras, Mark Zeidel, John Nagle
Prof. Stephanie Tristram-Nagle Ph.D.
Diphytanoylphosphatidylcholine (DPhyPC) is a branched chain lipid often used for model membrane studies, including peptide/lipid interactions, ion channels and lipid rafts. This work reports results of volume measurements, water permeability measurements P(f), X-ray scattering from oriented samples, and X-ray and neutron scattering from unilamellar vesicles at T=30 degrees C. We measured the volume/lipid V(L)=1426+/-1A(3). The area/lipid was found to be 80.5+/-1.5A(2) when both X-ray and neutron data were combined with the SDP model analysis (Kucerka, N., Nagle, J.F., Sachs, J.N., Feller, S.E., Pencer, J., Jackson, A., Katsaras, J., 2008. Lipid bilayer structure determined by the simultaneous analysis of neutron and …
Structure Of Fully Hydrated Fluid Phase Lipid Bilayers With Monounsaturated Chains., Norbert Kucerka, Stephanie Tristram-Nagle, John Nagle
Structure Of Fully Hydrated Fluid Phase Lipid Bilayers With Monounsaturated Chains., Norbert Kucerka, Stephanie Tristram-Nagle, John Nagle
Prof. Stephanie Tristram-Nagle Ph.D.
Quantitative structures are obtained at 30 degrees C for the fully hydrated fluid phases of palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC), with a double bond on the sn-2 hydrocarbon chain, and for dierucoylphosphatidylcholine (di22:1PC), with a double bond on each hydrocarbon chain. The form factors F(qz) for both lipids are obtained using a combination of three methods. (1) Volumetric measurements provide F(0). (2) X-ray scattering from extruded unilamellar vesicles provides /F(qz)/ for low q(z). (3) Diffuse X-ray scattering from oriented stacks of bilayers provides /F(qz)/ for high q(z). Also, data using method (2) are added to our recent data for dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) using methods …
Collective Librations Of Water Molecules In The Crystal Lattice Of Rubidium Bromide: Experiment And Simulation, L M. Lepodise, J Horvat, Roger A. Lewis
Collective Librations Of Water Molecules In The Crystal Lattice Of Rubidium Bromide: Experiment And Simulation, L M. Lepodise, J Horvat, Roger A. Lewis
Josip Horvat
Terahertz spectroscopy of RbBr reveals four prominent absorption lines at room temperature and a further 15 lines at 10 K. Via density-functional-theory (DFT) numerical modelling using the PBE0 hybrid GGA functional, all the absorptions are identified as correlated librations of water molecules in the RbBr lattice. Each libration mode is a combination of rocking, wagging and twisting motions of the water molecules. The number of libration lines and numerical modelling show that the C2v symmetry of water in RbBr is broken. Our modelling shows that the distribution of libration amplitudes and phases for different water molecules in the RbBr unit …
A Light-Assisted, Polymeric Water Oxidation Catalyst That Selectively Oxidizes Seawater With A Low Onset Potential, Jun Chen, Pawel W. Wagner, Lei Tong, Danijel Boskovic, Weimin Zhang, David L. Officer, Gordon G. Wallace, Gerhard F. Swiegers
A Light-Assisted, Polymeric Water Oxidation Catalyst That Selectively Oxidizes Seawater With A Low Onset Potential, Jun Chen, Pawel W. Wagner, Lei Tong, Danijel Boskovic, Weimin Zhang, David L. Officer, Gordon G. Wallace, Gerhard F. Swiegers
Gordon Wallace
Vapour phase polymerisation (vpp) of PEDOT to incorporate high levels of a sulphonated manganese porphyrin yields a vivid green conducting polymer that, under illumination, catalyzes selective oxidation of water from seawater from ca. 0.40 V (vs. NHE; Pt counter electrode) without observable chlorine formation. This onset potential is comparable to that of certain metal oxide semiconductors that achieve higher photocurrents but are not capable of selectively oxidising the water in seawater.
Dynamics Of Breakpoint Chlorination, Irvine Wei, J. Carrell Morris
Dynamics Of Breakpoint Chlorination, Irvine Wei, J. Carrell Morris
Irvine W. Wei
No abstract provided.
A Cellulose Liquid Crystal Motor: A Steam Engine Of The Second Kind, Yong Geng, Pedro Lucio Almeida, Cheng Cheng, Peter Palffy-Muhoray, Maria Helena Godinho, Susete Nogueira Fernandes
A Cellulose Liquid Crystal Motor: A Steam Engine Of The Second Kind, Yong Geng, Pedro Lucio Almeida, Cheng Cheng, Peter Palffy-Muhoray, Maria Helena Godinho, Susete Nogueira Fernandes
Peter Palffy-Muhoray
The salient feature of liquid crystal elastomers and networks is strong coupling between orientational order and mechanical strain. Orientational order can be changed by a wide variety of stimuli, including the presence of moisture. Changes in the orientation of constituents give rise to stresses and strains, which result in changes in sample shape. We have utilized this effect to build soft cellulose-based motor driven by humidity. The motor consists of a circular loop of cellulose film, which passes over two wheels. When humid air is present near one of the wheels on one side of the film, with drier air …
Optical Characterization Of The Nematic Lyotropic Chromonic Liquid Crystals: Light Absorption, Birefringence, And Scalar Order Parameter, Yuriy A. Nastishin, H. Liu, T. Schneider, V. G. Nazarenko, Sergij V. Shiyanovskii, Oleg Lavrentovich
Optical Characterization Of The Nematic Lyotropic Chromonic Liquid Crystals: Light Absorption, Birefringence, And Scalar Order Parameter, Yuriy A. Nastishin, H. Liu, T. Schneider, V. G. Nazarenko, Sergij V. Shiyanovskii, Oleg Lavrentovich
Oleg Lavrentovich
We report on the optical properties of the nematic (N) phase formed by lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals (LCLCs) in well aligned planar samples. LCLCs belong to a broad class of materials formed by one-dimensional molecular self-assembly and are similar to other systems such as “living polymers” and “wormlike micelles.” We study three water soluble LCLC forming materials: disodium chromoglycate, a derivative of indanthrone called Blue 27, and a derivative of perylene called Violet 20. The individual molecules have a planklike shape and assemble into rodlike aggregates that form the N phase once the concentration exceeds about 0.1M. The uniform surface …
Just Add Water: Colonisation, Water Governance, And The Australian Inland, Leah M. Gibbs
Just Add Water: Colonisation, Water Governance, And The Australian Inland, Leah M. Gibbs
Leah Maree Gibbs
Water has played a key role in the development of the Australian inland and the nation. For European colonists, the dry and variable landscape challenged ideas about nature imported from northern temperate regions. I argue first, that colonists brought with them ideas for ordering nature and tools for transforming landscapes that led to inappropriate and destructive water management and the silencing of local voices and knowledge systems. Secondly, colonial patterns of ordering and transforming landscapes are ongoing, but new ways of governing water, which challenge colonialism, are emerging. In the first section of the paper I discuss colonial relationships with …
Massive Star Forming Cores And Outflows Found By Analysis Of Astronomical Data, Hontas Farmer
Massive Star Forming Cores And Outflows Found By Analysis Of Astronomical Data, Hontas Farmer
Hontas F Farmer
Like gems hidden in mountains of sand, I have sifted through vast amounts of data which have been gathered by surveys covering wide areas of the sky at particular wavelengths, and found likely star forming cores, hints of circumstellar disk and outflows in regions of massive star formation. The procedural lesson from my masters thesis is that there are discoveries waiting to be made by comparing data sets gathered at different frequencies, and by conducting coordinated multi-spectral surveys of massive star forming regions.
Oxygen Exchange During The Reaction Of Pocl3 And Water, Robert Clark, Robert Morrison, Andrew Thomas, Rebeca Alvarez, Paul Milham
Oxygen Exchange During The Reaction Of Pocl3 And Water, Robert Clark, Robert Morrison, Andrew Thomas, Rebeca Alvarez, Paul Milham
Robert Clark
To investigate O exchange during the reaction of POCl3 and water, natural abundance POCl3 was reacted with water highly enriched in 18O, and the resulting H3PO4 was isolated as KH2PO4. This reaction was conducted with and without tetrahydrofuran (THF) as a solvent, and was controlled in THF and violent in its absence. Approximately 5 x 10-4M aqueous solutions of the KH2PO4 were analyzed using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, to estimate the proportions of the mass-clumped 16,17,18O isotope analogues of [H2PO4] -. During analysis, ~29% of [H2PO4] - dehydrated to [PO3]-, for which the proportions of the O isotope analogues were …
Catalytic Solar Water Splitting Inspired By Photosynthesis. Homogeneous Catalysts With A Mechanical ("Machine-Like") Action, Gerhard F. Swiegers, G Charles Dismukes, Leone Spiccia, Robin Brimblecombe, Annette Koo, Jun Chen, Gordon G. Wallace
Catalytic Solar Water Splitting Inspired By Photosynthesis. Homogeneous Catalysts With A Mechanical ("Machine-Like") Action, Gerhard F. Swiegers, G Charles Dismukes, Leone Spiccia, Robin Brimblecombe, Annette Koo, Jun Chen, Gordon G. Wallace
Gordon Wallace
Chemical reactions may be controlled by either: the minimum threshold energy that must be overcome during collisions between reactant molecules / atoms (the Activation Energy, Ea), or: the rate at which reactant collisions occur (the Collision Frequency, A) (for reactions with low Ea). Reactions of type (2) are governed by the physical, mechanical interaction of the reactants. Such mechanical processes are unusual, but not unknown in molecular catalysts. We examine the catalytic action and macroscopic properties of several abiological mechanical catalysts and show that they display distinct similarities to enzymes in general. An abiological model of the Photosystem II Water …
Conducting Polymers With Fibrillar Morphology Synthesized In A Biphasic Ionic Liquid/Water System, J.M. Pringle, Orawan Ngamna, Carol M. Lynam, Gordon G. Wallace, Maria Forsyth, Douglas Macfarlane
Conducting Polymers With Fibrillar Morphology Synthesized In A Biphasic Ionic Liquid/Water System, J.M. Pringle, Orawan Ngamna, Carol M. Lynam, Gordon G. Wallace, Maria Forsyth, Douglas Macfarlane
Gordon Wallace
The synthesis of poly(pyrrole), poly(terthiophene), and poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) with unusual fibrillar morphologies has been achieved by chemical polymerization in a biphasic ionic liquid/water system. Use of aqueous gold chloride as the oxidant, with the monomers dissolved in a hydrophobic ionic liquid, allows the polymerization to occur at the ionic liquid/water interface. The resultant conducting polymer fibrils are, on average, 50−100 nm wide and can be thousands of nanometers long. The polymers produced in this ionic liquid system are compared to those synthesized in a biphasic chloroform/water system.
Synthesis, Properties And Water Permeability Of Swnt Buckypapers, L J. Sweetman, L Nghiem, I Chironi, G Triani, Marc In Het Panhuis, St F. Ralph
Synthesis, Properties And Water Permeability Of Swnt Buckypapers, L J. Sweetman, L Nghiem, I Chironi, G Triani, Marc In Het Panhuis, St F. Ralph
Long D Nghiem
The ability of macrocyclic ligands to facilitate formation of dispersions of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) was investigated using a combination of absorption spectrophotometry and optical microscopy. Vacuum filtration of aqueous dispersions containing SWNTs and various macrocyclic ligands (derivatised porphyrin, phthalocyanine, cyclodextrin and calixarene) afforded self-supporting membranes known as buckypapers. Microanalytical data and energy dispersive X-ray spectra were obtained for these buckypapers and provided evidence for retention of the macrocyclic ligands within the structure of the membranes. The electrical conductivities of the membranes varied between 30 ± 20 and 220 ± 60 S cm−1, while contact angle analysis revealed they all …
A Spatial Analysis Of Variance Applied To Soil-Water Infiltration, C Gotway, Noel A. Cressie
A Spatial Analysis Of Variance Applied To Soil-Water Infiltration, C Gotway, Noel A. Cressie
Professor Noel Cressie
A spatial analysis of variance uses the spatial dependence among the observations to modify the usual interference procedures associated with a statistical linear model. When spatial correlation is present, the usual tests for presence of treatment effects may no longer be valid, and erroneous conclusions may result from assuming that the usual F ratios are F distributed. This is demonstrated using a spatial analysis of soil-water infiltration data. Emphasis is placed on modeling the spatial dependence structure with geostatistical techniques, and this spatial dependence structure is then used to test hypotheses about fixed effects using a nested linear model. -Authors
A Robust-Resistant Spatial Analysis Of Soil Water Infiltration., Noel A. Cressie, R Horton
A Robust-Resistant Spatial Analysis Of Soil Water Infiltration., Noel A. Cressie, R Horton
Professor Noel Cressie
Concentrates on estimating the spatial correlations between soil water infiltration observations, with special emphasis on resistant methods to remove nonstationarity. After this removal, robust semivariogram estimators are used to examine the spatial dependencies for various tillage treatments. There is some indication that infiltration characteristics inherit different types of spatial dependency, depending on the tillage treatment applied.-from Authors
Combining Mbr And Nf/Ro Membrane Filtration For The Removal Of Trace Organics In Indirect Potable Water Reuse Applications, William Price, Nichanan Tadkaew, Long Nghiem, Stuart Khan, Abdulhakeem Alturki, James Mcdonald
Combining Mbr And Nf/Ro Membrane Filtration For The Removal Of Trace Organics In Indirect Potable Water Reuse Applications, William Price, Nichanan Tadkaew, Long Nghiem, Stuart Khan, Abdulhakeem Alturki, James Mcdonald
Long D Nghiem
The aim of this study was to demonstrate the complementarities of combining membrane bioreactor (MBR) treatment with nanofiltration (NF) or reverse osmosis (RO) membrane filtration for the removal of trace organic contaminants for potential indirect potable water recycling applications. Four commercially available NF/RO membranes, namely NF270, NF90, BW30 and ESPA2, were selected for this investigation. Challenge tests were conducted with 40 trace organic compounds at concentrations of approximately 2 ng/L in initial wastewater solutions using a laboratory scaleMBRsystem and a cross-flow NF/RO rig. The results suggest that the MBR system effectively removes hydrophobic and biodegradable trace organic compounds. The adsorption …
Theoretical Probing Of The Phenomenon Of The Formation Of The Outermost Surface Layer Of A Multi-Component Particle, And The Surface Chemical Composition After The Rapid Removal Of Water In Spray Drying, Mark Nelson, Harvinder Sidhu, X.D. Chen
Theoretical Probing Of The Phenomenon Of The Formation Of The Outermost Surface Layer Of A Multi-Component Particle, And The Surface Chemical Composition After The Rapid Removal Of Water In Spray Drying, Mark Nelson, Harvinder Sidhu, X.D. Chen
Associate Professor Mark Nelson
Spray drying is a primary process for the manufacture of powders, which satisfy a vast array of societal demands in the areas of nutrition, health and medicine. The functionality of a spray-dried product begins with its incorporation into water (wetting followed by dispersion) Therefore, as its surface chemical composition and structure determine its first contact with water (that is, its hydrophilic nature), these are of prime concern. Laboratory studies on this first layer, which is in the order of several nm in depth from the surface, have been extensive but there is still a lack of a fundamental quantitative explanation …
Symmetry Solutions For Transient Solute Transport In Unsaturated Soils With Realistic Water Profile, Maureen Edwards, R Joel Moitsheki, Philip Broadbridge
Symmetry Solutions For Transient Solute Transport In Unsaturated Soils With Realistic Water Profile, Maureen Edwards, R Joel Moitsheki, Philip Broadbridge
Dr Maureen Edwards
No abstract provided.
Group Invariant Solutions For Two Dimensional Solute Transport Under Realistic Water Flows, Maureen Edwards, R Joel Moitsheki, Philip Broadbridge
Group Invariant Solutions For Two Dimensional Solute Transport Under Realistic Water Flows, Maureen Edwards, R Joel Moitsheki, Philip Broadbridge
Dr Maureen Edwards
No abstract provided.
Fire, Wind And Water: Social Networks In Natural Disasters, Mark Freeman
Fire, Wind And Water: Social Networks In Natural Disasters, Mark Freeman
Dr Mark Freeman
No abstract provided.
Modelling Adsorption Of A Water Molecule Into Various Pore Structures Of Silica Gel, Duangkamon Baowan, Ngamta Thamwattana
Modelling Adsorption Of A Water Molecule Into Various Pore Structures Of Silica Gel, Duangkamon Baowan, Ngamta Thamwattana
Dr Ngamta Thamwattana
Silica gel is widely used in commercial applications as a water adsorbent due to its properties including hydrothermally stable, high water sorption capacity, low regeneration temperature, low cost and wide range of pore diameters. Since the water sorption capacity of silica gel strongly depends on the pore size and structure, which can be controlled during synthesis, this paper study the effect of pore shapes and dimensions of silica gel upon the adsorption of a water molecule aiming at maximising the water sorption capacity. In particular, we consider three types of pore structures, namely cylindrical, square prismatic and conical pores. On …
Safe Water For People In Low, Small Island Pacific Nations: The Rural-Urban Dilemma, Ian White, Tony Falkland, Taboia Metutera, Mourongo Katatia, Tererei Abete-Reema, Marc Overmars, Pascal Perez, Anne Dray
Safe Water For People In Low, Small Island Pacific Nations: The Rural-Urban Dilemma, Ian White, Tony Falkland, Taboia Metutera, Mourongo Katatia, Tererei Abete-Reema, Marc Overmars, Pascal Perez, Anne Dray
Professor Pascal Perez
The issue of ensuring that growing communities in small island countries have access to safe water and adequate sanitation is examined in Kiribati, whose islands are spread over three million square kilometres in the central Pacific. Its coral island communities have water supply and sanitation problems among the most difficult in the world. Formulaic developed-world approaches, models, techniques and toolboxes that do not consider the social and cultural context have had little success. Changes in approach at the international, national and local levels are called for, and the resourcing of village-level water and sanitation committees would return ownership and control …