64 research outputs found

    MINIMIZING HYDROPONIC NUTRIENT POLLUTION THROUGH PH-BASED CONTROL ALGORITHMS

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    Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2022.It is well established that mankind’s current economic practices are unsustainable. Conse-quences such as food shortages and climate change are predicted in the coming decades and efforts to help avert these impending crises remain warranted. This is particularly true for ag-riculture. Not only must food production increase to support the rapidly growing human popu-lation but the environmental impacts caused by agricultural pollution continue to grow in se-verity. Around 50 % of the fertilizer applied to crop fields is washed away into surrounding habitats resulting in eutrophication, biodiversity loss and stratospheric ozone depletion, to name but a few (Kanter et al., 2020). As specified in the Title, the scope of this work surrounds nutrient pollution from hydroponic systems. Soilless agriculture is growing exponentially worldwide and will likely play a key role in the future of sustainable food production. Unlike conventional agriculture, the nutrient solution is physically contained, and thus nutrient discharge can be monitored and controlled. Despite this advantage, hydroponic systems are known to produce large amounts of nutrient laden wastewater. This wastewater results from frequent solution replacements (or high iii throughputs for continuous systems) to maintain high nutrient concentrations and to prevent the build-up of inert and toxic species, which accumulates rapidly due to transpiration. The nutrients of concern are nitrogen and phosphorous. These nutrients are typically limiting in natural ecosystems and thus causes the aforementioned environmental impacts when dis-charged. The aim of this work is therefore to minimize the nitrogen and phosphorous discharge rates from hydroponic systems. This can be accomplished by controlling their concentrations at low levels in solution. This strategy is not new and nutrient concentration control is often employed in hydroponic systems. The electrical conductivity method is the most common but is ill-suited for operation at low concentrations. Ion-selective-electrodes have also been used but these are expensive and generally not economically viable. The novelty of this work lies in the use of pH as the sole measured variable to control the nitrogen and phosphorous concentrations at low levels in hydroponic systems. Nitrogen is sup-plied to hydroponic systems either as nitrate or ammonium, and phosphorous is supplied as phosphate. Separate control methodologies were designed for each of these three nutrients. The control systems were able to reduce nitrogen and phosphorous pollution from the system by around an order of magnitude as compared with traditional hydroponic methods. Advantages and drawbacks are also discussed and compared with existing methods.Chemical EngineeringPhDUnrestricte

    The 1st International Electronic Conference on Chemical Sensors and Analytical Chemistry

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    The 1st International Electronic Conference on Chemical Sensors and Analytical Chemistry was held on 1–15 July 2021. The scope of this online conference was to gather experts that are well-known worldwide who are currently working in chemical sensor technologies and to provide an online forum for the presention and discussion of new results. Throughout this event, topics of interest included, but were not limited to, the following: electrochemical devices and sensors; optical chemical sensors; mass-sensitive sensors; materials for chemical sensing; nano- and micro-technologies for sensing; chemical assays and validation; chemical sensor applications; analytical methods; gas sensors and apparatuses; electronic noses; electronic tongues; microfluidic devices; lab-on-a-chip; single-molecule sensing; nanosensors; and medico-diagnostic testing

    Aerospace medicine and biology: A cumulative index to a continuing bibliography (supplement 358)

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    This publication is a cumulative index to the abstracts contained in Supplements 346 through 357 of Aerospace Medicine and Biology: A Continuing Bibliography. It includes seven indexes: subject, personal author, corporate source, foreign technology, contract number, report number and accession number

    Energy: A continuing bibliography with indexes, issue 39

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    This bibliography lists 1377 reports, articles and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system from July 1, 1983 through September 30, 1983

    Theme Issue Honoring Professor Robert Verpoorte's 75th Birthday: Past, Current and Future of Natural Products Research

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    This theme issue is to celebrate Professor Robert Verpoorte’s 75th birthday. Prof. Verpoorte has been working in Leiden University over 40 years. There is no need to dwell upon the contributions of Dr. Verpoorte to plant-derived natural products research during his whole life. Dr. Verpoorte was a highly productive scientist throughout his academic career, with over 800 scientific publications in the form of research papers, books, and book chapters. His research interests are very diverse, cover- ing numerous topics related to plant-based natural products such as plant cell biotech- nology, biosynthesis, metabolomics, genetic engineering, and green technology, as well as the isolation of new biologically active compounds. He has left indelible footprints in all these fields, and he is widely recognised as a pioneer in the work of the biosynthesis of indole alkaloids, NMR-based metabolomics, and green technology in natural products production. As close friends and colleagues who have been in nearly daily contact with him over the last 20 years viewing all of these remarkable scientific contributions, we felt compelled to recognize this by the publication of a Special Issue of this journal dedicated to him.Thus, this Special Issue has now finally been released with the help of many of his colleagues and former students as a token of our gratitude to his impressive work.The Special Issue covers five main natural products topics: (1) chemical profiling and metabolomics, (2) separation/isolation and identification of plant specialized metabolites, (3) pharmacognosy of natural products to identify bioactive molecules from natural prod- ucts, (4) novel formulation of natural products, and (5) overview of natural products as a source of bioactive molecules
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