1,755 research outputs found

    The IPTS Report No. 4, May 1996

    Get PDF

    The doctoral research abstracts. Vol:6 2014 / Institute of Graduate Studies, UiTM

    Get PDF
    Congratulations to Institute of Graduate Studies on the continuous efforts to publish the 6th issue of the Doctoral Research Abstracts which ranged from the discipline of science and technology, business and administration to social science and humanities. This issue captures the novelty of research from 52 PhD doctorates receiving their scrolls in the UiTM’s 81st Convocation. This convocation is very significant especially for UiTM since we are celebrating the success of 52 PhD graduands – the highest number ever conferred at any one time. To the 52 doctorates, I would like it to be known that you have most certainly done UiTM proud by journeying through the scholastic path with its endless challenges and impediments, and by persevering right till the very end. This convocation should not be regarded as the end of your highest scholarly achievement and contribution to the body of knowledge but rather as the beginning of embarking into more innovative research from knowledge gained during this academic journey, for the community and country. As alumni of UiTM, we hold you dear to our hearts. The relationship that was once between a student and supervisor has now matured into comrades, forging and exploring together beyond the frontier of knowledge. We wish you all the best in your endeavour and may I offer my congratulations to all the graduands. ‘UiTM sentiasa dihati ku’ Tan Sri Dato’ Sri Prof Ir Dr Sahol Hamid Abu Bakar , FASc, PEng Vice Chancellor Universiti Teknologi MAR

    The IPTS Report No. 4, May 1996

    Get PDF

    Improving body composition in broiler chicks through the early life diet

    Get PDF
    The poultry industry relies heavily on the efficient growth performance of broilers to provide quality breast meat at a low cost to meet consumer demand. However, high efficiency of broilers is also related to the occurrence and severity of skeletal muscle abnormalities like wooden breast. This study investigated the efficacy of incorporating long-chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), into the diets of hens and their offspring on altering the causative features of wooden breast. Early exposure to these fatty acids in broilers has shown to reduce adiposity, and may address excess adipogenesis seen in wooden breast. Physical characteristics of weight gain and relative breast weight were measured to confirm that fish oil did not compromise growth. Histological analysis of the breast showed that the perinatal fish oil diet promoted growth of larger muscle fibers and the maternal fish oil programmed reduced adipocyte size. Gene expression analysis results proposed the mechanisms that prompted differences in muscle fiber size area between diets namely, the increase in early myogenic marker expression, PAX7 and MYOD1. The increased expression of FABP4 seen in the perinatal fish oil diet groups may be attributed to a relatively new understanding of its function in muscle, and potentially an increase in fatty acid oxidation. Altering the hypertrophic growth rate of high efficiency broilers may assist in preventing growth that exceeds nutrient and oxygen provision seen in wooden breast. Primary satellite cells were collected from a subset of chicks that only differed by the maternal fish or soybean oil diets. Satellite cells isolated from the maternal fish oil group accumulated significantly less triglyceride versus maternal soybean oil. Decreasing elevated adipogenesis seen in the development of wooden breast may help to lessen the severity of the myopathy. In conclusion, future research is needed to identify the long term impacts fish oil supplementation can have on muscle development and adiposity in broilers at market age

    Pathogen Population Biology Research can Reduce International Threats to Tree Health Posed by Invasive Fungi

    Get PDF
    Humankind owes much to trees, given their major role in sequestering carbon and providing oxygen, sugars and much of the energy on which ourselves and terrestrial ecosystems depend. Trees and forests are important culturally, economically, environmentally and socially. And yet, despite this, trees throughout the world are currently facing an increasing number of serious challenges. On a global scale, Curtis et al. (2018) report most forest loss is due to commodity driven deforestation through permanent conversion to nonforest land uses including agriculture (e.g. palm oil production), energy production and mining. The other main drivers of global forest loss, that might instead be considered less permanent and associated with subsequent regrowth, include forestry, shifting agriculture and wildfire. Additional threats to forests include those posed by climate change, and invasive biotic agents such as insect pests and pathogens. Most new tree disease outbreaks are due to introduction events, with a potential pathogen introduced from their endemic centres of origin (where they generally cause little or no disease on their plant host due to long-term coevolution) into a new geographic location, in which a naive host has not previously been exposed and can thus be highly susceptible. The incidence of such 'new encounter' diseases is increasing at an unprecedented rate due to globalisation with increased international trade in plants and travel, a scenario potentially exacerbated by a changing climate better suited to establishment of a pathogen once introduced. Identification of the centres of origin of fungal pathogens can be important for several reasons. First, given that the original host-fungus interaction will have typically stabilised over long periods of time, such geographic regions could be useful sources of host genetic resistance. Moreover, the longer time periods involved will have likely resulted in greater genetic diversity accruing in such endemic populations. More diverse pathogen populations have greater evolutionary potential, with increased genetic variation available for response to environmental change. This could enable host tolerance to be overcome, unexpected 'jumps' onto new hosts, increased risk of fungicide resistance, and better adaptability to changing environmental conditions (e.g. temperature). Thus, strategies to reduce introduction of additional genetic variation from source to sink regions can reduce tree health threats. In this article, such introduction events are considered in the context of three devastating tree diseases, namely ash dieback, Dutch Elm Disease (DED) and Dothistroma Needle Blight (DNB, mainly on pine). On all these tree hosts, multiple closely-related fungal species have now been associated with each of these different diseases. Such related species are often morphologically very similar or even indistinguishable by eye, and consequently this can result in taxonomic confusion and species misidentification, leading to delayed diagnosis of the true causal agent of a given disease outbreak. Research into such related species is important as they might pose very different plant health threats that require distinct disease management strategies. These differences might relate to pathogenicity, geographic distribution, host range, effectiveness of host resistance, sensitivity to fungicides, temperature optima, reproductive strategy and so on. Furthermore, when related fungal species come into physical contact with each other after a long period of separation, for instance via an introduction event, various outcomes are possible including: (1) replacement (and possible extinction) of one species by the other; (2) coexistence of the species; or (3) cross-species hybridisation. The remainder of this article focuses, using three major tree disease case histories, on how fundamental research on pathogen biology can provide new insights into the genetic structure of related pathogen populations that can be usefully applied to reduce the threat to tree health posed by invasive fungal species

    Faculty Impact Statements, 2009

    Get PDF
    Each issue [in the Research Series] has a distinctive titl

    Faculty Impact Statements, 2009

    Get PDF
    Each issue [in the Research Series] has a distinctive titl

    Green Technologies for Production Processes

    Get PDF
    This book focuses on original research works about Green Technologies for Production Processes, including discrete production processes and process production processes, from various aspects that tackle product, process, and system issues in production. The aim is to report the state-of-the-art on relevant research topics and highlight the barriers, challenges, and opportunities we are facing. This book includes 22 research papers and involves energy-saving and waste reduction in production processes, design and manufacturing of green products, low carbon manufacturing and remanufacturing, management and policy for sustainable production, technologies of mitigating CO2 emissions, and other green technologies

    A multiscale methodology for the preliminary screening of alternative process designs from a sustainability viewpoint adopting molecular and process simulation along with data envelopment analysis

    Get PDF
    La ricerca scientifica nell\u2019ambito dell\u2019ingegneria chimica si \ue8 focalizzata sia sul perfezionamento delle teorie e delle tecniche utilizzate attualmente, che sullo sviluppo di nuovi strumenti atti a risolvere le problematiche ancora insolute relative alle produzioni di beni e servizi tipici delle industrie chimiche, biochimiche e farmaceutiche. In questo panorama, gli approcci multiscala si sono rivelati molto utili grazie alla loro peculiarit\ue0 di coniugare aspetti che spaziano dalla quanto-meccanica tipica della nanoscala, alla meccanica classica dei materiali massivi, comprendendo prospettive molto ampie e adattando ogni teoria alle diverse applicazioni. Inoltre, il riconoscimento dei concetti legati alla sostenibilit\ue0 come principi cardine per ottenere uno sviluppo sostenibile ha generato un prolifico incremento della diffusione di metodologie per considerare aspetti sociali e ambientali, a fianco delle tradizionali stime economiche, nel quadro pi\uf9 ampio delle valutazioni degli impianti chimici. Di conseguenza, questa tesi tratta dello sviluppo di una metodologia multiscala per la stima preliminare di diverse configurazioni impiantistiche, promuovendo l\u2019adozione di strumenti computazionali differenti e comprendendo valutazioni di carattere economico, sociale e ambientale. Il fine ultimo che tale metodologia si prefigge risiede nella soddisfazione della necessit\ue0 tipica di qualsiasi impianto di produzione, ovvero nella definizione di una metodologia di valutazione di vari parametri e configurazioni impiantistiche, utilizzando un\u2019ottica sostenibile e fornendo risultati velocemente. Al lettore verranno fornite le adeguate informazioni sull\u2019argomento in maniera progressiva attraverso i capitoli di questa tesi. Nel Chapter I saranno descritti il concetto di sostenibilit\ue0 e di sviluppo sostenibile. Seguir\ue0 una trattazione riguardante la loro applicazione nella societ\ue0 odierna da diverse prospettive: a partire da quella pi\uf9 generalista delle istituzioni, fino a quella pi\uf9 particolare dell\u2019industria, per concludere con una parte specifica sull\u2019industria chimica, corredata di esempi di metodologie applicate a processi chimici. Il Chapter II descriver\ue0 i passaggi necessari ad ottenere la valutazione della sostenibilit\ue0 delle alternative impiantistiche. Dal reperimento delle informazioni necessarie, all\u2019implementazione dei modelli nei simulatori di processo, seguito dal calcolo degli indici rappresentativi dei pilastri della sostenibilit\ue0, i cui valori vengono successivamente valutati tramite un algoritmo matematico (DEA) per identificare la configurazione impiantistica ottimale. Infine \ue8 necessario analizzare le alternative inefficienti di modo da comprendere su quali variabili si debba intervenire per migliorarne le prestazioni attraverso una retrofit analisi. Il Chapter III affronter\ue0 l\u2019utilizzo di diverse tecniche di simulazione molecolare per la stima del coefficiente di ripartizione ottanolo-acqua (Kow), che \ue8 un propriet\ue0 fondamentale per il calcolo di alcuni indici utilizzati. Il lettore trover\ue0 alcuni casi di studio descritti nel Chapter IV. Il primo appartiene al ramo della farmaceutica e si occupa della produzione del pioglitazone cloridrato attraverso l\u2019utilizzo di diverse vie di sintesi appartenenti a numerosi brevetti. La seconda applicazione della metodologia riguarda l\u2019industria biochimica e ottimizza le condizioni operative di un reattore utilizzato per la produzione di biodiesel a partire da olio vegetale. L\u2019ultimo caso di studio esplora il mondo dei materiali nanostrutturati, valutando diversi parametri di reazione utilizzati per condurre la sintesi di CdSe quantum dot. L\u2019ultimo Chapter V conterr\ue0 le valutazioni conclusive e le prospettive future.Research activity in chemical engineering is focused on the refinement of theories and techniques employed for the development of new tools aiming at solving issues directly related to the generation of goods and services supplied by chemical, biochemical and pharmaceutical industries. In this context, multiscale approaches revealed to be very useful, since they embrace theories from quantum mechanics at the nanoscale to classical mechanics at the macroscale, contemplating wide perspectives and enabling the adaptation of each theory to an abundance of disparate applications. Furthermore, the acknowledgment of sustainability among the cornerstones of future development led to a copious diffusion of sustainability evaluation methodologies, aiming to account for economic, social and environmental concerns among chemical processes assessments. Therefore, this thesis deals with the development of a multiscale framework for the preliminary screening of chemical process designs, promoting the adoption of various computational tools along with sustainability considerations. The purpose of this methodology resides in the fulfillment of an emblematic need for any production site, i.e. evaluating a production process considering possible modifications from different perspectives in order to identify as fast as possible the most efficient design including economic, social and environmental concerns. The reader will be guided through this topic following the chapters of this dissertation. In Chapter I, the concept of sustainability and sustainable development will be presented, followed by some applications starting from the wider panorama of institutions to the industry perspective, concluding with some relevant examples from chemical process engineering. Chapter II will describe each step to be performed in order to gain the sustainability evaluation of the process alternatives. From retrieving the promising process designs, to implementing each flowsheet in a process simulator, then calculating several indicators based on the sustainability pillars, which is followed by employing a mathematical tool (DEA) in order to select the most efficient designs and finally investigating how to enhance the sub-optimal alternatives through a retrofit analysis. Chapter III will deal with the application of different molecular simulation techniques in order to estimate the octanol-water partition coefficient (Kow), which is an essential parameter for the calculation of several sustainability indicators. Then the reader will encounter the three case studies shown in details in Chapter IV. The first one belongs to the pharmaceutical field and deals with the production of pioglitazone hydrochloride considering different synthesis routes from various patents. The second application regards the biochemical industry, optimizing the operating conditions of a reactor employed for the production of biodiesel from vegetable oil. The last one explores the synthesis of nanomaterials, evaluating several reaction parameters involved in the laboratory production of CdSe quantum dots from a sustainability viewpoint. Some concluding remarks and future perspectives will be included in the final Chapter V
    • …
    corecore