7,593 research outputs found
Biofuel scenarios in a water perspective: the global blue and green water footprint of road transport in 2030
The trend towards substitution of conventional transport fuels by biofuels requires additional water. The EU aims In the last two centuries, fossil fuels have been our major source of energy. However, issues concerning energy security and the quality of the environment have given an impulse to the development of alternative, renewable fuels. Particularly the transport sector is expected to steadily switch from fossil fuels to a larger fraction of biofuels - liquid transport fuels derived from biomass. Many governments believe that biofuels can replace substantial volumes of crude oil and that they will play a key role in diversifying the sources of energy supply in the coming decades. The growth of biomass requires water, a scarce resource. The link between water resources and (future) biofuel consumption, however, has not been analyzed in great detail yet. Existing scenarios on the use of water resources usually only consider the changes in food and livestock production, industry and domestic activity. The aim of this research is to assess the change in water use related to the expected increase in the use of biofuels for road transport in 2030, and subsequently evaluate the contribution to potential water scarcity. The study builds on earlier research on the relation between energy and water and uses the water footprint (WF) methodology to investigate the change in water demand related to a transition to biofuels in road transport. Information about this transition in each country is based on a compilation of different energy scenarios. The study distinguishes between two different bio-energy carriers, bio-ethanol and biodiesel, and assesses the ratio of fuel produced from selected first-generation energy crops per country. For ethanol these crops are sugar cane, sugar beet, sweet sorghum, wheat and maize. For biodiesel they are soybean, rapeseed, jatropha, and oil palm
Interplay of air and sand: Faraday heaping unravelled
We report on numerical simulations of a vibrated granular bed including the effect of the ambient air, generating the famous Faraday heaps known from experiment. A detailed analysis of the forces shows that the heaps are formed and stabilized by the airflow through the bed while the gap between bed and vibrating bottom is growing, confirming the pressure gradient mechanism found experimentally by Thomas and Squires [Phys. Rev. Lett. 81, 574 (1998)], with the addition that the airflow is partly generated by isobars running parallel to the surface of the granular bed. Importantly, the simulations also explain the heaping instability of the initially flat surface and the experimentally observed coarsening of a number of small heaps into a larger one
Asymptotic inference for nearly unstable AR(p) processes
In this paper nearly unstable AR( p) processes (in other words, models with characteristic roots near the unit circle) are studied. Our main aim is to describe the asymptotic behavior of the least-squares estimators of the coefficients. A convergence result is presented for the general complex-valued case, The limit distribution is given by the help of some continuous time AR processes. We apply the results for real-valued nearly unstable AR(p) models. In this case the limit distribution can be identified with the maximum likelihood estimator of the coefficients of the corresponding continuous time AR processes
Verschillen in resultaten glastuinbouwbedrijven onder de loep
De bedrijfsresultaten in de glastuinbouw staan de laatste paar jaar flink onder druk door lagere opbrengsten en hogere kosten. Zowel in relatief slechte als in relatief goede jaren lopen de bedrijfsresultaten tussen de bedrijven echter sterk uiteen. Dit artikel beschrijft de achterliggende oorzake
E-democracy: exploring the current stage of e-government
Governments around the world have been pressured to implement e-Government programs in order to improve the government-citizen dialogue. The authors of this article review prior literature on such efforts to find if they lead to increased democratic participation ("e-Democracy") for the affected citizens, with a focus on the key concepts of transparency, openness, and engagement. The authors find that such efforts are a starting point toward e-Democracy, but the journey is far from complete
Fracture clinic redesign reduces the cost of outpatient orthopaedic trauma care
Objectives: āVirtual fracture clinicsā have been reported as a safe and effective alternative to the traditional fracture clinic. Robust protocols are used to identify cases that do not require further review, with the remainder triaged to the most appropriate subspecialist at the optimum time for review. The objective of this study was to perform a ātop-downā analysis of the cost effectiveness of this virtual fracture clinic pathway.
Methods: National Health Service financial returns relating to our institution were examined for the time period 2009 to 2014 which spanned the service redesign.
Results: The total staffing costs rose by 4% over the time period (from Ā£1 744 933 to Ā£1 811 301) compared with a national increase of 16%. The total outpatient department rate of attendance fell by 15% compared with a national fall of 5%. Had our local costs increased in line with the national average, an excess expenditure of Ā£212 705 would have been required for staffing costs.
Conclusions: The virtual fracture clinic system was associated with less overall use of staff resources in comparison to national cost data. Adoption of this system nationally may have the potential to achieve significant cost savings
Cefsulodin for the treatment of Pseudomonas infections : a study comparing cefsulodin and ticarcillin
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Sudden Collapse of a Granular Cluster
Single clusters in a vibro-fluidized granular gas in N connected compartments
become unstable at strong shaking. They are experimentally shown to collapse
very abruptly. The observed cluster lifetime (as a function of the driving
intensity) is analytically calculated within a flux model, making use of the
self-similarity of the process. After collapse, the cluster diffuses out into
the uniform distribution in a self-similar way, with an anomalous diffusion
exponent 1/3.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Figure quality has been reduced in order to
decrease file-siz
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