29 research outputs found
Hydrobiological study on Summer, Rainy and Winter season of river Deorania at Bareilly
The waters of the Deorania River have been found to be a good model for studying the effects of sewer pollution. Therefore, the effect on hydrobiology was tested during different extreme points of the winter, summer and rainy season. Samples were collected from three different sites. Site A (unpolluted near Thana Bhojipura), site B (near the city Shamshan Bhoomi, about 50 meters away from the point where major drains of city joint the river) and site C (it is about 3 Km. away from the point where major drains join the river). The water of the river was analysed for hydrobiological parameters; temperature, colour, TSS, transparency, pH, DO, free CO2, COD, BOD, TDS, and salinity. The results indicate that all parameters at site B and C are beyond the permissible limit and unsuitable for human consumption and unfit for irrigation, dairy form, industrial use. Industrial effluent and domestic sewage contribute a source of pollution in river water. Till date there is no hydrobiological study performed on this river with respect to all three seasons therefore the study will be very beneficial for the whole scientific community
A Review Paper on Green Building Research
One of the most common issues on the word right now is green building technology, with the goal of reducing the development industry's various negative effects on the environment, society, and economy. Because pollution and global warming are quickly expanding over the planet, the world urgently requires a sustainable and reasonable development. Because of the increase in Green House Gases (GHGs), dramatic climatical differences occurring everyday have been noted and are being faced by almost everyone all over the world. Within settled countries such as the United States of America, Russia, Australia, and the United Kingdom, there have already been rigorous steps taken to achieve workable development, as well as rules and regulations enacted by their respective governments to assist and accomplish a workable and environmentally approachable development of their countries. However, emerging countries such as India, China, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, and others are dragging in terms of founding supportable growth and environmentally friendly structures. In addition, there is a deficiency of public understanding about this worldwide issue in these emerging countries. According to surveys and study, these countries are also far behind schedule the established nations of the world. This article discusses the need for maintainable growth around the world, particularly in emerging countries such as India and China, which have enormous land-living masses and are fast emerging, with the potential to become new global superpowers in the near future. It also includes sustainable and monetary research with connections to Indian contexts, as well as a recent live instance study of a freshly built and constructed luxurious housing home in a densely populated area of India. The case study is a inhabited house that is planned and built as a sustainable and green structure in an extremely community inside the state of Maharashtra, India, as India is also known as a country of villages with the world's second largest population. According to India's 2012 census, 69.84 percent of the population, or 869.17 million people, live in 6,47,861 distinct villages. By using straightforward, simple, and cost-effective strategies, this study will assist Indian communities and residential buildings in becoming more sustainable and greener
Synthesis of a highly thermostable insulin by phenylalanine conjugation at B29 Lysine.
Globally, millions of diabetic patients require daily life-saving insulin injections. Insulin heat-lability and fibrillation pose significant challenges, especially in parts of the world without ready access to uninterrupted refrigeration. Here, we have synthesized four human insulin analogs by conjugating ε-amine of B29 lysine of insulin with acetic acid, phenylacetic acid, alanine, and phenylalanine residues. Of these, phenylalanine-conjugated insulin, termed FHI, was the most stable under high temperature (65 °C), elevated salt stress (25 mM NaCl), and varying pH levels (ranging from highly acidic pH 1.6 to physiological pH 7.4). It resists fibrillation for a significantly longer duration with sustained biological activity in in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo and displays prolonged stability over its native counterpart. We further unravel the critical interactions, such as additional aromatic π-π interactions and hydrogen bonding in FHI, that are notably absent in native insulin. These interactions confer enhanced structural stability of FHI and offer a promising solution to the challenges associated with insulin heat sensitivity
Study of planktonic diversity of river Ganga from Devprayag to Roorkee, Uttarakhand (India)
Analysis of water samples for planktonic diversity has been carried out for five sampling stations of river Ganga stretched over a distance of 125 kms from Devprayag to Roorkee. The investigation was carried out for a period of one year at five different sampling sites i.e. Sampling station A (Devprayag), Sampling station B (Rishikesh), Sampling station C (Haridwar) Sampling station D ( Pul Jatwara) and Sampling station E (Roorkee). In the present study of river Ganga, Among the zooplankton, Protozoa, Rotifera, Cladocera, Copepod, Ostracods constitute the main component and in phytoplankton Diatoms were dominated and class Blue green algae, green algae was found least during study period. Majority of zooplankton shows maximum occurrence and abundance during the high salinity period
Customer satisfaction in public and private sector banks: A case study of NCR
Indians banking sector is likely to face tough competition in the coming few years because many of the recent policy started by the Indian government start to take effect and new entrants also show to make their presence felt. It is possible to be a case of survival of the best, or in other words, the most successful. A bank’s ability to make profits in an increasingly competitive market will be based on the number, and quality of its investors, thus consumer satisfaction must continue to be a key area for all banks in the future. Past studies have proved that service quality in an example of consumer satisfaction This paper user the SERVQUAL model to show which of the five service quality dimensions of tangibility, reliability, responsiveness, assurance and empathy have an effect on consumer satisfaction in public sector and private banks