2,625 research outputs found

    Catalysis for Mixed Alcohol Synthesis from Biomass Derived Syngas: Cooperative Research and Development Final Report, CRADA Number CRD-08-292

    Get PDF
    The Dow Chemical Company (Dow) developed and tested catalysts for production of mixed alcohols from synthesis gas (syngas), under research and development (R&D) projects that were discontinued a number of years ago. Dow possesses detailed laboratory notebooks, catalyst samples, and technical expertise related to this past work. The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) is conducting R&D in support of the United States Department of Energy (DOE) to develop methods for economically producing ethanol from gasified biomass. NREL is currently conducting biomass gasification research at an existing 1/2 ton/day thermochemical test platform. Both Dow and NREL believe that the ability to economically produce ethanol from biomass-derived syngas can be enhanced through collaborative testing, refinement, and development of Dow's mixed-alcohol catalysts at NREL's and/or Dow's bench- and pilot-scale facilities. Dow and NREL further agree that collaboration on improvements in catalysts as well as gasifier operating conditions (e.g., time, temperature, upstream gas treatment) will be necessary to achieve technical and economic goals for production of ethanol and other alcohols

    Mechanism and kinetics of aging in Inconel 718

    Get PDF
    Age hardening in Inconel 718 is investigated using Brinell hardness measurements. Formation of a precipitate causes an increase in hardness

    Continued fraction digit averages an Maclaurin's inequalities

    Get PDF
    A classical result of Khinchin says that for almost all real numbers α\alpha, the geometric mean of the first nn digits ai(α)a_i(\alpha) in the continued fraction expansion of α\alpha converges to a number K=2.6854520
K = 2.6854520\ldots (Khinchin's constant) as n→∞n \to \infty. On the other hand, for almost all α\alpha, the arithmetic mean of the first nn continued fraction digits ai(α)a_i(\alpha) approaches infinity as n→∞n \to \infty. There is a sequence of refinements of the AM-GM inequality, Maclaurin's inequalities, relating the 1/k1/k-th powers of the kk-th elementary symmetric means of nn numbers for 1≀k≀n1 \leq k \leq n. On the left end (when k=nk=n) we have the geometric mean, and on the right end (k=1k=1) we have the arithmetic mean. We analyze what happens to the means of continued fraction digits of a typical real number in the limit as one moves f(n)f(n) steps away from either extreme. We prove sufficient conditions on f(n)f(n) to ensure to ensure divergence when one moves f(n)f(n) steps away from the arithmetic mean and convergence when one moves f(n)f(n) steps away from the geometric mean. For typical α\alpha we conjecture the behavior for f(n)=cnf(n)=cn, 0<c<10<c<1. We also study the limiting behavior of such means for quadratic irrational α\alpha, providing rigorous results, as well as numerically supported conjectures.Comment: 32 pages, 7 figures. Substantial additions were made to previous version, including Theorem 1.3, Section 6, and Appendix

    TOPICS - The Traffic Engineer\u27s Latest Tool

    Get PDF

    Retrieval Guide: Kentucky Soils Data System

    Get PDF
    The Kentucky Soils Data System is an extensive data file of the physical properties and characteristics of soils as determined by field and laboratory testing. Site locations are available for most samples. Since Kentucky has been mapped geologically (scale 1:24,000), the bedrock at each of these sample locations can be determined, providing better opportunities for studying soil-bedrock (parent material) relationships. A complimentary report covers data input. This report is divided into two sections: data availability and data retrieval. The first section is designed to show the quantity and types of data available and how the data are distributed geographically. The second section consists of example problems showing how the data may be retrieved in the form of various lists or tables

    Psychosocial Correlates of Physical Activity in Children and Adolescents in a Rural Community Setting

    Get PDF
    The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationships between selected psychosocial factors and the physical activity behaviors of children (grade 4-8) and adolescents (grades 9-12) in a rural community setting. The Children’s Physical Activity Scale (CPAC)was used to measure the psychosocial factors of physical activity, The Physical Activity Questionnaire-Children (PAQ-C), and Physical Activity Questionnaire-Adolescents (PAQ-A) were used to measure the physical activity behaviors of the 167 participants. Results indicated that male and female physical activity behaviors were not significantly different. However, physical activity declined with age [F(8,147) = 5.44, p \u3c 0.05, ES = 0.23]. All psychosocial factors were significantly correlated with physical activity in youth with the single highest correlation for males being “liking of exercise” (r = .61) and the highest correlation for females was “liking of games and sports”(r = .44). Stepwise regression analyses identified three subscales (liking of games and sport, liking of exercise, and parental support) in a significant prediction model of physical activity in both genders. The results indicate that children\u27s physical activity is associated with a variety of psychosocial variables that represent import predisposing and reinforcing factors

    Primary Upper Urinary Tract Small Cell Carcinoma: A Case Series and Literature Review

    Get PDF
    Background: Primary upper urinary tract small cell carcinoma (SCC) is exceedingly rare with \u3c 30 cases reported in the literature. Little is known about the incidence, diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes in these patients. We present a series of three patients with primary upper tract SCC. Case Presentation: Patient 1 is an 89-year-old Caucasian male who presented with hydroureteronephrosis and a mass in the proximal right ureter. Biopsy revealed SCC. Without further intervention, the patient died 2 months after his diagnosis. Patient 2 is a 67-year-old Caucasian female who underwent left laparoscopic nephroureterectomy for primary distal ureteral SCC, pT4N1M0. She developed lymphadenopathy and completed external beam radiation to the pelvis and four courses of cisplatin-based chemotherapy. She died from metastatic disease 7 months after diagnosis. Patient 3 is a 45-year-old female who underwent open right radical nephrectomy, retroperitoneal lymph node dissection, and hepatic metastasectomy for metastatic primary upper tract SCC, pT3N1M1. She underwent two subsequent retroperitoneal debulking procedures for recurrence followed by treatment with octreotide. She developed widespread metastasis and was treated with temozolomide and capecitabine before her death 80 months after diagnosis. Conclusion: This series contributes to the limited knowledge of the management and natural course of primary upper tract SCC. Patient 1 represents the first disease-specific mortality reported in a patient who received no therapy. Patient 3 represents the longest reported survival with metastatic disease, and the first treated with octreotide. The patient was managed with aggressive repeat surgical resection and exhibited 2 years of progression-free survival on octreotide. Emphasis should be placed on aggressive resection of all visible disease combined with the use of multimodal adjuvant chemoradiation for selected patients in this rare disease
    • 

    corecore