24 research outputs found

    Low temperature ignition of biomass

    Get PDF
    Abstract Biomass is an especially reactive fuel. There have been large increases in the transportation and utilization of biomass fuels over the past 10 years and this has raised concerns over its safe handling and utilization. Fires, and sometimes explosions, are a risk during all stages of fuel production as well as during the handling and utilization of the product. This paper presents a method for assessing ignition risk and provides a ranking of relative risk of ignition of biomass fuels. Tests involved single particle measurements, thermal analysis, dust layer and basket ignition tests. In all cases, smouldering combustion was observed, whereby the fuels pyrolyse to produce a black char, which then subsequently ignites. Low temperature pyrolysis kinetics have been utilised to predict ignition delay times at low temperatures. A method for evaluating risk was explored based on the activation energy for pyrolysis and a characteristic temperature from {TGA} analysis. Here, olive cake, sunflower husk and Miscanthus fall into the high risk category, while the woods, plane, pine, mesquite and red berry juniper, fall into the medium risk category. This method is able to capture the impact of low activation energy for pyrolysis on the increased risk of ignition

    Low Temperature Ignition of Biomass

    Get PDF
    Biomass is an especially reactive fuel. There have been large increases in the transportation and utilisation of biomass fuels over the past 10 years and this has raised concerns over its safe handling and utilisation. Fires, and sometimes explosions, are a risk during all stages of fuel production as well as during the handling and utilisation of the product. This paper presents a method for assessing ignition risk and provides a ranking of relative risk of ignition of biomass fuels. Tests involved single particle measurements, thermal analysis, dust layer and basket ignition tests. In all cases, smouldering combustion was observed, whereby the fuels pyrolyse to produce a black char, which then subsequently ignites. Low temperature pyrolysis kinetics have been utilised to predict ignition delay times at low temperatures. A method for evaluating risk was explored based on the activation energy for pyrolysis and a characteristic temperature from TGA analysis. Here, olive cake, sunflower husk and Miscanthus fall into the high risk category, while the woods, plane, pine, mesquite and red berry juniper, fall into the medium risk category. This method is able to capture the impact of low activation energy for pyrolysis on the increased risk of ignition

    New reactivity and structural insights of alkali-metal-mediated alumination in directed ortho-alumination of a tertiary aromatic amide

    No full text
    The first reported sodium alkyl(TMP)aluminate reagent to be synthesised and crystallographically characterised, [TMEDA·Na(µ-TMP)(µ-iBu)Al(iBu)2], reacts as an amido base towards phenylacetylene to form crystalline [(TMEDA)2·Na(µ-CCPh)(µ-iBu)Al(iBu)2]; whereas the congeneric TMEDA-stabilised lithium (TMP)aluminate exhibits dual alkyl/amido basicity in its reaction with N,N-diisopropylbenzamide to form a novel heterobimetallic-heterotrianionic crystalline complex [{PhC(O)N(iPr)2}·Li{2-[1-C(O)N(iPr)2]C6H4}{Me2NCH2CH2N(Me)CH2}Al(iBu)2], which, in addition to having an ortho-deprotonated benzamide ligand, also contains a methyl-deprotonated TMEDA ligand and a neutral benzamide molecule ligated to lithium

    The Peters'-Plus syndrome: description of 16 patients and review of the literature

    No full text
    Peters'-Plus syndrome is characterized by Peters' anomaly, a typical face, cleft lip and palate, short limb dwarfism, and developmental retardation. We report the follow-up of six patients in the original report, 10 yet unreported patients, and review 26 patients that have been reported in the literature. The spectrum of the syndrome is broadened by data from affected sibs which indicate that a wider range of anterior chamber cleavage disorders may be present, a cleft lip or palate need not be present, and developmental retardation may be mild or even absent. An increased foetal loss in families with Peters'-Plus syndrome may indicate intrauterine death of some foetuses affected by the syndrome. The pattern of inheritance is autosomal recessiv

    The composition of precarity: ‘emerging’ composers’ experiences of opportunity culture in contemporary classical music

    No full text
    This paper examines the precarious working lives of ‘emerging’ composers attempting to build a career in the world of new classical music in the UK. This topic is approached by considering the ‘composition opportunity’, success in which is seen as an important element in ‘making it’ in this sphere. We argue that such schemes in fact manifest a crucial tension in the nature of artistic labour, and are, at the very least, problematic in their function as conduits towards full professional identity. They may instead act to maintain the precarious working situation of composers in a neoliberal age. The working lives of artists are all too rarely illuminated, and new music composers are no exception; this survey of 47 emerging composers is the largest study of such individuals in the U
    corecore