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Water reuse for irrigated agriculture in Jordan: challenges of soil sustainability and the role of management strategies
Reclaimed water provides an important contribution to the water balance in water-scarce Jordan, but the quality of this water presents both benefits and challenges. Careful management of reclaimed water is required to maximize the nutrient benefits while minimizing the salinity risks. This work uses a multi-disciplinary research approach to show that soil response to irrigation with reclaimed water is a function of the management strategies adopted on the farm by the water user. The adoption of management methods to maintain soil productivity can be seen to be a result of farmersâ awareness to potentially plant-toxic ions in the irrigation water (70% of Jordan Valley farmers identified salinization as a hazard from irrigation with reclaimed water). However, the work also suggests that farmersâ management capacity is affected by the institutional management of water. About a third (35%) of farmers in the Jordan Valley claimed that their ability to manage salinization was limited by water shortages. Organizational interviews revealed that institutional awareness of soil management challenges was quite high (34% of interviewees described salinization as a risk from water reuse), but strategies to address this challenge at the institutional level require greater development
The discomforting rise of ' public geographies': a 'public' conversation.
In this innovative and provocative intervention, the authors explore the burgeoning âpublic turnâ visible across the social sciences to espouse the need to radically challenge and reshape dominant and orthodox visions of âthe academyâ, academic life, and the role and purpose of the academic
Evaluating Lifeworld as an emancipatory methodology
Disability research is conducted within a highly politicised âhotbedâ of competing paradigms and principles. New researchers, who want to work within the social model, are soon faced with complex and challenging methodological and philosophical dilemmas. The social model advocates research agendas that are focused on the emancipation and empowerment of disabled people but, in reality, these are rarely achieved. To be successful researchers need to engage with innovative and creative methodologies and to share their experiences of these within environments that welcome challenge and debate. This paper focuses on Lifeworld and assesses its value as a tool for emancipatory research. Using examples from a study with parents, whose children were in the process of being labelled as having autism, the paper illustrates how the principles that âunderpinâ the methodology offered a supportive framework for a novice researcher
Alloy surface segregation in reactive environments: A first-principles atomistic thermodynamics study of Ag3Pd(111) in oxygen atmospheres
We present a first-principles atomistic thermodynamics framework to describe
the structure, composition and segregation profile of an alloy surface in
contact with a (reactive) environment. The method is illustrated with the
application to a Ag3Pd(111) surface in an oxygen atmosphere, and we analyze
trends in segregation, adsorption and surface free energies. We observe a wide
range of oxygen adsorption energies on the various alloy surface
configurations, including binding that is stronger than on a Pd(111) surface
and weaker than that on a Ag(111) surface. This and the consideration of even
small amounts of non-stoichiometries in the ordered bulk alloy are found to be
crucial to accurately model the Pd surface segregation occurring in
increasingly O-rich gas phases.Comment: 13 pages including 6 figures; related publications can be found at
http://www.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/th/th.htm
Relaxation in the glass-former acetyl salicylic acid studied by deuteron magnetic resonance and dielectric spectroscopy
Supercooled liquid and glassy acetyl salicylic acid was studied using
dielectric spectroscopy and deuteron relaxometry in a wide temperature range.
The supercooled liquid is characterized by major deviations from thermally
activated behavior. In the glass the secondary relaxation exhibits the typical
features of a Johari-Goldstein process. Via measurements of spin-lattice
relaxation times the selectively deuterated methyl group was used as a
sensitive probe of its local environments. There is a large difference in the
mean activation energy in the glass with respect to that in crystalline acetyl
salicylic acid. This can be understood by taking into account the broad energy
barrier distribution in the glass.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Steam reforming on transition-metal carbides from density-functional theory
A screening study of the steam reforming reaction (CH_4 + H_2O -> CO + 3H_2)
on early transition-metal carbides (TMC's) is performed by means of
density-functional theory calculations. The set of considered surfaces includes
the alpha-Mo_2C(100) surfaces, the low-index (111) and (100) surfaces of TiC,
VC, and delta-MoC, and the oxygenated alpha-Mo_2C(100) and TMC(111) surfaces.
It is found that carbides provide a wide spectrum of reactivities towards the
steam reforming reaction, from too reactive via suitable to too inert. The
reactivity is discussed in terms of the electronic structure of the clean
surfaces. Two surfaces, the delta-MoC(100) and the oxygen passivated
alpha-Mo_2C(100) surfaces, are identified as promising steam reforming
catalysts. These findings suggest that carbides provide a playground for
reactivity tuning, comparable to the one for pure metals.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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