1,375 research outputs found

    Designing zeolite catalysts for shape-selective reactions: Chemical modification of surfaces for improved selectivity to dimethylamine in synthesis from methanol and ammonia

    Get PDF
    The relative contributions of external and intracrystalline acidic sites of small pore H-RHO zeolite for the selective synthesis of methylamines from methanol and ammonia have been studied. Nonselective surface reactions which produce predominantly trimethylamine can be eliminated by “capping” the external acidic sites with trimethylphosphite (TMP) and other reagents, thus improving the selectivity toward the formation of dimethylamine. For small pore zeolites, neither the zeolite pore size nor the internal acidic sites is significantly affected by this treatment. In situ infrared and MAS-NMR studies show that TMP reacts irreversibly with the zeolite acidic sites via a modified Arbusov rearrangement to form surface-bound dimethylmethylphosphonate

    Reducing Work Content in Early Stage Naval Ship Designs

    Get PDF
    Naval Postgraduate School Acquisition Research Progra

    Generalized indirect inference for discrete choice models.

    Get PDF
    Abstract This paper develops and implements a practical simulation-based method for estimating dynamic discrete choice models. The method, which can accommodate lagged dependent variables, serially correlated errors, unobserved variables, and many alternatives, builds on the ideas of indirect inference. In particular, the method uses a descriptive statistical (or auxiliary) model-typically a linear probability model-to summarize the statistical properties of the observed and simulated data. The method then chooses the structural parameters so that the coefficients of the auxiliary model in the simulated data match as closely as possible those in the observed data. The main difficulty in implementing indirect inference in discrete choice models is that the objective surface is a step function, rendering useless gradient-based optimization methods. To overcome this obstacle, this paper shows how to smooth the objective surface. The key idea is to use a function of the latent utilities as the dependent variable in the auxiliary model. As the smoothing parameter goes to zero, this function delivers the discrete choice implied by the latent utilities, thereby guaranteeing consistency. A set of Monte Carlo experiments shows that the method is fast, robust, and nearly as efficient as maximum likelihood when the auxiliary model is sufficiently rich

    Generalized indirect inference for discrete choice models.

    Get PDF
    Abstract This paper develops and implements a practical simulation-based method for estimating dynamic discrete choice models. The method, which can accommodate lagged dependent variables, serially correlated errors, unobserved variables, and many alternatives, builds on the ideas of indirect inference. In particular, the method uses a descriptive statistical (or auxiliary) model-typically a linear probability model-to summarize the statistical properties of the observed and simulated data. The method then chooses the structural parameters so that the coefficients of the auxiliary model in the simulated data match as closely as possible those in the observed data. The main difficulty in implementing indirect inference in discrete choice models is that the objective surface is a step function, rendering useless gradient-based optimization methods. To overcome this obstacle, this paper shows how to smooth the objective surface. The key idea is to use a function of the latent utilities as the dependent variable in the auxiliary model. As the smoothing parameter goes to zero, this function delivers the discrete choice implied by the latent utilities, thereby guaranteeing consistency. A set of Monte Carlo experiments shows that the method is fast, robust, and nearly as efficient as maximum likelihood when the auxiliary model is sufficiently rich

    The Will to Prevail: Inside the Legal Battle to Save Sweet Briar

    Get PDF
    Part I provides an in-depth factual overview, beginning with the Sweet Briar College\u27s founding in the early 1900s. The commentary then turns to the controversial decision to close and discusses the facts and legal theories of the case, the decisions by the circuit court and the Supreme Court of Virginia, and the eventual settlement that kept the school alive. In Part II, the discussion shifts to the landmark nature of this case, not only for Sweet Briar College, but also for other Virginia colleges and non-profits around the country. The essay analyzes the legal questions arising from the case, including whether a Virginia corporation could also be a trustee, and, what were the Board\u27s legal obligations in this case

    On the abundance of non-cometary HCN on Jupiter

    Full text link
    Using one-dimensional thermochemical/photochemical kinetics and transport models, we examine the chemistry of nitrogen-bearing species in the Jovian troposphere in an attempt to explain the low observational upper limit for HCN. We track the dominant mechanisms for interconversion of N2-NH3 and HCN-NH3 in the deep, hightemperature troposphere and predict the rate-limiting step for the quenching of HCN at cooler tropospheric altitudes. Consistent with other investigations that were based solely on time-scale arguments, our models suggest that transport-induced quenching of thermochemically derived HCN leads to very small predicted mole fractions of hydrogen cyanide in Jupiter's upper troposphere. By the same token, photochemical production of HCN is ineffective in Jupiter's troposphere: CH4-NH3 coupling is inhibited by the physical separation of the CH4 photolysis region in the upper stratosphere from the NH3 photolysis and condensation region in the troposphere, and C2H2-NH3 coupling is inhibited by the low tropospheric abundance of C2H2. The upper limits from infrared and submillimeter observations can be used to place constraints on the production of HCN and other species from lightning and thundershock sources.Comment: 56 pages, 0 tables, 6 figures. Submitted to Faraday Discussions [in press
    • …
    corecore