1,677 research outputs found

    MESSUNG DER OBERFLÄCHENSPANNUNG MIT HILFE EINER MIKROPIPETTE

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    Oribatid assemblies of tropical high mountains on some points of the “Gondwana-Bridge” – a case study

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    This work is the first part of a series of studies, which introduces the methodological possibilities of coenological and zoogeographical indication and – following the climate, vegetation and elevation zones – the pattern-describing analysis of the main Oribatid sinusia of the world explored till our days.This current work is a case-study, which displays the comparison of 9 examination sites from 3 different geographical locations. On each location, three vegetation types have been examined: a plain rain-forest, a mossforest and a mountainous paramo. Analyses are based on the hitherto non-published genus-level database and coenological tables of the deceased János Balogh professor. Occurrence of 18 genera is going to be published as new data for the given zoogeographical region

    Effect of postharvest on the economic viability of walnut production

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    In this study we were studying the question whether walnut production under domestic natural and economic circumstances shall be considered a profitable activity or not. Our partial objective is to determine, what level of natural inputs and production costs are required for walnut production, what yield level, selling price and production value can be attained, what level of profitability, rentability and efficiency may production have, is the establishment of a walnut orchard profitable on the entire lifespan of the plantation, and the production of which is more efficient: the dry shelled walnut production requiring postharvest activity or the raw, shelled walnut without postharvest activities. In this study, comparison of two systems is conducted. First version: producer establishes a walnut plantation and sells walnut raw and shelled. Second version: producer also invests into a drying facility, and in this case the end product is the dry, shelled walnut. If the producer sells walnut right after harvest in a raw bulk, total production costs in productive years reaches 974,011 HUF/ha. Attainable yield is 2.63 t/ha with 396.3 HUF/kg selling price, therefore the profit is 138,258 HUF/ha with 14.19% cost-related profitability. In the case when the producer sells dried, shelled walnut, production costs are 25% higher compared to that of raw walnut due to the cost of drying. By calculating with the postharvest loss, average yield is 1.84 t/ha, however, its selling price is way higher (882.84 HUF/kg), therefore the profit per hectare reaches 475,496 HUF with 39.01% cost-related profitability. Thus it can be stated that walnut production in an average year may be profitable even without postharvest, but efficiency is improved significantly when the producer sells the products dried. Investment profitability analysis revealed that production of raw, shelled walnut is not economically viable, since the plantation does not pay off on its entire lifespan (30 years), while walnut production with postharvest is efficient and rentable, since both net present value (NPV) and internal rate of return (IRR) showed more favourable values than in the previous case, and the orchard pays off in the 21th year after establishment

    BESTIMMUNG VON MANGAN IN BLUT MITTELS NEUTRONAKTIVATIONSANALYSE

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    Mechanical and abrasion wear properties of hydrogenated nitrile butadiene rubber of identical hardness filled with carbon black and silica

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    The mechanical and abrasive wear properties of a hydrogenated nitrile butadiene rubber filled with 35 part per hundred rubber carbon black or silica with and without silane surface treatment (SI-si and SI, respectively), were investigated. Specimens were subjected to dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (also to study the Payne effect), mechanical (hardness, tensile modulus, ultimate tensile strength and strain, Mullins effect and tear strength), and fracture mechanical (J-integral) tests. The abrasive coefficient of friction and wear (specific wear rate, Ws) of the hydrogenated nitrile butadiene rubbers of identical hardness were measured against abrasive papers of different grit sizes (P600-P5000).The worn surface of the HNBR systems was inspected in scanning electron microscopy and the typical wear mechanisms deduced and discussed. Coefficient of friction did not change with the grit size by contrast to Ws which was markedly reduced with decreasing surface roughness of the abrasive paper. Ws of the compounds did not vary when wearing against P3000 and P5000 abrasive papers, representing mean surface roughness values of 7 and 5  μm, respectively. This was attributed to a change from abrasion to sliding type wear. hydrogenated nitrile butadiene rubber- carbon black outperformed the silica filled versions with respect to Ws though exhibited the highest coefficient of friction. No definite correlation could be found between the abrasive wear and the studied dynamic mechanical thermal analysis and (fracture) mechanical properties. </jats:p
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