16 research outputs found

    A922 Sequential measurement of 1 hour creatinine clearance (1-CRCL) in critically ill patients at risk of acute kidney injury (AKI)

    Get PDF
    Meeting abstrac

    SURFACE COORDINATE GEOMETRY OF IRON CATALYSTS - HYDROGENATION OF CO2 OVER FE/ZRO2 PREPARED BY A NOVEL METHOD

    No full text
    Zirconia-supported iron oxide catalyst has been designed following the approach to the Fe/TiO2 catalyst. The catalyst prepared by reducing the precursor obtained from incipient wetness impregnation in H-2 at the proper temperature exhibits good activity (CO2 conversion > 20%) and selectivity (68%) in the selective synthesis of hydrocarbons (C-2-C-5) from CO2 and H-2 The catalytic activity has been found to vary with iron weight loadings in a ''two maxima'' fashion and is also affected by reduction temperature. Mossbauer and EXAFS analyses suggest that the active phases are coordinatively unsaturated ferric cations and alpha-Fe. No ferrous cations are observed. A good geometric arrangement for the two phases on the catalyst is thought to give the highest catalytic activity

    SURFACE COORDINATE GEOMETRY OF IRON CATALYSTS - HYDROGENATION OF CO2 OVER FE/TIO2 PREPARED BY A NOVEL METHOD

    No full text
    Titania-supported iron oxide catalyst has been designed based on a geometric consideration. The catalyst prepared by reducing the precursor obtained from incipient wetness impregnation in H-2 at proper temperature exhibits good activity (CO2 conversion >24%) and selectivity (> 60%) in the selective synthesis of hydrocarbons (C-2-C-5) from CO2 and H-2. The catalytic activity has been found to vary with iron weight loadings in a ''twin maxima'' fashion and, also, to be affected by the reduction temperature. Mossbauer and EXAFS analyses suggest that the active phase is coordinatively unsaturated ferrous cations associated with alpha-Fe. Alternative arrangement of the two phases in a proper way is beneficial to relax the Fe-O bonds and results in the highest catalytic activity for the catalyst, but the formation of predominantly FeTiO3 phase finally makes the catalyst inactive

    The antioxidation-related functional structure of plant communities: Understanding antioxidation at the plant community level

    No full text
    In the case of ecological stresses, reactive oxygen species (ROS) can be overproduced in plant cells, leading to lipid peroxidation that causes damage or death to cells. To prevent damage, plant tissues contain several antioxidants that scavenge ROS. However, antioxidation at the plant community level still remains unknown and may provide an insight into ecosystem functioning regarding stress resistance. To understand the property, we established the antioxidation-related functional structure based on the concept of the functional structure and the activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD), catalase (CAT), reduced glutathione (GSH), carotenoid (Car) and proline (Pro) and the relative abundance of component species in natural plant communities on the Chinese hilly-gullied Loess Plateau. An information-theoretic (I-T) approach was used to infer the effects of antioxidation-related functional components and stresses that we investigated on lipid peroxidation at the plant community level quantified by the community-weighted mean of malondialdehyde (MDA). We found that the induction of lipid peroxidation was more closely associated with a soil available nitrogen deficiency than it was with an available phosphorus deficiency. However, the inducing effect of soil available nitrogen was finite. The prevention of lipid peroxidation was more closely associated with the community-weighted means of GSH and Pro (CWM GSH and CWM Pro) than it was with other antioxidation-related functional components. However, the efficiency of CWM Pro was quite low; CWM GSH exhibited inefficiency. In addition, antioxidation-related functional components were affected by neither soil available nitrogen nor available phosphorus. Furthermore, by estimating the relative weights of the antioxidants and considering the feasibility of community assemblages, we proposed that Stipa grandis, Leymus secalinus, Stipa bungeana, Phragmites australis, Potentilla tanacetifolia, Artemisia gmelinii, Artemisia scoparia, Heteropappus altaicus and Syringa oblata could be utilized in community assemblages to achieve an antioxidation-functional target. Additionally, appropriate phosphorus application for A. gmelinii and H. altaicus might contribute to maintaining their antioxidation. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
    corecore