800 research outputs found
The Ursinus Weekly, March 18, 1963
Future of the United Nations topic of speaker Bohmrich in April ⢠Pre-medicals see childbirth films ⢠Stayer & Campbell representatives to all-state band ⢠Chemistry profs to gather at UC for convention ⢠UC students invited to attend banquet of local businessmen ⢠Pettit appears at Controversy chat ⢠Sharon Robbins named editor-in-chief of Weekly; Hunter, Peek, Garner selected as staff editors ⢠Campus Chest drive extended for week ⢠Navy information team to visit campus soon ⢠Gordon lectures on archaeology in Forum program ⢠Junior Prom slated for April 5 ⢠Social Security agent to interview students ⢠Carlton Dingman plans to attend University of Sweden next year ⢠Young Republicans see film on parties ⢠Montgomery County science fair to be held at UC later this month ⢠Helfferich plans to attend Navy orientation cruise ⢠Editorial: This is it! ⢠Progress on freshman term papers in various stages in Rimby\u27s dorm ⢠Letters to the editor ⢠Student-faculty show Saturday termed success of high quality ⢠Freedom to learn topic of PSEA film ⢠Intramural wrestling tournament produces 5 champions from 5 teams ⢠Baseball prospects are encouraging ⢠Trackmen optimistic about Spring season ⢠IM basketball title game tomorrow pits Maples against Leber-South ⢠Netwomen finish season with loss to West Chesterhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1291/thumbnail.jp
Valorization of artichoke wastewaters by integrated membrane process
In this work an integrated membrane system was developed on laboratory scale to fractionate artichoke wastewaters. In particular, a preliminary ultrafiltration (UF) step, based on the use of hollow fibre membranes, was investigated to remove suspended solids from an artichoke extract. The clarified solution was then submitted to a nanofiltration (NF) step. Two different 2.5 Ă 21 in. spiral-wound membranes (Desal DL and NP030) with different properties were investigated. Both membranes showed a high rejection towards the phenolic compounds analysed (chlorogenic acid, cynarin and apigenin-7-O-glucoside) and, consequently, towards the total antioxidant activity (TAA). On the other hand, the Desal DL membrane was characterized by a high rejection towards sugar compounds (glucose, fructose and sucrose) (100%) when compared with the NP030 membrane (4.02%).
The performance of selected membranes in terms of permeate flux, fouling index and water permeability recovery was also evaluated.
On the base of experimental results, an integrated membrane process for the fractionation of artichoke wastewaters was proposed. This conceptual process design permitted to obtain different valuable products: a retentate fraction (from the NP030 membrane) enriched in phenolic compounds suitable for nutraceutical, cosmeceutical or food application; a retentate fraction (from the Desal DL membrane), enriched in sugar compounds, of interest for food applications; a clear permeate (from the Desal DL membrane) which can be reused as process water or for membrane cleaning.Conidi, C.; Cassano, A.; GarcĂa CastellĂł, EM. (2014). Valorization of artichoke wastewaters by integrated membrane process. Water Research. 48:363-374. doi:10.1016/j.watres.2013.09.047S3633744
Homocoupling of terminal alkynes catalysed by ultrafine copper nanoparticles on titania
Copper nanoparticles on titania effectively catalyse the oxidative homocoupling of terminal alkynes in the presence of piperidine as a base in tetrahydrofuran (THF) or under solvent-free conditions. A wide range of diynes have been synthesised in high yields using low catalyst loading (1 mol-% Cu). The copper catalyst (mainly as Cu2O) has been characterised by different means, is easy to prepare, can be reutilised several times, works either in air or under inert atmosphere and was shown to be superior to other commercially available copper sources.This work was generously supported by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e InnovaciĂłn [(MICINN) (grant number CTQ2007-65218) and Consolider Ingenio (grant number 2010-CSD2007-00006)], the Generalitat Valenciana (grant no. PROMETEO/2009/039), and the Fondos Europeos para el Desarrollo Regional (FEDER)
Zoonotic potential of simian arteriviruses
Wild nonhuman primates are immediate sources and long-term reservoirs of human pathogens. However, ethical and technical challenges have hampered the identification of novel blood-borne pathogens in these animals. We recently examined RNA viruses in plasma from wild African monkeys and discovered several novel, highly divergent viruses belonging to the family Arteriviridae. Close relatives of these viruses, including simian hemorrhagic fever virus, have caused sporadic outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fever in captive macaque monkeys since the 1960s. However, arterivirus infection in wild nonhuman primates had not been described prior to 2011. The arteriviruses recently identified in wild monkeys have high sequence and host species diversity, maintain high viremia, and are prevalent in affected populations. Taken together, these features suggest that the simian arteriviruses may be âpreemergentâ zoonotic pathogens. If not, this would imply that biological characteristics of RNA viruses thought to facilitate zoonotic transmission may not, by themselves, be sufficient for such transmission to occur
Recommended from our members
Research and theory for nursing and midwifery: Rethinking the nature of evidence
Background and Rationale: The rise in the principles of evidence-based medicine in the 1990s heralded a re-emerging orthodoxy in research methodologies. The view of the randomised controlled trial (RCT) as a âgold standardâ for evaluation of medical interventions has extended recently to evaluation of organisational forms and reforms and of change in complex systemsâwithin health care and in other human services. Relatively little attention has been given to the epistemological assumptions underlying such a hierarchy of research evidence.
Aims and Methods: Case studies from research in maternity care are used in this article to describe problems and limitations encountered in using RCTs to evaluate some recent policy-driven and consumer-oriented developments. These are discussed in relation to theory of knowledge and the epistemological assumptions, or paradigms, underpinning health services research. The aim in this discussion is not to advocate, or to reject, particular approaches to research but to advocate a more open and critical engagement with questions about the nature of evidence.
Findings and Discussion: Experimental approaches are of considerable value in investigating deterministic and probabilistic cause and effect relationships, and in testing often well-established but unevaluated technologies. However, little attention has been paid to contextual and cultural factors in the effects of interventions, in the culturally constructed nature of research questions themselves, or of the data on which much research is based. More complex, and less linear, approaches to methodology are needed to address these issues. A simple hierarchical approach does not represent the complexity of evidence well and should move toward a more cyclical view of knowledge development
- âŚ