231 research outputs found
Ökonomische Aspekte einer großflächigen Bewirtschaftung nach den Prinzipien des Ökologischen Landbaus dargestellt am Beispiel der Region Mostviertel-Eisenwurzen (Ö)
In der Diskussion um die Vorteilhaftigkeit des Ökologischen Landbaus wird häufig das Argument gebraucht, dass der Biolandbau gegenüber der konventionellen Landwirtschaft betriebswirtschaftliche Vorteile aufweist und darüber hinaus deutlich geringere externe Kosten verursacht, so dass auch aus volkswirtschaftlicher Sicht Vorteile bestehen. Im Zuge des zugrunde liegenden Forschungsprojektes wird daher geprüft, inwieweit sich eine Umstellung auf den Biolandbau sowohl auf ausgewählte betriebswirtschaftliche Parameter (Deckungsbeitrag, Beschäftigung), als auch auf ökologische Kenngrößen (Treibhausgasemissionen, Wasserqualität) und damit auf die externen Kosten auswirkt. In diesem Beitrag ist dargestellt, zu welchen Veränderungen eine Umstellung in der Region Mostviertel-Eisenwurzen (Ö) auf die Höhe des Deckungsbeitrags bei Milchviehbetrieben führt und inwieweit die externen Kosten infolge der Treibhausgasemissionen gesenkt werden können
Optimization of PECVD process for ultra thin tunnel SiOx film as passivation layer for silicon heterojunction solar cells
Ultra thin silicon oxide a SiOx H films have been grown by means of plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition PECVD to replace the standard hydrogenated amorphous silicon a Si H passivation layer for silicon heterojunction solar cells to reduce parasitic absorption. Additionally, silicon oxide surfaces are well known as superior substrates for the nucleation enhancement for nanocrystalline silicon doped films. Symmetrical passivation samples were fabricated with variable a SiOx H layers with a thickness of 10 1.5 nm and characterized after several annealing steps 25 650 C . The best value reached so far on lt;100 gt; oriented Si wafers is implied open circuit voltage of 686 mV and minority carrier lifetime of 1.6 ms after annealing at 300 C. Such values were found to be reproducible even for ultra thin a SiOx H layers 1.5 n
Nanocrystalline silicon oxide interlayer in monolithic perovskite silicon heterojunction tandem solar cells with total current density gt;39 mA cm2
Silicon heterojunction solar cells are implemented as bottom cells in monolithic perovskite silicon tandem solar cells. Commonly they are processed with a smooth front side to facilitate wet processing of the lead halide perovskite cell on top. The inherent drawback of this design, namely, enhanced reflection of the cell, can be significantly reduced by replacing the amorphous or nanocrystalline silicon front side n layer of the silicon cell by a nanocrystalline silicon oxide n layer. It is deposited with the same commonly used plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition and can be tuned to feature opto electrical properties for enhanced light coupling into the Si bottom cell, namely, low parasitic absorption and an intermediate refractive index of 2.6. We demonstrate that a 80 100 nm thick layer results in 0.9 mA cm 2 current gain in the bottom cell yielding tandem cells with a top cell bottom cell total current above 39 mA cm 2 . These first nc SiO x H coupled tandem cells reach an efficiency gt;23.
Denitrification, dehydration and ozone loss during the 2015/2016 Arctic winter
The 2015/2016 Arctic winter was one of the coldest stratospheric winters in recent years. A stable vortex formed by early December and the early winter was exceptionally cold. Cold pool temperatures dropped below the nitric acid trihydrate (NAT) existence temperature of about 195 K, thus allowing polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) to form. The low temperatures in the polar stratosphere persisted until early March, allowing chlorine activation and catalytic ozone destruction. Satellite observations indicate that sedimentation of PSC particles led to denitrification as well as dehydration of stratospheric layers. Model simulations of the 2015/2016 Arctic winter nudged toward European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) analysis data were performed with the atmospheric chemistry–climate model ECHAM5/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry (EMAC) for the Polar Stratosphere in a Changing Climate (POLSTRACC) campaign. POLSTRACC is a High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft (HALO) mission aimed at the investigation of the structure, composition and evolution of the Arctic upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS). The chemical and physical processes involved in Arctic stratospheric ozone depletion, transport and mixing processes in the UTLS at high latitudes, PSCs and cirrus clouds are investigated. In this study, an overview of the chemistry and dynamics of the 2015/2016 Arctic winter as simulated with EMAC is given. Further, chemical–dynamical processes such as denitrification, dehydration and ozone loss during the 2015/2016 Arctic winter are investigated. Comparisons to satellite observations by the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (Aura/MLS) as well as to airborne measurements with the Gimballed Limb Observer for Radiance Imaging of the Atmosphere (GLORIA) performed aboard HALO during the POLSTRACC campaign show that the EMAC simulations nudged toward ECMWF analysis generally agree well with observations. We derive a maximum polar stratospheric O3 loss of ∼ 2 ppmv or 117 DU in terms of column ozone in mid-March. The stratosphere was denitrified by about 4–8 ppbv HNO3 and dehydrated by about 0.6–1 ppmv H2O from the middle to the end of February. While ozone loss was quite strong, but not as strong as in 2010/2011, denitrification and dehydration were so far the strongest observed in the Arctic stratosphere in at least the past 10 years
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Radiocarbon dating organic residues at the microgram level
Relation between submilligram sample size and {sup 14}C activity for sample blanks (wood from Pliocene sediments) and a contemporary standard (oxalic acid) for catalytically reduced graphitic carbon was examined down to 20 micrograms. Mean age of the 1 mg wood sample blanks is now about 51.3 ka (0.168 pMC) while the mean for 20 microgram sample blanks is about 42.9 ka. So far, the lowest value for a 1-mg wood sample blank is about 60.5 ka (0.056 pMC). We have determined a mean {sup 14}C age of about 9.4 ka from a suite of 7 organic extracts from hair, bone, and matting from a mummified human skeleton from Spirit Cave, Nevada. These data indicate that the Spirit Cave human is the third, oldest directly-dated, human skeleton currently known from North America
Inter-model comparison of global hydroxyl radical (OH) distributions and their impact on atmospheric methane over the 2000–2016 period
The modeling study presented here aims to estimate
how uncertainties in global hydroxyl radical (OH) distributions, variability, and trends may contribute to resolving discrepancies between simulated and observed methane (CH4) changes since 2000. A multi-model ensemble of 14 OH fields was analyzed and aggregated into 64 scenarios
to force the offline atmospheric chemistry transport model
LMDz (Laboratoire de Meteorologie Dynamique) with a
standard CH4 emission scenario over the period 2000–2016.
The multi-model simulated global volume-weighted tropospheric mean OH concentration ([OH]) averaged over 2000–2010 ranges between 8:7*10^5 and 12:8*10^5 molec cm-3.
The inter-model differences in tropospheric OH burden and
vertical distributions are mainly determined by the differences in the nitrogen oxide (NO) distributions, while the spatial discrepancies between OH fields are mostly due to differences in natural emissions and volatile organic compound (VOC) chemistry. From 2000 to 2010, most simulated OH fields show an increase of 0.1–0:3*10^5 molec cm-3 in the tropospheric mean [OH], with year-to-year variations much smaller than during the historical period 1960–2000. Once
ingested into the LMDz model, these OH changes translated
into a 5 to 15 ppbv reduction in the CH4 mixing ratio
in 2010, which represents 7%–20% of the model-simulated
CH4 increase due to surface emissions. Between 2010 and
2016, the ensemble of simulations showed that OH changes
could lead to a CH4 mixing ratio uncertainty of > 30 ppbv.
Over the full 2000–2016 time period, using a common stateof-
the-art but nonoptimized emission scenario, the impact
of [OH] changes tested here can explain up to 54% of the
gap between model simulations and observations. This result
emphasizes the importance of better representing OH abundance and variations in CH4 forward simulations and emission optimizations performed by atmospheric inversions
Comparison of ECHAM5/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry (EMAC) simulations of the Arctic winter 2009/2010 and 2010/2011 with Envisat/MIPAS and Aura/MLS observations
We present model simulations with the atmospheric chemistry–climate model
ECHAM5/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry (EMAC) nudged toward European Centre for
Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) ERA-Interim reanalyses for the Arctic
winters 2009/2010 and 2010/2011. This study is the first to perform an
extensive assessment of the performance of the EMAC model for Arctic winters
as previous studies have only made limited evaluations of EMAC simulations
which also were mainly focused on the Antarctic winter stratosphere. We have
chosen the two extreme Arctic winters 2009/2010 and 2010/2011 to evaluate the
formation of polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) and the representation of the
chemistry and dynamics of the polar winter stratosphere in EMAC. The EMAC
simulations are compared to observations by the Michelson Interferometer for
Passive Atmospheric Soundings (Envisat/MIPAS) and the observations from the
Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (Aura/MLS). The Arctic winter 2010/2011 was one
of the coldest stratospheric winters on record, leading to the strongest
depletion of ozone measured in the Arctic. The Arctic winter 2009/2010 was,
from the climatological perspective, one of the warmest stratospheric winters
on record. However, it was distinguished by an exceptionally cold
stratosphere (colder than the climatological mean) from mid-December 2009 to
mid-January 2010, leading to prolonged PSC formation and existence.
Significant denitrification, the removal of HNO3 from the
stratosphere by sedimentation of HNO3-containing polar stratospheric
cloud particles, occurred in that winter. In our comparison, we focus on PSC
formation and denitrification. The comparisons between EMAC simulations and
satellite observations show that model and measurements compare well for
these two Arctic winters (differences for HNO3 generally within
±20 %) and thus that EMAC nudged toward ECMWF ERA-Interim
reanalyses is capable of giving a realistic representation of the evolution
of PSCs and associated sequestration of gas-phase HNO3 in the polar
winter stratosphere. However, simulated PSC volume densities are smaller than
the ones derived from Envisat/MIPAS observations by a factor of 3–7. Further,
PSCs in EMAC are not simulated as high up (in altitude) as they are observed.
This underestimation of PSC volume density and vertical extension of the PSCs
results in an underestimation of the vertical redistribution of HNO3
due to denitrification/re-nitrification. The differences found here between
model simulations and observations stipulate further improvements in the EMAC
set-up for simulating PSCs
Comparison of ECHAM5/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry (EMAC) simulations of the Arctic winter 2009/2010 and 2010/2011 with Envisat/MIPAS and Aura/MLS observations
We present model simulations with the atmospheric chemistry–climate model
ECHAM5/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry (EMAC) nudged toward European Centre for
Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) ERA-Interim reanalyses for the Arctic
winters 2009/2010 and 2010/2011. This study is the first to perform an
extensive assessment of the performance of the EMAC model for Arctic winters
as previous studies have only made limited evaluations of EMAC simulations
which also were mainly focused on the Antarctic winter stratosphere. We have
chosen the two extreme Arctic winters 2009/2010 and 2010/2011 to evaluate the
formation of polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) and the representation of the
chemistry and dynamics of the polar winter stratosphere in EMAC. The EMAC
simulations are compared to observations by the Michelson Interferometer for
Passive Atmospheric Soundings (Envisat/MIPAS) and the observations from the
Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (Aura/MLS). The Arctic winter 2010/2011 was one
of the coldest stratospheric winters on record, leading to the strongest
depletion of ozone measured in the Arctic. The Arctic winter 2009/2010 was,
from the climatological perspective, one of the warmest stratospheric winters
on record. However, it was distinguished by an exceptionally cold
stratosphere (colder than the climatological mean) from mid-December 2009 to
mid-January 2010, leading to prolonged PSC formation and existence.
Significant denitrification, the removal of HNO3 from the
stratosphere by sedimentation of HNO3-containing polar stratospheric
cloud particles, occurred in that winter. In our comparison, we focus on PSC
formation and denitrification. The comparisons between EMAC simulations and
satellite observations show that model and measurements compare well for
these two Arctic winters (differences for HNO3 generally within
±20 %) and thus that EMAC nudged toward ECMWF ERA-Interim
reanalyses is capable of giving a realistic representation of the evolution
of PSCs and associated sequestration of gas-phase HNO3 in the polar
winter stratosphere. However, simulated PSC volume densities are smaller than
the ones derived from Envisat/MIPAS observations by a factor of 3–7. Further,
PSCs in EMAC are not simulated as high up (in altitude) as they are observed.
This underestimation of PSC volume density and vertical extension of the PSCs
results in an underestimation of the vertical redistribution of HNO3
due to denitrification/re-nitrification. The differences found here between
model simulations and observations stipulate further improvements in the EMAC
set-up for simulating PSCs
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