128 research outputs found

    A review on biodiesel production from microalgae: Influencing parameters and recent advanced technologies

    Get PDF
    Microalgae are the important part of carbon cycle in the nature, and they could utilize the carbon resource in water and soil efficiently. The abilities of microalgae to mitigate CO2 emission and produce oil with a high productivity have been proven. Hence, this third-generation biodiesel should be popularized. This review firstly introduce the basic characteristics and application fields of microalgae. Then, the influencing parameters and recent advanced technologies for the microalgae biodiesel production have been discussed. In influencing parameters for biodiesel production section, the factors of microalgae cultivation, lipid accumulation, microalgae harvesting, and lipid extraction have been summarized. In recent advanced technologies for biodiesel production section, the microalgae cultivation systems, lipid induction technologies, microalgae harvesting technologies, and lipid extraction technologies have been reviewed. This review aims to provide useful information to help future development of efficient and commercially viable technology for microalgae-based biodiesel production

    CHARACTERISTICS AND KINETICS OF BIOMASS PYLOLYSIS IN A MICRO FLUIDIZED BED REACTOR

    Get PDF
    A Micro Fluidized Bed Reactor (MFBR) was developed to enable on-line pulse feeding and isothermal differential reaction of particle reactant. Application of the MFBR to biomass pyrolysis demonstrated that the resulting globe kinetics parameters were 11.77 kJ/mol and 1.45 s-1 on the gas release characteristics, respectively

    Tidal mixing in the South China Sea : an estimate based on the internal tide energetics

    Get PDF
    Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2016. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Physical Oceanography 46 (2016): 107–124, doi:10.1175/JPO-D-15-0082.1.By taking into account the contributions of both locally and remotely generated internal tides, the tidal mixing in the Luzon Strait (LS) and the South China Sea (SCS) is investigated through internal-tide simulation and energetics analysis. A three-dimensional nonhydrostatic high-resolution model driven by four primary tidal constituents (M2, S2, K1, and O1) is used for the internal-tide simulation. The baroclinic energy budget analysis reveals that the internal tides radiated from the LS are the dominant energy source for the tidal dissipation in the SCS. In the LS, the estimated depth-integrated turbulent kinetic energy dissipation exceeds O(1) W m−2 atop the two subsurface ridges, with a dissipation rate of >O(10−7) W kg−1 and diapycnal diffusivity of ~O(10−2) m2 s−1. In the SCS, the most intense turbulence occurs in the deep-water basin with a dissipation rate of O(10−8–10−6) W kg−1 and diapycnal diffusivity of O(10−3–10−1) m2 s−1 within the ~2000-m water column above the seafloor as well as in the shelfbreak region with a dissipation rate of O(10−7–10−6) W kg−1 and diapycnal diffusivity of O(10−4–10−3) m2 s−1. These estimated values are consistent with observations reported in previous studies and are at least one order of magnitude larger than those based solely on locally generated internal tides.This work is jointly supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDA11010304, XDA11010204), the MOST of China (2014CB953904), the Knowledge Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (SQ201305), and National Natural Science Foundation of China (41376021, 41306013). ZL’s participation of this work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41476006), the Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province of China (2015J06010), and the National Basic Research Program of China (2012CB417402).2016-07-0

    Analytical Multi-Scale Methodology for Fluidization Systems - Retrospect and Prospect

    Get PDF
    Understanding the spatio-temporal multi-scale structure of fluidization is a challenging problem. This presentation reviews our 20-year efforts on this subject, showing the roadmap that has gradually evolved from a simple idea to a systematic methodology inclusive of subsidiary, related systems and industrial applications. The strategy of establishing stability conditions through analyses of the compromise between dominant mechanisms is emphasized. The presentation concludes with prospects for further theoretical explorations and industrial applications

    Case Studies of Environmental Visualization

    Get PDF
    The performance gap between simulation and reality has been identified as a major challenge to achieving sustainability in the Built Environment. While Post-Occupancy Evaluation (POE) surveys are an integral part of better understanding building performance, and thus addressing this issue, the importance of POE remains relatively unacknowledged within the wider Built Environment community. A possible reason that has been highlighted is that POE survey data is not easily understood and utilizable by non-expert stakeholders, including designers. A potential method by which to address this is the visualization method, which has well established benefits for communication of big datasets. This paper presents two case studies where EnViz (short for “Environmental Visualization”), a prototype software application developed for research purposes, was utilized and its effectiveness tested via a range of analysis tasks. The results are discussed and compared with those of previous work that utilized variations of the methods presented here. The paper concludes by presenting the lessons drawn from the five-year period of EnViz, emphasizing the potential of environmental visualization for decision support in environmental design and engineering for the built environment, and suggests directions for future development
    corecore