667 research outputs found

    Kinetic model for an up-flow anaerobic packed bed bioreactor: Dairy wastewater treatment

    Get PDF
    Kinetic studies of anaerobic digestion process of cheese whey were conducted in a pilot-scale up-flow anaerobic packed bed bioreactor (UAPB). An influent COD concentration of 59419 mg/l was utilized at steady state condition. Logistic and Monod kinetic models were employed to describe microbial activities of cheese whey in an anaerobic digester. The hydraulic retention times (HRT) in the range of 6 to 24 h were investigated throughout the experiments. Lactose conversions were 58.5 and 99.4% for HRT of 6 and 16 h, respectively. The methane production rates were 6.57 and 3.25 l/h for HRT of 6 and 24 h, respectively. Monod biokinetic coefficients, Ks,  s, s, m m and methane yield (YM) were 8.59, 7.63 (h-1) and 0.11 (g methane/g lactose), respectivel

    Mechanical properties of wool and cotton yarns used in twenty-first century tapestry: preparing for the future by understanding the present

    Get PDF
    The conservation of historic tapestries is a complex and highly skilled task. Tapestries now being woven will need conservation in years to come. Can we, by understanding the properties of these contemporary works, assist the conservators of the future? The recreation of the Hunt of the Unicorn tapestries being undertaken by the West Dean Tapestry Studio offers a unique opportunity to access the materials being used and to create a body of data on their initial properties. This study uses tensile testing of the warp and weft materials to determine their maximum load at break, extension at maximum load, and specific stress (tenacity). Wool weft yarns from two different sources and of two thicknesses were examined. These wools were dyed ‘in house’ and the effect of the different dyes used was also assessed. These parameters all showed some significant (P < 0.05) differences. Cotton warp yarns of differing thickness and a gold thread were also tested. The comparison of how cotton and wool break demonstrates that when a tapestry is put under sufficient stress the cotton will snap but the wool may only stretch. However, this could often be beyond its recovery range resulting in a failure to return to shape

    The limits of process: On (re)reading Henri Bergson

    Get PDF
    This article offers a reading of the work of Henri Bergson as it pertains to organizations through the lens of ideas drawn from critical realism. It suggests an alternative to interpretations based on a stark division between process and realist perspectives. Much of the existing literature presents a rather partial view of Bergson’s work. A review suggests some interesting parallels with themes in critical realism, notably the emergence of mind. Critical realism has a focus on process at its heart, but is also concerned with how the products of such processes become stabilized and form the conditions for action. This suggests that attention might usefully be paid to the relationship between organizational action and the sedimented practices grouped under the heading of ‘routines’. More attention to Bergson’s account of the relationship between instinct, intuition and intelligence provides a link to the social character of thought, something which can be mapped on to Archer’s work on reflexivity and the ‘internal conversation’. This suggests that our analyses need to pay attention to both memory and history, to building and dwelling, rather than the one-sided focus found in some process theory accounts

    International Conference on Irrigation Management Transfer, Wuhan, China, 20-24 September 1994. Vol.3. Draft conference papers.

    Get PDF
    Irrigation managementIrrigation systemsFarmer participationPrivatizationSocial aspectsFarmers' associationsWater users' associationsTrainingPolicyFarmer participationEconomic aspectsFarmer managed irrigation systemsIrrigation programsRehabilitationWater resource management

    Key Global Health Positions and Officials in the U.S. Government

    Get PDF
    This fact sheet identifies key U.S. government global health positions and officials

    Readers and Reading in the First World War

    Get PDF
    This essay consists of three individually authored and interlinked sections. In ‘A Digital Humanities Approach’, Francesca Benatti looks at datasets and databases (including the UK Reading Experience Database) and shows how a systematic, macro-analytical use of digital humanities tools and resources might yield answers to some key questions about reading in the First World War. In ‘Reading behind the Wire in the First World War’ Edmund G. C. King scrutinizes the reading practices and preferences of Allied prisoners of war in Mainz, showing that reading circumscribed by the contingencies of a prison camp created an unique literary community, whose legacy can be traced through their literary output after the war. In ‘Book-hunger in Salonika’, Shafquat Towheed examines the record of a single reader in a specific and fairly static frontline, and argues that in the case of the Salonika campaign, reading communities emerged in close proximity to existing centres of print culture. The focus of this essay moves from the general to the particular, from the scoping of large datasets, to the analyses of identified readers within a specific geographical and temporal space. The authors engage with the wider issues and problems of recovering, interpreting, visualizing, narrating, and representing readers in the First World War

    Trimness of Closed Intervals in Cambrian Semilattices

    Get PDF
    In this article, we give a short algebraic proof that all closed intervals in a γ\gamma-Cambrian semilattice Cγ\mathcal{C}_{\gamma} are trim for any Coxeter group WW and any Coxeter element γW\gamma\in W. This means that if such an interval has length kk, then there exists a maximal chain of length kk consisting of left-modular elements, and there are precisely kk join- and kk meet-irreducible elements in this interval. Consequently every graded interval in Cγ\mathcal{C}_{\gamma} is distributive. This problem was open for any Coxeter group that is not a Weyl group.Comment: Final version. The contents of this paper were formerly part of my now withdrawn submission arXiv:1312.4449. 12 pages, 3 figure

    Closing Remarks: Law and Inequality after the Crisis

    Get PDF
    I am honored to have been asked to give the closing remarks to what hasbeen an inspiring and insightful conference, and humbled to do so before so many respected friends and colleagues. I think my most important duty before doing so is to thank the truly amaz­ing students who conceived of and executed this conference from start to finish: Brian Highsmith, Lina Khan, Urja Mittal, and Jake Struebing, and also all of the student moderators too. I also want to thank all the marvelous panelists who traveled from far and near to be here with us. It has meant so much for us to have you share your thinking and research on these urgent questions. And a particular thank you to those who gave the keynote and lunchtime addresses-Vanita Gupta, Zephyr Teachout, Justice Goodwin Liu, and Daniel Markovits
    corecore