1,114 research outputs found
Practical application of ferrate(VI) for water and wastewater treatment: site studyâs approach
This paper presents the work aiming to validate the practical feasibility of ferrate(VI) used as an alternative to the existing coagulant (e.g., ferric chloride/sulphate) for both drinking water and domestic sewage treatment via series of pilot plant trials. For drinking water treatment, a ferrate(VI) dose of 0.1âŻmg/L can achieve 93% and 97% particle removal (in terms of particle counting) after the filtration for raw water and for the ozonized water, respectively, which is satisfied to the treated water quality requirement for the particlesâ removal. Moreover, ferrate(VI) can remove 10% metformin, benzotriazole and acesulfam from raw water but FeCl3 with ozonation canât. When treating domestic sewage at pilot scale trials, ferrate(VI) demonstrated encouraging performance as well, at a very lower dose range, 0.1â0.2âŻmg Fe/L, ferrate(VI) achieved better performance in comparison with high dosed ferric sulphate. This will reduce chemical demand and sludge production and therefore results in a low operating cost and generates substantial cost saving in treating sewage. Keywords: BOD removal, Coagulation, COD removal, Drinking water treatment, Ferrate(VI), Micro pollutant reduction, Particle removal, Phosphorous removal, Sewage treatmen
Examining electron-boson coupling using time-resolved spectroscopy
Nonequilibrium pump-probe time domain spectroscopies can become an important
tool to disentangle degrees of freedom whose coupling leads to broad structures
in the frequency domain. Here, using the time-resolved solution of a model
photoexcited electron-phonon system we show that the relaxational dynamics are
directly governed by the equilibrium self-energy so that the phonon frequency
sets a window for "slow" versus "fast" recovery. The overall temporal structure
of this relaxation spectroscopy allows for a reliable and quantitative
extraction of the electron-phonon coupling strength without requiring an
effective temperature model or making strong assumptions about the underlying
bare electronic band dispersion.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures + Supplementary Material and movies, to appear in
PR
A Review Of Australia's Compulsory Superannuation Scheme After A Decade
The Australian superannuation system places trustees in the key role of managing superannuation assets and we subject the role of trustee to close scrutiny while identifying the very substantial principal-and-agent problems that exist in the industry. We consider two policy issues: member choice of fund and portability of accumulated balances in the light of how they would improve the ability of individual members to maximise retirement benefits and the efficiency of the system. We argue that the award superannuation scheme which requires, by conditions in industrial awards, contributions of three per cent of wage or salary of an employee continues along side the SG scheme is due for review.
Advanced Focused Beam-Induced Processing for Nanoscale Synthesis and 2D Materials Device Architectures
Nanofabrication has come to prominence over recent years due to miniaturization of electronic devices as well as interesting physical phenomena that arise in material systems at the nanoscale. Particle beam induced processing enables additive as well as subtractive nanoprocessing techniques. Focused beam induced processing facilitates direct-write processing, thus making it a common technique for fabrication and synthesis on the nanoscale and is typically carried out with charged particles such as electrons or ion species, each of which offer distinct capabilities. This dissertation addresses several challenges which currently plague the focused beam-induced processing community and explores novel applications.Chapter I explores laser based purification strategies for electron beam induced deposition. This addresses the challenge of material purity, which currently limits broader application of the nanofabrication technique. Chapter II covers advanced helium ion beam induced processing using a Gas Field Ionization source. This chapter explores novel applications for the helium ion beam as well as the mitigation of helium-induced subsurface damage, which currently prevents ubiquitous adoption of the helium ion microscope as a nanofabrication tool. Chapter III studies defect introduction in 2D materials under helium ion irradiation, which proves to be an ideal nanoprocessing application for the helium ion beam
Sustainable Retirement: A Look At Consumer Desires
This paper examines the findings of the research project, 'Retirement Savings: Drivers and Desires', commissioned by the Investment and Financial Services Association Ltd (IFSA) in 2001. The paper investigates retirement savings decision-making and retirement income product stream choice. This paper presents a quantitative analysis of questionnaire data relating to decision-making and product stream choice and discusses these issues in the context of established research findings about retirement income. The paper consists of five sections. The first is a brief review of the 'Drivers and Desires' research project conducted in 2001. An important theme to emerge from the initial project was that participants reported a high level of risk aversion and a strong desire to obtain the publicly funded age pension. Based on the findings of the initial project, the remaining sections of this paper focuses on consumer preferences, particularly relating to risk aversion and demand for the age pension. The second section focuses on a specific issue emanating from the initial project, specifically the market for annuities. The third section considers retirement income streams in terms of risks to investors. The fourth section carries out a quantitative analysis of consumer preferences toward the identified risks in previous sections, and specifically considers various trade-offs in the decision-making process. The fifth section outlines various policy alternatives and issues for future consideration.
TESTING THE INCOMPLETE ARBITRATE HYPOTHESIS: EVIDENCE FROM AUSTRALIAN WHOLESALE SUPERANNUATION FUNDS
This paper tests the efficiency of capital markets when information is costly to obtain by analysing the performance of Australian wholesale superannuation funds specialising in the management of domestic equity portfolios from 1991 through 1999. Using a fund regression approach, the paper finds evidence that is consistent with an incomplete arbitrage function, with investment managers generating returns sufficiently high to compensate them for the increased costs of active asset selection. Risk-adjusted returns in the Australian superannuation fund industry, net of management fees and expenses, are comparable to the returns from a passive asset selection policy.Superannuation funds, Australia
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