135 research outputs found

    Caractérisation de deux effluents industriels au Togo :étude d’impact sur l’environnement

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    Characterization of two industrial effluents in Togo : environment impact studyEnvironment pollution due to two industrial effluents has been investigated. Results how that effluent derive from the factory of the treatment of Kpémé posphate ore was  loaded with settling suspended matter (> 90 % of total suspended solids). Suspended solids contained metallic elements, about 17.5 μg g-1 as cadmium (Cd) were measured. Water around the input point of the effluent (effluent is discharged in the sea) had a turbidity as high as 200 NTU. The study did not show a particular metallic contamination (Cd and Hg) of some fish species. Datcha textile industry effluent was characterized by high alkalinity (pH > 10) and by high concentrations of suspended solids (500-650 mg L-1), oxydable matter (COD = 340-380 mgO2 L-1) and organic nitrogen (30-40 mgN L-1)

    La mise à l'équilibre des eaux tropicales : conséquences sur la déferrisation

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    L'étude de l'équilibre calco-carbonique d'une eau souterraine de l'Afrique de l'Ouest par la méthode de LEGRAND et POIRIER, a conduit à la détermination des conditions de traitement pour neutraliser l'agressivité naturelle de l'eau, due essentiellement à une forte teneur en acide carbonique et réduire ainsi son caractère corrosif. le problème de l'évolution du fer présent en relation avec la mise à l'équilibre a été également étudiée.L'application réalisée sur un pilote de laboratoire a permis d'optimiser les principales étapes du traitement, c'est-à-dire l'addition d'une base forte, la précipitation et la filtration des hydroxydes ferriques qui se forment à la suite de la neutralisation de l'acide carbonique.Studies on calcium carbonate equilibrium of West African ground water, a sample of potable water distributed in Lomé (Togo), were carried out using the method described by LEGRAND and POIRIER. It is a standard graphic method in which calculations include all basic (Ca++, HCO3-, CO3--, CO2, H2O+, OH-), and characteristic (Mg++, Na+, K+, SO4--, Cl- ...) chemical parameters of natural water. Processing of a computer program for calculations enabled the equilibrium and saturation curve [CO2] = f[Ca++], to be obtained. The aggressivity to the lime deposit character, different conditions of treatment, aeration, and addition of an appropriate base to neutralise the nature aggressivity of water due to its high dissolved carbon dioxide content could also be defined.The problem of the presence of iron was studied; high concentration of iron in natural ground water lead to various problems : developing of tastes, staining and discoloration of clothes, and growth of iron bacteria in the distribution system. Its removal from water is accomplished by means of the oxidation of iron (II) to iron (III) followed by the precipitation of relatively insoluble ferric hydroxide. The oxidation rate is highly dependent on pH. Thus, the process of removal of carbon dioxide by stripping or neutralisation raises the pH of the water. If the pH is raised high enough, an insoluble form of iron will precipitate. Another important aspect of the chemical behaviour of iron is the formation of complex ions with inorganic as well as organic ligands; silica in water forms a relatively stable complex with iron (III). The difficulty in removing iron from water is often associated with this phenomenon.Continuous flow studies were carried out to improve important steps of treatment such as addition of a strong base, and precipitation and filtration of ferric hydroxide produced during carbonic acid neutralization. They show the weak stability of silicato-iron (III) complex at high pH value and prove that practically complete iron removal may be obtained

    Coagulation of some humic acid solutions by moringa oleifera lam seeds: effect on chlorine requirement

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    No Abstract. Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Ethiopia Vol. 15 (2) 2001: pp. 119-12

    Relationship Between LIBS Ablation and Pit Volume for Geologic Samples: Applications for the In Situ Absolute Geochronology

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    These first results demonstrate that LIBS spectra can be an interesting tool to estimate the ablated volume. When the ablated volume is bigger than 9.10(exp 6) cubic micrometers, this method has less than 10% of uncertainties. Far enough to be directly implemented in the KArLE experiment protocol. Nevertheless, depending on the samples and their mean grain size, the difficulty to have homogeneous spectra will increase with the ablated volume. Several K-Ar dating studies based on this approach will be implemented. After that, the results will be shown and discussed

    Linking migration and hospital data in England: linkage process and evaluation of bias.

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    INTRODUCTION: Difficulties ascertaining migrant status in national data sources such as hospital records have limited large-scale evaluation of migrant healthcare needs in many countries, including England. Linkage of immigration data for migrants and refugees, with National Health Service (NHS) hospital care data enables research into the relationship between migration and health for a large cohort of international migrants. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to describe the linkage process and compare linkage rates between migrant sub-groups to evaluate for potential bias for data on non-EU migrants and resettled refugees linked to Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) in England. METHODS: We used stepwise deterministic linkage to match records from migrants and refugees to a unique healthcare identifier indicating interaction with the NHS (linkage stage 1 to NHS Personal Demographic Services, PDS), and then to hospital records (linkage stage 2 to HES). We calculated linkage rates and compared linked and unlinked migrant characteristics for each linkage stage. RESULTS: Of the 1,799,307 unique migrant records, 1,134,007 (63%) linked to PDS and 451,689 (25%) linked to at least one hospital record between 01/01/2005 and 23/03/2020. Individuals on work, student, or working holiday visas were less likely to link to a hospital record than those on settlement and dependent visas and refugees. Migrants from the Middle East and North Africa and South Asia were four times more likely to link to at least one hospital record, compared to those from East Asia and the Pacific. Differences in age, sex, visa type, and region of origin between linked and unlinked samples were small to moderate. CONCLUSION: This linked dataset represents a unique opportunity to explore healthcare use in migrants. However, lower linkage rates disproportionately affected individuals on shorter-term visas so future studies of these groups may be more biased as a result. Increasing the quality and completeness of identifiers recorded in administrative data could improve data linkage quality

    Optical probing of spin fluctuations of a single magnetic atom

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    We analyzed the photoluminescence intermittency generated by a single paramagnetic spin localized in an individual semiconductor quantum dot. The statistics of the photons emitted by the quantum dot reflect the quantum fluctuations of the localized spin interacting with the injected carriers. Photon correlation measurements which are reported here reveal unique signatures of these fluctuations. A phenomenological model is proposed to quantitatively describe these observations, allowing a measurement of the spin dynamics of an individual magnetic atom at zero magnetic field. These results demonstrate the existence of an efficient spin relaxation channel arising from a spin-exchange with individual carriers surrounding the quantum dot. A theoretical description of a spin-flip mechanism involving spin exchange with surrounding carriers gives relaxation times in good agreement with the measured dynamics

    Healthcare resource utilisation and mortality outcomes in international migrants to the UK: analysis protocol for a linked population-based cohort study using Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD), Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) and the Office for National Statistics (ONS) [version 2; peer review: 1 approved with reservations, 1 not approved]

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    An estimated 14.2% (9.34 million people) of people living in the UK in 2019 were international migrants. Despite this, there are no large-scale national studies of their healthcare resource utilisation and little is known about how migrants access and use healthcare services. One ongoing study of migration health in the UK, the Million Migrants study, links electronic health records (EHRs) from hospital-based data, national death records and Public Health England migrant and refugee data. However, the Million Migrants study cannot provide a complete picture of migration health resource utilisation as it lacks data on migrants from Europe and utilisation of primary care for all international migrants. Our study seeks to address this limitation by using primary care EHR data linked to hospital-based EHRs and national death records.  Our study is split into a feasibility study and a main study. The feasibility study will assess the validity of a migration phenotype, a transparent reproducible algorithm using clinical terminology codes to determine migration status in Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD), the largest UK primary care EHR. If the migration phenotype is found to be valid, the main study will involve using the phenotype in the linked dataset to describe primary care and hospital-based healthcare resource utilisation and mortality in migrants compared to non-migrants. All outcomes will be explored according to sub-conditions identified as research priorities through patient and public involvement, including preventable causes of inpatient admission, sexual and reproductive health conditions/interventions and mental health conditions. The results will generate evidence to inform policies that aim to improve migration health and universal health coverage

    Controlling Curie temperature in (Ga,Ms)As through location of the Fermi level within the impurity band

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    The ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As has emerged as the most studied material for prototype applications in semiconductor spintronics. Because ferromagnetism in (Ga,Mn)As is hole-mediated, the nature of the hole states has direct and crucial bearing on its Curie temperature TC. It is vigorously debated, however, whether holes in (Ga,Mn)As reside in the valence band or in an impurity band. In this paper we combine results of channeling experiments, which measure the concentrations both of Mn ions and of holes relevant to the ferromagnetic order, with magnetization, transport, and magneto-optical data to address this issue. Taken together, these measurements provide strong evidence that it is the location of the Fermi level within the impurity band that determines TC through determining the degree of hole localization. This finding differs drastically from the often accepted view that TC is controlled by valence band holes, thus opening new avenues for achieving higher values of TC.Comment: 5 figures, supplementary material include
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