Search results for "Equilibrium"

showing 10 items of 1021 documents

Electronic and Steric Effects: How Do They Work in Ionic Liquids? The Case of Benzoic Acid Dissociation

2010

The need to have a measure of the strength of some substituted benzoic acids in ionic liquid solution led us to use the protonation equilibrium of sodium p-nitrophenolate as a probe reaction, which was studied by means of spectrophotometric titration at 298 K. In order to evaluate the importance of electronic effect of the substituents present on the aromatic ring, both electron-withdrawing and -donor substituents were taken into account. Furthermore, to have a measure of the importance of the steric effect of the substituents both para- and ortho-substituted benzoic acids were analyzed. The probe reaction was studied in two ionic liquids differing for the ability of the cation to give hydr…

inorganic chemicalsSteric effectsionic liquids ion pair formation carboxylic acidsChemistryHydrogen bondorganic chemicalsOrganic ChemistryInorganic chemistryProtonationSettore CHIM/06 - Chimica OrganicaDissociation (chemistry)chemistry.chemical_compoundIonic liquidElectronic effectEquilibrium constantBenzoic acidThe Journal of Organic Chemistry
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Hydration dependence of myoglobin dynamics studied with elastic neutron scattering, differential scanning calorimetry and broadband dielectric spectr…

2014

In this work we present a thorough investigation of the hydration dependence of myoglobin dynamics. The study is performed on D2O-hydrated protein powders in the hydration range 0<h<0.5 (h≡gr[D2O]/gr[protein]) and in the temperature range 20-300K. The protein equilibrium fluctuations are investigated with Elastic Neutron Scattering using the spectrometer IN13 at ILL (Grenoble), while the relaxations of the protein + hydration water system are investigated with Broadband Dielectric Spectroscopy; finally, Differential Scanning Calorimetry is used to obtain a thermodynamic description of the system. The effect of increasing hydration is to speed up the relaxations of the myoglobin + hydration …

inorganic chemicalsWork (thermodynamics)BiophysicsNeutron scatteringMolecular Dynamics SimulationBiochemistryPhase Transitionchemistry.chemical_compoundDifferential scanning calorimetryAnimalsHorsesRange (particle radiation)Calorimetry Differential ScanningMyoglobinProtein dynamicsOrganic ChemistryDynamics (mechanics)WaterSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Neutron DiffractionMyoglobinchemistryChemical physicsDielectric SpectroscopyPhysical chemistryGlass transition•Protein dynamics •Equilibrium fluctuations •Protein/hydration water relaxations •Glass transition •Hydration water liquid-liquid transitionBiophysical chemistry
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Determination of the atmospheric precipitation pH value on the basis of the analysis of lichen cationoactive layer constitution

2006

Studies of equilibria and kinetics of the ion exchange process between the surrounding (water solution) and lichens prove that the number of mobile hydrogen ions bonded in lichens depends on the concentration of hydrogen ions in the precipitation with which the lichens are in contact and the type and concentration of other cations contained in the precipitation. The measurement of these values was suggested; as a result, it enabled to determine the pH of precipitation by determination of mobile cations bonded in exposed or naturally grown lichens. The studies were conducted on Hypogymnia physodes lichens.

integumentary systemIon exchangeHydrogenPrecipitation (chemistry)ChemistryGeneral Chemical EngineeringKineticschemistry.chemical_elementIonstomatognathic diseasesstomatognathic systemEnvironmental chemistryElectrochemistryAcid rainskin and connective tissue diseasesLichenEquilibrium constantElectrochimica Acta
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Self-enforcing international environmental agreements revisited

2004

In Barrett's (1994) paper on transboundary pollution abatement is shown that if the signatories of an international environmental agreement act in a Stackelberg fashion, then, depending on parameter values, a self-enforcing IEA can have any number of signatories between two and the grand coalition. Barrett obtains this result using numerical simulations and also ignoring the fact that emissions must be non-negative. Recent attempts to use analytical approaches and to explicitly recognize the non-negativity constraints have suggested that the number of signatories of a stable IEA may be very small. The way such papers have dealt with non-negativity constraints is to restrict parameter values…

international externalities self-enforcing environmental agreements Stackelberg equilibrium non-negative emissions constraintsEconomics and EconometricsPublic economicsjel:D62jel:C72Transboundary pollutionjel:F02Grand coalitionMicroeconomicsrestrictjel:Q20Key (cryptography)EconomicsStackelberg competitionOxford Economic Papers
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Many-particle theory for time-dependent quantum transport in nanostructures

2012

During the recent decades, molecular electronics has established its place as one of the promising fields in the nanoscience. The possibility to manufacture and control molecular junctions where single molecules are squeezed between the conducing electrodes has opened up new possibilities to develop nanoscale devices which could be employed as building blocks for future nanoelectronic applications. The driving force for this new branch of physics has been the experimental advances but also theoretical methods have been under intensive study and many theoretical tools have been developed to understand the electron transport processes in the nanoscale systems. This thesis focuses on developin…

itseisenergiamany-particle theoryGreenin funktioKadanoff-Baymelektronitkvantti-kuljetusilmiötelektronien kuljetusilmiötaikariippuvat ilmiötself-energymonihiukkasteoriaGreen functiontime-dependent non-equilibrium phenomenaelectron transportfysiikkamolekyylielektroniikkaquantum transport
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''Dual'' gravity: Using spatial econometrics to control for multilateral resistance.

2007

We propose a quantity-based `dual' version of the gravity equation that yields an estimating equation with both cross-sectional interdependence and spatially lagged error terms. Such an equation can be concisely estimated using spatial econometric techniques. We illustrate this methodology by applying it to the Canada-U.S. data set used previously, among others, by Anderson and van Wincoop (2003) and Feenstra (2002, 2004). Our key result is to show that controlling directly for spatial interdependence across trade flows, as suggested by theory, significantly reduces border effects because it captures `multilateral resistance'. Using a spatial autoregressive moving average specification, we …

jel:C31[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financejel:F12gravity equationspatial econometricsborder effectsGravity equations[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesjel:R12interregional tradeMulti-region general equilibrium trade modelsSpatial econometrics[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceBorder effectsgravity equations multi-region general equilibrium trade models; spatial econometrics border effects
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Delegated agency in multiproduct oligopolies with indivisible goods

2010

This paper focuses on oligopolistic markets in which indivisible goods are sold by multiproduct firms to a continuum of homogeneous buyers, with measure normalized to one, who have preferences over bundles of products. Our analysis contributes to the literature on delegated agency games with direct externalities and complete information, extending the insights by Berheim and Whinston (1986, a , b) to markets with indivisibilities. By analyzing a kind of extended contract schedules - mixed bundling prices - that discriminate on exclusivity, the paper shows that efficient equilibria always exist in such settings. There may also exist inefficient equilibria in which the agent chooses a subopti…

jel:D41jel:C72jel:L13jel:D21jel:D43Multiproduct Price Competition Delegated Agency Games Mixed Bundling Prices Subgame Perfect Nash Equilibrium Strong Equilibrium
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On Capturing Oil Rents with a National Excise Tax Revisited

2004

In this paper the scope of Bergstrom’s (1982) results is studied. Moreover, his analysis is extended assuming that extraction cost is directly related to accumulated extractions. For the case of a competitive market it is found that the optimal policy is a constant tariff if extraction is costless. However, with depletion effects, the optimal tariff must ultimately be decreasing. For the case of a monopolistic market the results depend crucially on the kind of strategies the importing country governments can play and on whether the monopolist chooses the price or extraction rate. For a price-setting monopolist it is shown that the importing countries cannot use a tariff to capture monopoly …

jel:D41media_common.quotation_subjectEconomic rentjel:C73Tariffjel:D42Tariffs Tariff agreements Non renewable resources Depletion effects Price-setting monopolist Quantity-setting monopolist Differential games Open-loop strategies Linear strategies Markov-perfect Nash equilibrium Markov-perfect Stackelberg equilibriumjel:F02jel:H20MicroeconomicsMonopolistic competitionResource (project management)EconomicsPerfect competitionExciseMonopolyNon-renewable resourcejel:Q38media_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Job Creation in Spain: Productivity Growth, Labour Market Reforms or both?

2010

The benefits implied by changing the growth model are at the heart ofthe heated political and economic debate in Spain. Increases in productivity and the reallocation of employment towards more innovative sectors are defended as the panacea for most of the ills afflicting the Spanish economy. In this paper we use a DSGE model with price rigidities, and labour market search frictions a la Mortensen-issarides, to assess the effects of the change in the growth model onunemployment. In so doing, we assume that the vigorous demand shock which has been mostly responsible for recent economic growth in Spain will be successfully substituted by a productivity shock as the main driver of Spain‘s…

jel:E27productivitiylabour marketgeneral equilibriumjel:L10jel:E65artistic creation superstars private copy piracy leviesjel:L82jel:E24
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Search, Nash Bargaining and Rule of Thumb Consumers

2009

This paper analyses the effects of introducing typical Keynesian features, namely rule-of-thumb consumers and consumption habits, into a standard labour market search model. It is a well-known fact that labour market matching with Nash-wage bargaining improves the ability of the standard real business cycle model to replicate some of the cyclical properties featuring the labour market. However, when habits and rule-of-thumb consumers are taken into account, the labour market search model gains extra power to reproduce some of the stylised facts characterising the US labour market, as well as other business cycle facts concerning aggregate consumption and investment behaviour.

jel:E62jel:E32general equilibrium labour market search habits rule-of-tumb consumersjel:E24
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