Search results for "OMAS"

showing 10 items of 1725 documents

Cr(VI) sorption by intact and dehydrated Candida utilis cells: differences in mechanisms

2001

The Cr(VI) sorption kinetics by intact and dehydrated Candida utilis cells were studied. Yeast dehydration led to enhanced Cr(VI) sorption activity by cells during the first 15–20 min of rehydration. In experiments with K2Cr2O7 as a chromium source, [Cr2O7]2− was converted into [CrO4]2− during incubation with dehydrated biomass. An effect of the considerably enhanced Cr(VI) sorption activity by dehydrated cells in the buffered media at pH≈8.0 can serve as another confirmation of the different sorption mechanisms of intact and dehydrated C.utilis cells. This effect was not revealed in water solution at pH 8.0. This phenomenon will be studied in further investigations.

ChemistryInorganic chemistrySorption kineticsBiomasschemistry.chemical_elementBioengineeringSorptionmedicine.diseasecomplex mixturesApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBiochemistryYeastChromiummedicineDehydrationIncubationProcess Biochemistry
researchProduct

Kinetics of nitrogen removal in a MBR nutrient removal activated sludge system

2006

The application of membrane bioreactor (MBR) technology to biological nutrient removal (BNR) activated sludge (AS) systems is limited and uncertainty exists as to the impact of the conditions induced by the membranes on the biologically mediated processes of nutrient removal. Two main conditions associated with MBRs are (1) high total suspended solids (TSS) concentrations (8–20 g/L) and (2) different selection pressures due to biomass retention not being based on settleability, compared with conventional systems with secondary settling tanks (SSTs). Recently, Ramphao et al. [1] concluded that incorporating membranes in BNR AS makes a profound difference to the design of the system. Previous…

ChemistryMechanical EngineeringGeneral Chemical EngineeringEnvironmental engineeringBiomassGeneral ChemistryMembrane bioreactorPulp and paper industryMembraneActivated sludgeEnhanced biological phosphorus removalNutrientSettlingGeneral Materials ScienceWater Science and TechnologyTotal suspended solidsDesalination
researchProduct

Soil Carbon, Nitrogen and Phosphorus Dynamics as Affected by Solarization Alone or Combined with Organic Amendment

2006

Soil solarization, alone or combined with organic amendment, is an increasingly attractive approach for managing soil-borne plant pathogens in agricultural soils. Even though it consists in a relatively mild heating treatment, the increased soil temperature may strongly affect soil microbial processes and nutrients dynamics. This study aimed to investigate the impact of solarization, either with or without addition of farmyard manure, in soil dynamics of various C, N and P pools. Changes in total C, N and P contents and in some functionally-related labile pools (soil microbial biomass C and N, K2SO4-extractable C and N, basal respiration, KCl-exchangeable ammonium and nitrate, and water-sol…

ChemistrySoil organic matterSoil biologySettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaBulk soilfood and beveragesSoil ScienceSoil solarizationPlant Sciencecomplex mixturesManureHumusSoil managementAgronomySoil fertilitychloroform fumigation–extraction labile N microbial biomass organic amendment soil organic matter soil solarization water-soluble PPlant and Soil
researchProduct

Influence of Micromixing on Microorganisms and Products

2001

The influence of mixing intensity as well as physical and chemical parameters on the cells of different microorganisms and the biosynthesis process is examined in this paper. Some reactions of cells effecting mixing intensity are described, such as retarded biomass growth, changes in aggregation and mutual arrangement of cells, morphological changes of cells and decreasing of biological activity, caused by an increased intensity of turbulence (turbohypobiosis). Several methods for investigating the local energy in reactors are compared. It is concluded that conventional methods of hydrodynamic analysis do not always allow valid results for the optimization of the mixing regime to be obtaine…

ChemistryStereochemistryMixing (process engineering)BiomassBioengineeringApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicromixingYield (chemistry)Scientific methodProcess optimizationAerationBiological systemIntensity (heat transfer)BiotechnologyActa Biotechnologica
researchProduct

Catalytic conversion of glucose to 5-hydroxymethylfurfural over biomass-based activated carbon catalyst

2020

Abstract Selective and efficient dehydration of glucose to 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) has been widely explored research problem recently, especially from the perspective of more sustainable heterogeneous catalysts. In this study, activated carbon was first produced from a lignocellulosic waste material, birch sawdust. Novel heterogeneous catalysts were then prepared from activated carbon by adding Lewis or Bronsted acid sites on the carbon surface. Prepared catalysts were used to convert glucose to HMF in biphasic water:THF system at 160 °C. The highest HMF yield and selectivity, 51% and 78%, respectively, were obtained in 8 h with a catalytic mixture containing both Lewis and Bronsted a…

Chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementBiomass02 engineering and technologyGeneral Chemistry010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesCatalysis0104 chemical sciencesCatalysisvisual_artYield (chemistry)medicinevisual_art.visual_art_mediumOrganic chemistrySawdust0210 nano-technologySelectivityBrønsted–Lowry acid–base theoryCarbonActivated carbonmedicine.drugCatalysis Today
researchProduct

GUARINO GUARINI E LA CHIESA DEI PADRI SOMASCHI A MESSINA

2016

Il progetto di Guarino Guarini per la chiesa dei Padri Somaschi di Messina costituisce uno dei problemi aperti della letteratura storiografica dedicata al celebre architetto modenese. La sua mancata realizzazione e, al contempo, le sue connotazioni ritenute ricorrentemente troppo “mature” per la fase iniziale della sua carriera, svoltasi a Messina negli anni 1657- 1662, hanno infatti indotto a sostanziali incertezze sulla sua collocazione cronologia e quindi sul suo effettivo ruolo nella concatenazione delle esperienze progettuali di Guarini, in merito soprattutto alla messa a punto delle sue singolari cupole a fasce incrociate. Questo contributo propone un risposta a tali irrisolte questio…

Chiesa Padri SomaschiXVII secoloChurch of the Somascan OrderGuarino GuariniSettore ICAR/18 - Storia Dell'ArchitetturaMessina
researchProduct

Catastrophic effects of sand mining on macroinvertebrates in a large shallow lake with implications for management

2019

Sand mining is a human activity that is increasing in inland waters and has profound effects on entire aquatic ecosystems. However, current knowledge of the effects of sand mining on freshwater lake ecosystems remains limited, especially for biotic communities. Here, we investigated the responses of macroinvertebrates to indiscriminate sand mining in a large shallow lake of China. Our results indicated that sand mining significantly increased the content of suspended particulate matter, total nitrogen, total phosphorus and chlorophyll a in the water column both in the sand mining area and the area adjacent to the dredging activities. While there was significantly lower total nitrogen and th…

ChinaEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencessand dredging010501 environmental sciencesmacroinvertebrate01 natural sciencesMiningSphaeriumDredgingWater columnparasitic diseasesEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsWaste Management and DisposalEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesSand miningBiomass (ecology)biologykaivostoimintaEcologyAquatic ecosystemLake ecosystemvesiekosysteemitympäristönsuojeluBiodiversityselkärangattomatbiology.organism_classificationPollutionInvertebratesbiological traitsbiodiversiteettiekosysteemit (ekologia)LakesBenthic zonebiomonitoringEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental Monitoring
researchProduct

Making natural products from renewable feedstocks: back to the roots?

2019

Covering: up to mid-2019 This review highlights the utilization of biomass-derived building blocks in the total synthesis of natural products. An overview over several renewable feedstock classes, namely wood/lignin, cellulose, chitin and chitosan, fats and oils, as well as terpenes, is given, covering the time span from the initial beginning of natural product synthesis until today. The focus is put on the origin of the employed carbon atoms and on the nature of the complex structures that were assembled therefrom. The emerging trend of turning away from petrochemically derived starting materials back to bio-based resources, just as seen in the early days of total synthesis, shall be demon…

ChitinRaw material010402 general chemistryLignin01 natural sciencesBiochemistryNatural (archaeology)chemistry.chemical_compoundDrug DiscoveryLigninBiomassCelluloseCelluloseBiological ProductsChitosanTerpenes010405 organic chemistrybusiness.industryOrganic ChemistryTotal synthesisGreen Chemistry TechnologyPulp and paper industryWoodCarbon0104 chemical sciencesRenewable energychemistryEnvironmental sciencebusinessOilsNatural Product Reports
researchProduct

Long-term phytoplankton changes in a shallow hypertrophic lake, Albufera of Valencia (Spain)

1994

A long-term phytoplankton study was carried out in the Albufera of Valencia, a shallow hypertrophic lake (surface area 21 km2, mean depth 1 m, total inorganic nitrogen load 155 g m-2 y-1, total inorganic phosphate load 15 g m-2 y-1) from 1980 to 1988. The lake functions as a reservoir for the surrounding rice cultivation. From 1940's to 1988, its phytoplankton assemblage has been altered from a mesotrophic to a hypertrophic character, as consequence of the increasing pollution. For 1980–88, annual variations in the phytoplankton were less pronounced than seasonal changes. The hypertrophic and morphometric features of the lake favoured the stability of the phytoplankton assemblage and chloro…

Chlorophyll aBiomass (ecology)biologyEcologySeasonalitybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseWaves and shallow waterchemistry.chemical_compoundOceanographychemistryAlgaePhytoplanktonmedicineEnvironmental sciencePaddy fieldEutrophication
researchProduct

Linking chlorophyll a fluorescence to photosynthesis for remote sensing applications: mechanisms and challenges

2014

Chlorophyll a fluorescence (ChlF) has been used for decades to study the organization, functioning, and physiology of photosynthesis at the leaf and subcellular levels. ChlF is now measurable from remote sensing platforms. This provides a new optical means to track photosynthesis and gross primary productivity of terrestrial ecosystems. Importantly, the spatiotemporal and methodological context of the new applications is dramatically different compared with most of the available ChlF literature, which raises a number of important considerations. Although we have a good mechanistic understanding of the processes that control the ChlF signal over the short term, the seasonal link between ChlF…

ChlorophyllChlorophyll aMETIS-306570PhysiologyRemote sensing applicationEcologyChlorophyll AContext (language use)Plant ScienceBiologyPhotochemical Reflectance IndexPhotosynthesisFluorescencePlant Leaveschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryITC-ISI-JOURNAL-ARTICLEPhotosynthetic acclimationRemote Sensing TechnologyThylakoid membrane organizationBiomassSeasonsPhotosynthesisBiological systemChlorophyll fluorescenceJournal of Experimental Botany
researchProduct