Search results for "WATER"

showing 10 items of 9348 documents

CeO2−x nanorods with intrinsic urease-like activity

2018

The large-scale production and ecotoxicity of urea make its removal from wastewater a health and environmental challenge. Whereas the industrial removal of urea relies on hydrolysis at elevated temperatures and high pressure, nature solves the urea disposal problem with the enzyme urease under ambient conditions. We show that CeO2−x nanorods (NRs) act as the first and efficient green urease mimic that catalyzes the hydrolysis of urea under ambient conditions with an activity (kcat = 9.58 × 101 s−1) about one order of magnitude lower than that of the native jack bean urease. The surface properties of CeO2−x NRs were probed by varying the Ce4+/Ce3+ ratio through La doping. Although La substit…

chemistry.chemical_classificationUreasebiologyChemistrySynthetic membrane02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesCatalysisHydrolysischemistry.chemical_compoundEnzymeWastewaterbiology.proteinUreaGeneral Materials ScienceEnzyme kinetics0210 nano-technologyNuclear chemistryNanoscale
researchProduct

Screening pretreatment methods to enhance thermophilic anaerobic digestion of pulp and paper mill wastewater treatment secondary sludge

2013

Abstract The effect of hydrothermal (150 °C for 10 min and 70 °C for 40 min), enzymatic (Accelerase 1500, 0.07 g/g volatile solids (VS)), ultrasound (45 kHz for 30 min) and chemical pretreatments (HNO3 at pH 3 and NaOH at pH 12) alone or in combination on the chemical composition and methane yield of the pulp and paper mill secondary sludge was studied in batch assays at 55 °C. In total, 12 different pretreatment combinations were compared. Chemical analyses showed that all pretreatments except for HNO3 and ultrasound pretreatments improved the organic matter solubilization. Among the studied pretreatments, hydrothermal (150 °C, 10 min) pretreatment alone or in combination with enzymatic an…

chemistry.chemical_classificationWaste managementChemistrybusiness.industryGeneral Chemical EngineeringPulp (paper)ta1172Paper millGeneral Chemistryengineering.materialPulp and paper industryIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringMethaneHydrolysisAnaerobic digestionchemistry.chemical_compoundWastewaterengineeringEnvironmental ChemistryOrganic matterSewage treatmentbusinessta218Chemical Engineering Journal
researchProduct

Temperature influence on moisture transfer through synthetic films

2000

Abstract Water transfer through films was investigated as a function of the temperature, the physical state of water and the relative humidity (RH) difference. The films were two synthetic packagings: a hydrophobic one, the polyethylene, a hydrophilic one, the cellophane. Some phenomena which could occur at low temperatures were discussed, such as polymer structure change due to mechanical relaxation or network plasticisation and modification of the penetrant diffusion at its melting temperature. But it seems that the comparison of water permeabilities (WPs) with temperature, especially at subzero temperatures, requires the correction of their calculation with the difference of water chemic…

chemistry.chemical_classificationWater activityVapour pressure of waterCellophaneFiltration and SeparationPolymerPolyethyleneBiochemistrylaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundMembraneChemical engineeringchemistrylawOrganic chemistryGeneral Materials ScienceRelative humidityPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryWater vaporJournal of Membrane Science
researchProduct

Wastewater modification processes in a stabilization reservoir: a new mathematical model

2018

The paper presents a mathematical model for the simulation of the ecology of a wastewater stabilization reservoir (WSR). WSRs are hypertrophic aquatic systems devoted to water storage in warm countries where shortage conditions are often encountered. Several factors that affect the stabilization reservoir’s effluent quality were taken into account: hydraulics and hydrology, solar radiation, reaeration, algae, zooplankton, organic matter, pathogens, and sediment-water interactions. The model quantifies the specific influence of each factor on effluent quality, and evaluating the correlation between the different factors. State variables included in the model were: algae, dissolved oxygen, or…

chemistry.chemical_classificationWater resources management mathematical modelling stabilization reservoir wastewater treatmentSettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleAquatic ecosystemWater storageEnvironmental engineeringZooplanktonHydrology (agriculture)WastewaterchemistryEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterSewage treatmentKeywords: Water resources management Mathematical modelling Stabilization reservoir Wastewater treatmentEffluent
researchProduct

Influence of anthropogenic activity on the lead isotope signature of Thau Lake sediments (southern France): origin and temporal evolution

2000

Lead concentrations and isotopic compositions were determined on both bulk sediments deposited in the Thau lake in southern France during the last 200 years, and leachates derived from a series of sequential leachings of the sediments, making it possible to identify the sources, natural (i.e. indigenous lithologic) or anthropogenic, and to quantify the different inputs of Pb. Two distinct inputs of Pb could be distinguished. One of these corresponds to the terrigenous material entering the basin, representative of the local natural Pb ‘background’. Its supply remained steady most of the time with 206Pb/207Pb ratios of 1.200±0.003, except at the time of heavy storms producing voluminous and …

chemistry.chemical_classificationWatershedLithologyTerrigenous sedimentGeochemistryMineralogyStormStructural basinPollutionSilicatechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryGeochemistry and PetrologyEnvironmental ChemistryOrganic matterLeachateGeologyApplied Geochemistry
researchProduct

Sur la présence de matières organiques mésocénozoïques dans des humus actuels (bassin de Chaillexon, Doubs, France)

1998

Abstract The optical analysis in the Chaillexon watershed (Doubs, France), of the present soils' humus layers' organic matter points out the contribution of Meso-Cenozoic organic matter in addition to the one produced by vegetal cover. Their relative occurrence varies in each layer: in the reverse of that of vegetal organic matter, the relative amount of Meso-Cenozoic organic matter increases according to the depth. That result shows that the total organic matter amounts in soils (and its evaluation) do not only depend on the net primary production and that geological formations have to be taken into account. Moreover, it suggests that present and past detrital supplies are concerned with ‘…

chemistry.chemical_classificationWatershedchemistryEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterEnvironmental scienceOcean EngineeringOrganic matterSoil scienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHumusComptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences - Series IIA - Earth and Planetary Science
researchProduct

The influence of weathering processes on labile and stable organic matter in Mediterranean volcanic soils

2008

The relationship and mechanisms among weathering processes, cation fluxes, clay mineralogy, organic matter composition and stability were studied in soils developing on basaltic material in southern Italy (Sicily). The soils were transitions between Phaeozems and Vertisols. Intense losses of the elements Na, Ca and Mg were measured indicating that weathering has occurred over a long period of time. The main weathering processes followed the sequence: amphibole, mica, volcanic glass or if ash was the primary source→smectite→interstratified smectite–kaolinite→kaolinite. Kaolinite formation was strongly related to high Al, Mg and Na losses. The good correlation between oxyhydroxides and kaolin…

chemistry.chemical_classificationWeatheringGeochemistrySoil ScienceWeatheringVertisolMass balanceClay mineralogyVolcanic glass10122 Institute of GeographyFTOrganic matter stabilitychemistryMediterranean soilsIR spectroscopyEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterKaoliniteOrganic matter910 Geography & travelClay minerals1111 Soil ScienceAmphiboleGeology
researchProduct

EnzymesIn Vitro as indicators for pesticides: An examination

1992

Pesticides—a serious problem especially for drinking water quality—frequently are potent inhibitors of enzymes in their target organisms. As the established chemical analyses of pesticides are time-consuming, complicated, and expensive, so-called screening methods are urgently needed. For this purpose the sensitivity of 13 different enzymes was tested in vitro by inhibiting their kinetic rates and/or substrate conversions by 16 pesticides (herbicides and fungicides). Because of the stabilization and resulting low sensitivity of enzymes commercially available—especially in test kits—it was necessary to vary the test conditions and to develop special methods for detecting enzymatic inhibition…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyChemistryHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisAldehyde dehydrogenasePesticidePesticide pollutionToxicologyIn vitroFungicideEnzymeBiochemistryEnzyme inhibitorToxicitybiology.proteinWater Science and TechnologyEnvironmental Toxicology & Water Quality
researchProduct

Responses of two earthworm populations with different exposure histories to chlorophenol contamination

1998

Two populations of the earthworm Aporrectodea tuberculata (Eisen), one from a chlorophenol contaminated and another from an uncontaminated site in central Finland, were exposed to acute, toxic, and sublethal concentrations of pentachlorophenol (PCP). Exposure history seemed to have only slight effect on the responses of the earthworms. Values of a lethal concentration of 50% in the humus-rich soil were very high, 1,870 μg PCP per gram for the earthworms from the contaminated site and 1,520 μg/g for the earthworms from the uncontaminated site. No differences in the accumulation of PCP from the soil into the earthworms between the two populations were found. Earthworms from both populations s…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyEcologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisSoil biologySoil organic matterEarthwormbiology.organism_classificationSoil contaminationPentachlorophenolchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryOligochaetaEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterEnvironmental ChemistryOrganic matterEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry
researchProduct

2019

Water-soluble chlorophyll proteins (WSCP) from Brassicaceae form homotetrameric chlorophyll (Chl)–protein complexes binding one Chl per apoprotein and no carotenoids. Despite the lack of photoprotecting pigments, the complex-bound Chls displays a remarkable stability toward photodynamic damage. On the basis of a mutational study, we show that not only the presence of the phytyls is necessary for photoprotection in WSCPs, as we previously demonstrated, but also is their correct conformation and localization. The extreme heat stability of WSCP also depends on the presence of the phytyl chains, confirming their relevance for the unusual stability of WSCP.

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyGeneral Chemical Engineeringfood and beveragesBrassicaceaeGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationExtreme heatchemistry.chemical_compoundPigmentWater solublechemistryChlorophyllPhotoprotectionvisual_artpolycyclic compoundsBiophysicsvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCarotenoidACS Omega
researchProduct