962 resultados para % dry wt.
Estudo de catalisadores modelo à base de CeO2-ZrO2 dopado com cobre para controle de emissões de NOx
Resumo:
Convencionalmente, metais nobres são empregados como metais ativos em catalisadores automotivos, mas o uso de cobre vem sendo estudado pelo fato de promover sítios ativos para adsorção química e redução de NOx. Diante deste contexto, esta dissertação visa testar novas formulações de catalisadores, com foco em seu desempenho na reação de redução do NO pelo CO e sua seletividade a N2. Foram avaliados o método de adição de cobre no preparo e os teores de cobre utilizados na preparação. Os métodos de adição utilizados foram impregnação a seco (IS), reação em estado sólido (RS) e coprecipitação (CO). Os teores de cobre estudados ficaram entre 0,36 e 6,9% (m/m). Além disso, foi estudado o impacto no desempenho do catalisador após envelhecimento térmico a 950C por 12h. Foram empregadas as seguintes técnicas de caracterização textural e físico-química como espectrometria de absorção atômica, fisissorção de N2, difração de raios X, espectroscopia Raman e redução a temperatura programada. Os catalisadores também foram avaliados na reação de redução do NO pelo CO. A análise textural indicou que o método de coprecipitação levou a características texturais diferentes dos outros catalisadores. Análises de DRX mostraram a formação de CuO cristalino para teores iguais ou superiores a 3,3% (m/m) de cobre. As análises de Redução a Temperatura Programada (RTP) indicaram que ocorreu uma forte interação na interface entre o suporte e as espécies de cobre dispersas, acompanhada da diminuição da temperatura de redução do CuO e da redução parcial da céria em temperaturas mais baixas. Os testes catalíticos mostraram um melhor desempenho dos catalisadores (IS) que apresentaram conversões mais elevadas em menores temperaturas. Com relação ao envelhecimento, observou-se uma diminuição significativa da eficiência dos catalisadores. Uma comparação com catalisadores à base de metal nobre mostrou um bom desempenho dos catalisadores à base de cobre, com a vantagem destes apresentarem emissão de N2O restrita a baixas temperaturas
Resumo:
Determining patterns of population connectivity is critical to the evaluation of marine reserves as recruitment sources for harvested populations. Mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis) is a good test case because the last known major spawning aggregation in U.S. waters was granted no-take status in the Tortugas South Ecological Reserve (TSER) in 2001. To evaluate the TSER population as a recruitment source, we genotyped mutton snapper from the Dry Tortugas, southeast Florida, and from three locations across the Caribbean at eight microsatellite loci. Both Fstatistics and individual-based Bayesian analyses indicated that genetic substructure was absent across the five populations. Genetic homogeneity of mutton snapper populations is consistent with its pelagic larval duration of 27 to 37 days and adult behavior of annual migrations to large spawning aggregations. Statistical power of future genetic assessments of mutton snapper population connectivity may benefit from more comprehensive geographic sampling, and perhaps from the development of less polymorphic DNA microsatellite loci. Research where alternative methods are used, such as the transgenerational marking of embryonic otoliths with barium stable isotopes, is also needed on this and other species with diverse life history characteristics to further evaluate the TSER as a recruitment source and to define corridors of population connectivity across the Caribbean and Florida.
Resumo:
Three men electrofishing in an unknown a dry stream in North West England, UK, in the 50's. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
Resumo:
The overall goal of the MARine and Estuarine goal Setting (MARES) project for South Florida is “to reach a science-based consensus about the defining characteristics and fundamental regulating processes of a South Florida coastal marine ecosystem that is both sustainable and capable of providing the diverse ecosystem services upon which our society depends.” Through participation in a systematic process of reaching such a consensus, science can contribute more directly and effectively to the critical decisions being made by both policy makers and by natural resource and environmental management agencies. The document that follows briefly describes the MARES project and this systematic process. It then describes in considerable detail the resulting output from the first two steps in the process, the development of conceptual diagrams and an Integrated Conceptual Ecosystem Model (ICEM) for the first subregion to be addressed by MARES, the Florida Keys/Dry Tortugas (FK/DT). What follows with regard to the FK/DT is the input received from more than 60 scientists, agency resource managers, and representatives of environmental organizations beginning with a workshop held December 9-10, 2009 at Florida International University in Miami, Florida.
Resumo:
This project characterized and assessed the condition of coastal water resources in the Dry Tortugas National Park (DRTO) located in the Florida Keys. The goal of the assessment was to: (1) identify the state of knowledge of natural resources that exist within the DRTO, (2) summarize the state of knowledge about natural and anthropogenic stressors and threats that affected these resources, and (3) describe strategies being implemented by DRTO managers to meet their resource management goals. The park, located in the Straits of Florida 113 km (70 miles) west of Key West, is relatively small (269 square kilometers) with seven small islands and extensive shallow water coral reefs. Significant natural resources within DRTO include coastal and oceanic waters, coral reefs, reef fisheries, seagrass beds, and sea turtle and bird nesting habitats. This report focuses on marine natural resources identified by DRTO resource managers and researchers as being vitally important to the Tortugas region and the wider South Florida ecosystem. Selected marine resources included physical resources (geology, oceanography, and water quality) and biological resources (coral reef and hardbottom benthic assemblages, seagrass and algal communities, reef fishes and macro invertebrates, and wildlife [sea turtles and sea-birds]). In the past few decades, some of these resources have deteriorated because of natural and anthropogenic factors that are local and global in scale. To meet mandated goals (Chapter 1), resource managers need information on: (1) the types and condition of natural and cultural resources that occur within the park and (2) the stressors and threats that can affect those resources. This report synthesizes and summarizes information on: (1) the status of marine natural resources occurring at DRTO; and (2) types of stressors and threats currently affecting those resources at the DRTO. Based on published information, the assessment suggests that marine resources at DRTO and its surrounding region are affected by several stressors, many of which act synergistically. Of the nine resource components assessed, one resource category – water quality – received an ecological condition ranking of "Good"; two components – the nonliving portion of coral reef and hardbottom and reef fishes – received a rating of "Caution"; and two components – the biotic components of coral reef and hardbottom substrates and sea turtles – received a rating of "Significant concern" (Table E-1). Seagrass and algal communities and seabirds were unrated for ecological condition because the available information was inadequate. The stressor category of tropical storms was the dominant and most prevalent stressor in the Tortugas region; it affected all of the resource components assessed in this report. Commercial and recreational fishing were also dominant stressors and affected 78% of the resource components assessed. The most stressed resource was the biotic component of coral reef and hardbottom resources, which was affected by 76% of the stressors. Water quality was the least affected; it was negatively affected by 12% of stressors. The systematic assessment of marine natural resources and stressors in the Tortugas region pointed to several gaps in the information. For example, of the nine marine resource components reviewed in this report, the living component of coral reefs and hardbottom resources had the best rated information with 25% of stressor categories rated "Good" for information richness. In contrast, the there was a paucity of information for seagrass and algal communities and sea birds resource components.