910 resultados para inorganic solution
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The Sultanate of Oman is located on the south-eastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula, which lies on the south-western tip of the Asian continent. The strategic geographical locations of the Sultanate with its many maritime ports distributed on the Indian Ocean have historically made it one of the Arabian Peninsula leaders in the international maritime trade sector. Intensive trading relationships over long time periods have contributed to the high plant diversity seen in Oman where agricultural production depends entirely on irrigation from groundwater sources. As a consequence of the expansion of the irrigated area, groundwater depletion has increased, leading to the intrusion of seawater into freshwater aquifers. This phenomenon has caused water and soil salinity problems in large parts of the Al-Batinah governorate of Oman and threatens cultivated crops, including banana (Musa spp.). According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, the majority of South Al-Batinah farms are affected by salinity (ECe > 4 dS m-1). As no alternative farmland is available, the reclamation of salt-affected soils using simple cultural practices is of paramount importance, but in Oman little scientific research has been conducted to develop such methods of reclamation. This doctoral study was initiated to help filling this research gap, particularly for bananas. A literature review of the banana cultivation history revealed that the banana germplasm on the Arabian Peninsula is probably introduced from Indonesia and India via maritime routes across the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea. In a second part of this dissertation, two experiments are described. A laboratory trial conducted at the University of Kassel, in Witzenhausen, Germany from June to July 2010. This incubation experiment was done to explore how C and N mineralization of composted dairy manure and date palm straw differed in alkaline non-saline and saline soils. Each soil was amended with four organic fertilizers: 1) composted dairy manure, 2) manure + 10% date palm straw, 3) manure + 30% date palm straw or 4) date palm straw alone, in addition to un-amended soils as control. The results showed that the saline soil had a lower soil organic C content and microbial biomass C than the non-saline soil. This led to lower mineralization rates of manure and date palm straw in the saline soil. In the non-saline soil, the application of manure and straw resulted in significant increases of CO2 emissions, equivalent to 2.5 and 30% of the added C, respectively. In the non-amended control treatment of the saline soil, the sum of CO2-C reached only 55% of the soil organic C in comparison with the non-saline soil. In which 66% of the added manure and 75% of the added straw were emitted, assuming that no interactions occurred between soil organic C, manure C and straw C during microbial decomposition. The application of straw always led to a net N immobilization compared to the control. Salinity had no specific effect on N mineralization as indicated by the CO2-C to Nmin ratio of soil organic matter and manure. However, N immobilization was markedly stronger in the saline soil. Date palm straw strongly promoted saprotrophic fungi in contrast to manure and the combined application of manure and date palm straw had synergistic positive effects on soil microorganisms. In the last week of incubation, net-N mineralization was observed in nearly all treatments. The strongest increase in microbial biomass C was observed in the manure + straw treatment. In both soils, manure had no effect on the fungi-specific membrane component ergosterol. In contrast, the application of straw resulted in strong increases of the ergosterol content. A field experiment was conducted on two adjacent fields at the Agricultural Research Station, Rumais (23°41’15” N, 57°59’1” E) in the South of Al-Batinah Plain in Oman from October 2007 to July 2009. In this experiment, the effects of 24 soil and fertilizer treatments on the growth and productivity of Musa AAA cv. 'Malindi' were evaluated. The treatments consisted of two soil types (saline and amended non-saline), two fertilizer application methods (mixed and ring applied), six fertilizer amendments (1: fresh dairy manure, 2: composted dairy manure, 3: composted dairy manure and 10% date palm straw, 4: composted dairy manure and 30% date palm straw, 5: only NPK, and 6: NPK and micronutrients). Sandy loam soil was imported from another part of Oman to amended the soil in the planting holes and create non-saline conditions in the root-zone. The results indicate that replacing the saline soil in the root zone by non-saline soil improved plant growth and yield more than fertilizer amendments or application methods. Particularly those plants on amended soil where NPK was applied using the ring method and which received micronutrients grew significantly faster to harvest (339 days), had a higher average bunch weight (9.5 kg/bunch) and were consequently more productive (10.6 tonnes/hectare/cycle) compared to the other treatments.
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Diese Arbeit thematisiert die optimierte Darstellung von organischen Mikro- und Nanodrähten, Untersuchungen bezüglich deren molekularen Aufbaus und die anwendungsorientierte Charakterisierung der Eigenschaften. Mikro- und Nanodrähte haben in den letzten Jahren im Zuge der Miniaturisierung von Technologien an weitreichendem Interesse gewonnen. Solche eindimensionalen Strukturen, deren Durchmesser im Bereich weniger zehn Nanometer bis zu einigen wenigen Mikrometern liegt, sind Gegenstand intensiver Forschung. Neben anorganischen Ausgangssubstanzen zur Erzeugung von Mikro- und Nanodrähten haben organische Funktionsmaterialien aufgrund ihrer einfachen und kostengünstigen Verarbeitbarkeit sowie ihrer interessanten elektrischen und optischen Eigenschaften an Bedeutung gewonnen. Eine wichtige Materialklasse ist in diesem Zusammenhang die Verbindungsklasse der n-halbleitenden Perylentetracarbonsäurediimide (kurz Perylendiimide). Dem erfolgreichen Einsatz von eindimensionalen Strukturen als miniaturisierte Bausteine geht die optimierte und kontrollierte Herstellung voraus. Im Rahmen der Doktorarbeit wurde die neue Methode der Drahterzeugung „Trocknen unter Lösungsmittelatmosphäre“ entwickelt, welche auf Selbstassemblierung der Substanzmoleküle aus Lösung basiert und unter dem Einfluss von Lösungsmitteldampf direkt auf einem vorgegebenen Substrat stattfindet. Im Gegensatz zu literaturbekannten Methoden ist kein Transfer der Drähte aus einem Reaktionsgefäß nötig und damit verbundene Beschädigungen der Strukturen werden vermieden. Während herkömmliche Methoden in einer unkontrolliert großen Menge von ineinander verwundenen Drähten resultieren, erlaubt die substratbasierte Technik die Bildung voneinander separierter Einzelfasern und somit beispielsweise den Einsatz in Einzelstrukturbauteilen. Die erhaltenen Fasern sind morphologisch sehr gleichmäßig und weisen bei Längen von bis zu 5 mm bemerkenswert hohe Aspektverhältnisse von über 10000 auf. Darüber hinaus kann durch das direkte Drahtwachstum auf dem Substrat über den Einsatz von vorstrukturierten Oberflächen und Wachstumsmasken gerichtetes, lokal beschränktes Drahtwachstum erzielt werden und damit aktive Kontrolle auf Richtung und Wachstumsbereich der makroskopisch nicht handhabbaren Objekte ausgeübt werden. Um das Drahtwachstum auch hinsichtlich der Materialauswahl, d. h. der eingesetzten Ausgangsmaterialien zur Drahterzeugung und somit der resultierenden Eigenschaften der gebildeten Strukturen aktiv kontrollieren zu können, wird der Einfluss unterschiedlicher Parameter auf die Morphologie der Selbstassemblierungsprodukte am Beispiel unterschiedlicher Derivate betrachtet. So stellt sich zum einen die Art der eingesetzten Lösungsmittel in flüssiger und gasförmiger Phase beim Trocknen unter Lösungsmittelatmosphäre als wichtiger Faktor heraus. Beide Lösungsmittel dienen als Interaktionspartner für die Moleküle des funktionellen Drahtmaterials im Selbstassemblierungsprozess. Spezifische Wechselwirkungen zwischen Perylendiimid-Molekülen untereinander und mit Lösungsmittel-Molekülen bestimmen dabei die äußere Form der erhaltenen Strukturen. Ein weiterer wichtiger Faktor ist die Molekülstruktur des verwendeten funktionellen Perylendiimids. Es wird der Einfluss einer Bay-Substitution bzw. einer unsymmetrischen Imid-Substitution auf die Morphologie der erhaltenen Strukturen herausgestellt. Für das detaillierte Verständnis des Zusammenhanges zwischen Molekülstruktur und nötigen Wachstumsbedingungen für die Bildung von eindimensionalen Strukturen zum einen, aber auch die resultierenden Eigenschaften der erhaltenen Aggregationsprodukte zum anderen, sind Informationen über den molekularen Aufbau von großer Bedeutung. Im Rahmen der Doktorarbeit konnte ein molekular hoch geordneter, kristalliner Aufbau der Drähte nachgewiesen werden. Durch Kombination unterschiedlicher Messmethoden ist es gelungen, die molekulare Anordnung in Strukturen aus einem Spirobifluoren-substituierten Derivat in Form einer verkippten Molekülstapelung entlang der Drahtlängsrichtung zu bestimmen. Um mögliche Anwendungsbereiche der erzeugten Drähte aufzuzeigen, wurden diese hinsichtlich ihrer elektrischen und optischen Eigenschaften analysiert. Neben dem potentiellen Einsatz im Bereich von Filteranwendungen und Sensoren, sind vor allem die halbleitenden und optisch wellenleitenden Eigenschaften hervorzuheben. Es konnten organische Transistoren auf der Basis von Einzeldrähten mit im Vergleich zu Dünnschichtbauteilen erhöhten Ladungsträgerbeweglichkeiten präpariert werden. Darüber hinaus wurden die erzeugten eindimensionalen Strukturen als aktive optische Wellenleiter charakterisiert. Die im Rahmen der Dissertation erarbeiteten Kenntnisse bezüglich der Bildung von eindimensionalen Strukturen durch Selbstassemblierung, des Drahtaufbaus und erster anwendungsorientierter Charakterisierung stellen eine Basis zur Weiterentwicklung solcher miniaturisierter Bausteine für unterschiedlichste Anwendungen dar. Die neu entwickelte Methode des Trocknens unter Lösungsmittelatmosphäre ist nicht auf den Einsatz von Perylendiimiden beschränkt, sondern kann auf andere Substanzklassen ausgeweitet werden. Dies eröffnet breite Möglichkeiten der Materialauswahl und somit der Einsatzmöglichkeiten der erhaltenen Strukturen.
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There have being increasing debate on the prospects of biofuel becoming the next best alternative to solving the problem of CO2 emission and the escalating fuel prices, but the question is whether this assertion is true and also if it comes without any cost to pay. This paper seeks to find out whether this much praised alternative to solving these problems is a better option or another way for the developed countries to find more areas where they could get cheap land, labour and raw materials for the production of biofuel. This will focus mainly on some effects the growing biofuel production has on food security, livelihood of people, the environment and some land conflicts developing as a result of land grabbing for biofuel production in the developing countries.
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Different theoretical models have tried to investigate the feasibility of recurrent neural mechanisms for achieving direction selectivity in the visual cortex. The mathematical analysis of such models has been restricted so far to the case of purely linear networks. We present an exact analytical solution of the nonlinear dynamics of a class of direction selective recurrent neural models with threshold nonlinearity. Our mathematical analysis shows that such networks have form-stable stimulus-locked traveling pulse solutions that are appropriate for modeling the responses of direction selective cortical neurons. Our analysis shows also that the stability of such solutions can break down giving raise to a different class of solutions ("lurching activity waves") that are characterized by a specific spatio-temporal periodicity. These solutions cannot arise in models for direction selectivity with purely linear spatio-temporal filtering.
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Uniformly distributed ZnO nanorods with diameter 70-100 nm and 1-2μm long have been successfully grown at low temperatures on GaN by using the inexpensive aqueous solution method. The formation of the ZnO nanorods and the growth parameters are controlled by reactant concentration, temperature and pH. No catalyst is required. The XRD studies show that the ZnO nanorods are single crystals and that they grow along the c axis of the crystal plane. The room temperature photoluminescence measurements have shown ultraviolet peaks at 388nm with high intensity, which are comparable to those found in high quality ZnO films. The mechanism of the nanorod growth in the aqueous solution is proposed. The dependence of the ZnO nanorods on the growth parameters was also investigated. While changing the growth temperature from 60°C to 150°C, the morphology of the ZnO nanorods changed from sharp tip (needle shape) to flat tip (rod shape). These kinds of structure are useful in laser and field emission application.
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Uniformly distributed ZnO nanorods with diameter 80-120 nm and 1-2µm long have been successfully grown at low temperatures on GaN by using the inexpensive aqueous solution method. The formation of the ZnO nanorods and the growth parameters are controlled by reactant concentration, temperature and pH. No catalyst is required. The XRD studies show that the ZnO nanorods are single crystals and that they grow along the c axis of the crystal plane. The room temperature photoluminescence measurements have shown ultraviolet peaks at 388nm with high intensity, which are comparable to those found in high quality ZnO films. The mechanism of the nanorod growth in the aqueous solution is proposed. The dependence of the ZnO nanorods on the growth parameters was also investigated. While changing the growth temperature from 60°C to 150°C, the morphology of the ZnO nanorods changed from sharp tip with high aspect ratio to flat tip with smaller aspect ratio. These kinds of structure are useful in laser and field emission application.
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Many online services access a large number of autonomous data sources and at the same time need to meet different user requirements. It is essential for these services to achieve semantic interoperability among these information exchange entities. In the presence of an increasing number of proprietary business processes, heterogeneous data standards, and diverse user requirements, it is critical that the services are implemented using adaptable, extensible, and scalable technology. The COntext INterchange (COIN) approach, inspired by similar goals of the Semantic Web, provides a robust solution. In this paper, we describe how COIN can be used to implement dynamic online services where semantic differences are reconciled on the fly. We show that COIN is flexible and scalable by comparing it with several conventional approaches. With a given ontology, the number of conversions in COIN is quadratic to the semantic aspect that has the largest number of distinctions. These semantic aspects are modeled as modifiers in a conceptual ontology; in most cases the number of conversions is linear with the number of modifiers, which is significantly smaller than traditional hard-wiring middleware approach where the number of conversion programs is quadratic to the number of sources and data receivers. In the example scenario in the paper, the COIN approach needs only 5 conversions to be defined while traditional approaches require 20,000 to 100 million. COIN achieves this scalability by automatically composing all the comprehensive conversions from a small number of declaratively defined sub-conversions.
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We present a technique for the rapid and reliable evaluation of linear-functional output of elliptic partial differential equations with affine parameter dependence. The essential components are (i) rapidly uniformly convergent reduced-basis approximations — Galerkin projection onto a space WN spanned by solutions of the governing partial differential equation at N (optimally) selected points in parameter space; (ii) a posteriori error estimation — relaxations of the residual equation that provide inexpensive yet sharp and rigorous bounds for the error in the outputs; and (iii) offline/online computational procedures — stratagems that exploit affine parameter dependence to de-couple the generation and projection stages of the approximation process. The operation count for the online stage — in which, given a new parameter value, we calculate the output and associated error bound — depends only on N (typically small) and the parametric complexity of the problem. The method is thus ideally suited to the many-query and real-time contexts. In this paper, based on the technique we develop a robust inverse computational method for very fast solution of inverse problems characterized by parametrized partial differential equations. The essential ideas are in three-fold: first, we apply the technique to the forward problem for the rapid certified evaluation of PDE input-output relations and associated rigorous error bounds; second, we incorporate the reduced-basis approximation and error bounds into the inverse problem formulation; and third, rather than regularize the goodness-of-fit objective, we may instead identify all (or almost all, in the probabilistic sense) system configurations consistent with the available experimental data — well-posedness is reflected in a bounded "possibility region" that furthermore shrinks as the experimental error is decreased.
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We study the preconditioning of symmetric indefinite linear systems of equations that arise in interior point solution of linear optimization problems. The preconditioning method that we study exploits the block structure of the augmented matrix to design a similar block structure preconditioner to improve the spectral properties of the resulting preconditioned matrix so as to improve the convergence rate of the iterative solution of the system. We also propose a two-phase algorithm that takes advantage of the spectral properties of the transformed matrix to solve for the Newton directions in the interior-point method. Numerical experiments have been performed on some LP test problems in the NETLIB suite to demonstrate the potential of the preconditioning method discussed.
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One of the tantalising remaining problems in compositional data analysis lies in how to deal with data sets in which there are components which are essential zeros. By an essential zero we mean a component which is truly zero, not something recorded as zero simply because the experimental design or the measuring instrument has not been sufficiently sensitive to detect a trace of the part. Such essential zeros occur in many compositional situations, such as household budget patterns, time budgets, palaeontological zonation studies, ecological abundance studies. Devices such as nonzero replacement and amalgamation are almost invariably ad hoc and unsuccessful in such situations. From consideration of such examples it seems sensible to build up a model in two stages, the first determining where the zeros will occur and the second how the unit available is distributed among the non-zero parts. In this paper we suggest two such models, an independent binomial conditional logistic normal model and a hierarchical dependent binomial conditional logistic normal model. The compositional data in such modelling consist of an incidence matrix and a conditional compositional matrix. Interesting statistical problems arise, such as the question of estimability of parameters, the nature of the computational process for the estimation of both the incidence and compositional parameters caused by the complexity of the subcompositional structure, the formation of meaningful hypotheses, and the devising of suitable testing methodology within a lattice of such essential zero-compositional hypotheses. The methodology is illustrated by application to both simulated and real compositional data
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Title: Data-Driven Text Generation using Neural Networks Speaker: Pavlos Vougiouklis, University of Southampton Abstract: Recent work on neural networks shows their great potential at tackling a wide variety of Natural Language Processing (NLP) tasks. This talk will focus on the Natural Language Generation (NLG) problem and, more specifically, on the extend to which neural network language models could be employed for context-sensitive and data-driven text generation. In addition, a neural network architecture for response generation in social media along with the training methods that enable it to capture contextual information and effectively participate in public conversations will be discussed. Speaker Bio: Pavlos Vougiouklis obtained his 5-year Diploma in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in 2013. He was awarded an MSc degree in Software Engineering from the University of Southampton in 2014. In 2015, he joined the Web and Internet Science (WAIS) research group of the University of Southampton and he is currently working towards the acquisition of his PhD degree in the field of Neural Network Approaches for Natural Language Processing. Title: Provenance is Complicated and Boring — Is there a solution? Speaker: Darren Richardson, University of Southampton Abstract: Paper trails, auditing, and accountability — arguably not the sexiest terms in computer science. But then you discover that you've possibly been eating horse-meat, and the importance of provenance becomes almost palpable. Having accepted that we should be creating provenance-enabled systems, the challenge of then communicating that provenance to casual users is not trivial: users should not have to have a detailed working knowledge of your system, and they certainly shouldn't be expected to understand the data model. So how, then, do you give users an insight into the provenance, without having to build a bespoke system for each and every different provenance installation? Speaker Bio: Darren is a final year Computer Science PhD student. He completed his undergraduate degree in Electronic Engineering at Southampton in 2012.
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Combina historias de ficción y no ficción acerca de la contaminación. De qué manera afecta nuestra vida, cómo agua aire y suelo pueden verse afectadas y cómo se está tratando de resolver los problemas de contaminación tóxica en todo el mundo. Las preguntas abiertas estimulan a los estudiantes a reflexionar sobre estas cuestiones que afectan a las personas en diferentes partes del mundo y a formar sus propias opiniones.
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Recurso para la asignatura de la Ciudadanía para alumnos entre once y dieciséis años. Está estructurado en cuatro secciones: las dos primeras se centran en el conocimiento de sí mismo y en la capacidad para manejar las emociones y las relaciones. Las unidades de la sección tres están diseñadas para ayudar a entender cómo desarrollar un estilo de vida saludable, más seguro, a pensar en las alternativas al tomar decisiones sobre sanidad personal y las consecuencias de tales decisiones. En la sección cuatro se trata la comprensión del mundo del trabajo y la capacidad financiera.
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Libro dirigido a profesores que tengan que impartir la asignatura de 'Educación para la ciudadanía' en relación con 'Educación personal, social y de la salud' en el nivel KS4 (Key Stage 4), enseñanza secundaria. Presenta sugerencias de planificación y materiales adicionales para acompañar a los libros del alumno 'Your life 4' y 'Your life 5'. Cubre los siguientes temas: desarrollo como ciudadano, bienestar personal (comprenderse a si mismo y saber relacionarse), bienestar personal (mantener la salud), bienestar económico y capacidad financiera.
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Los Centros de Investigación de Geografía son por lo general productores de un gran volumen de Información Geográfica (IG), los cuales generan tanto proyectos financiados como iniciativas de investigación individuales. El Centro de Estudos de Geografia e Planeamento Regional (e-GEO) ha estado involucrado en varios proyectos a escala local, regional, nacional e internacional. Recientemente, dos cuestiones fueron objeto de debate. Una de ellas fue el hecho de que la información espacial obtenida a partir del desarrollo de tales proyectos de investigación no ha tenido la visibilidad que se esperaba. En la mayoría de las veces, la IG de estos proyectos no estaba en el formato adecuado para que los investigadores -o incluso el público en general o grupos de interés- pudieran pesquisar fácilmente. La segunda cuestión era sobre cómo hacer que estos resultados pudieran ser accesibles al alcance de todos, en todos los lugares, fácilmente y con los mínimos costes para el Centro, teniendo en cuenta el actual contexto económico portugués y los intereses de e-GEO. Estas dos cuestiones se resuelven con una sola respuesta: la puesta en marcha de un WebGIS en una plataforma Open Source. En este trabajo se ilustra la producción de un instrumento para la difusión de las indicaciones geográficas en el World Wide Web, utilizando únicamente software libre y freeware. Esta herramienta permite a todos los investigadores del Centro publicar su IG, la cual aparece como plenamente accesible a cualquier usuario final. Potencialmente, el hecho de permitir que este tipo de información sea plenamente accesible debería generar un gran impacto, acortando las distancias entre el trabajo realizado por los académicos y el usuario final. Creemos que es una óptima manera para que el público pueda acceder e interpretar la información espacial. En conclusión, esta plataforma debería servir para cerrar la brecha entre productores y usuarios de la información geográfica, permitiendo la interacción entre todas las partes así como la carga de nuevos datos dado un conjunto de normas destinadas a control de calidad