958 resultados para Congo Fan
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Composed primarily of articles written by Bruno Eckert's group, Forschungsinstitut für Kraftfahrwesen und Fahrzeugmotoren, Technische Hochschule, Stuttgard. Translated by various groups and individuals both in and out of the Navy Dept. Preliminary translation done by German prisoners of war.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bibliographical footnotes.
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Includes transactions, etc., of the Association pour le perfectionnement du matériel colonial
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Accompanied by "Appendice." (vi, 189 p. 26 cm.) Published: Bruxelles, M. Weissenbruch, imprimeur du roi, 1910.
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Starchy plant foods are significant in the diet of almost all peoples. Archaeologically, however, preservation of such plants is limited, and direct evidence of plant use by past people is also rare. Although starch grains can be preserved on artefacts used to process starchy plants, it is very difficult to identify grains damaged by processing methods such as milling or cooking. We present a method for identifying such damaged starch grains using Congo Red staining to identify cooking or milling activities in the past subsistence behaviour of Aboriginal people of southeast Queensland, Australia. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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A family of titania derived nanocomposites synthesized via sol-gel and hydrothermal routes exhibit excellent performance for the photocatalytic degradation of two important exemplar water pollutants, oxytetracycline and Congo Red. Low loadings of Co3O4 nanoparticles dispersed over the surfaces of anatase TiO2 confer visible light photoactivity for the aqueous phase decomposition of organics through the resulting heterojunction and reduced band gap. Subsequent modification of these Co3O4/TiO2 composites by trace amounts of graphene oxide nanosheets in the presence of a diamine linker further promotes both oxytetracycline and Congo Red photodegradation under simulated solar and visible irradiation, through a combination of enhanced photoresponse and consequent radical generation. Radical quenching and fluorescence experiments implicate holes and hydroxyl radicals as the respective primary and secondary active species responsible for oxidative photodegradation of pollutants.