216Th ECS Meeting Abstracts 2009
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Aalseth Aaron Aarup Aasen Aasheim Abair Abanatha Abandschon Abarca Abarr Abate Abba Abbas Abbate Abbe Abbett Abbey Abbott Abbs
BUSCAPRONTA www.buscapronta.com ARQUIVO 35 DE PESQUISAS GENEALÓGICAS 306 PÁGINAS – MÉDIA DE 98.500 SOBRENOMES/OCORRÊNCIA Para pesquisar, utilize a ferramenta EDITAR/LOCALIZAR do WORD. A cada vez que você clicar ENTER e aparecer o sobrenome pesquisado GRIFADO (FUNDO PRETO) corresponderá um endereço Internet correspondente que foi pesquisado por nossa equipe. Ao solicitar seus endereços de acesso Internet, informe o SOBRENOME PESQUISADO, o número do ARQUIVO BUSCAPRONTA DIV ou BUSCAPRONTA GEN correspondente e o número de vezes em que encontrou o SOBRENOME PESQUISADO. Número eventualmente existente à direita do sobrenome (e na mesma linha) indica número de pessoas com aquele sobrenome cujas informações genealógicas são apresentadas. O valor de cada endereço Internet solicitado está em nosso site www.buscapronta.com . Para dados especificamente de registros gerais pesquise nos arquivos BUSCAPRONTA DIV. ATENÇÃO: Quando pesquisar em nossos arquivos, ao digitar o sobrenome procurado, faça- o, sempre que julgar necessário, COM E SEM os acentos agudo, grave, circunflexo, crase, til e trema. Sobrenomes com (ç) cedilha, digite também somente com (c) ou com dois esses (ss). Sobrenomes com dois esses (ss), digite com somente um esse (s) e com (ç). (ZZ) digite, também (Z) e vice-versa. (LL) digite, também (L) e vice-versa. Van Wolfgang – pesquise Wolfgang (faça o mesmo com outros complementos: Van der, De la etc) Sobrenomes compostos ( Mendes Caldeira) pesquise separadamente: MENDES e depois CALDEIRA. Tendo dificuldade com caracter Ø HAMMERSHØY – pesquise HAMMERSH HØJBJERG – pesquise JBJERG BUSCAPRONTA não reproduz dados genealógicos das pessoas, sendo necessário acessar os documentos Internet correspondentes para obter tais dados e informações. DESEJAMOS PLENO SUCESSO EM SUA PESQUISA. -
Glass Ionomer Bone Cements Based on Magnesium-Containing Bioactive
Biomed. Glasses 2019; 5:1–12 Research Article Roland Wetzel, Leena Hupa, and Delia S. Brauer* Glass ionomer bone cements based on magnesium-containing bioactive glasses https://doi.org/10.1515/bglass-2019-0001 Received Sep 25, 2018; revised Dec 16, 2018; accepted Jan 14, 2019 1 Introduction Abstract: Glass ionomer cements (GIC) are used in restora- Cements for prosthetic stabilisation or spinal corrective tive dentistry and their properties (low heat during setting, surgeries (vertebroplasty, kyphoplasty) typically consist adhesion to mineralised tissue and surgical metals) make of polymethylmethacrylate [1, 2]. They exhibit a number them of great interest for bone applications. However, den- of drawbacks which include high curing temperatures tal GIC are based on aluminium-containing glasses, and or the presence of unreacted and toxic methacrylic acid the resulting release of aluminium ions from the cements monomers. They also do not bind to bone and are held in needs to be avoided for applications as bone cements. Re- place by mechanical interlocking only [2–6]. As a result, placing aluminium ions in glasses for use in glass ionomer there is a demand for alternative non-toxic cements with cements is challenging, as aluminium ions play a critical bone bonding capability. role in the required glass degradation by acid attack as Glass ionomer cements (GIC) have been used in well as in GIC mechanical stability. Magnesium ions have restorative dentistry as filler or luting materials for been used as an alternative for aluminium in the glass decades [7, 8]. They are formed by an acid-base reaction component, but so far no systematic study has looked into between a polymeric acid and an acid-degradable fluoro- the actual role of magnesium ions. -
Nanoengineered Chiral Pt-Ir Alloys for High-Performance Enantioselective Electrosynthesis
ARTICLE https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-21603-8 OPEN Nanoengineered chiral Pt-Ir alloys for high-performance enantioselective electrosynthesis Sopon Butcha1,2, Sunpet Assavapanumat2, Somlak Ittisanronnachai2, Veronique Lapeyre1, ✉ ✉ Chularat Wattanakit 2 & Alexander Kuhn 1,2 fi 1234567890():,; The design of ef cient chiral catalysts is of crucial importance since it allows generating enantiomerically pure compounds. Tremendous efforts have been made over the past dec- ades regarding the development of materials with enantioselective properties for various potential applications ranging from sensing to catalysis and separation. Recently, chiral features have been generated in mesoporous metals. Although these monometallic matrices show interesting enantioselectivity, they suffer from rather low stability, constituting an important roadblock for applications. Here, a straightforward strategy to circumvent this limitation by using nanostructured platinum-iridium alloys is presented. These materials can be successfully encoded with chiral information by co-electrodeposition from Pt and Ir salts in the simultaneous presence of a chiral compound and a lyotropic liquid crystal as asymmetric template and mesoporogen, respectively. The alloys enable a remarkable discrimination between chiral compounds and greatly improved enantioselectivity when used for asym- metric electrosynthesis (>95 %ee), combined with high electrochemical stability. 1 University of Bordeaux, CNRS UMR 5255, Bordeaux INP, Site ENSCBP, 33607 Pessac, France. 2 School of Molecular -
8Th International Conference on Isotopes and Expo
th 2 0 1 4 8th International Conference on Isotopes and Expo Preparing for Tomorrow Sponsored by the Accelerator Applications, Preliminary Program Biology & Medicine, and Isotope & Radiation Divisions of the American Nuclear Society www.8ici.org August 24-28, 2014 Hyatt Regency-Chicago Chicago, IL SPONSORS Accelerator Applications Division Biology and Medicine Division Isotopes and Radiation Division 2 2014 International Conference on Isotopes and Expo: Preliminary Program www.ans.org Table of Contents Plenary Programs and Speakers Sponsors 2 Meeting Officials 4-5 Meeting Information and Special Events 6 Plenary Programs and Speakers 7 Meeting Schedule 8-9 Monday Technical Sessions 10-13 Tuesday Technical Sessions 14-18 Wednesday Technical Sessions 19-23 Thursday Technical Sessions 23-24 2014 8TH ICI Registration Form 25 www.8ici.org 2014 International Conference on Isotopes and Expo: Preliminary Program 3 Meeting Officials Honorary Chair: General Chair: Assistant General Chair: Myung-Chul Lee Paul T. Dickman Nigel R. Stevenson President, WCI Argonne National Laboratory Clear Vascular, Inc. President, Korean Association for Radiation Application Technical Program Co-Chair: Technical Program Co-Chair: Finance Chair: Rolf Zeisler Stephen P. LaMont James T. Tanner National Institute of Standard Los Alamos National Laboratory U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Technology (retired) Publications Co-Chair: Publications Co-Chair: International Program Director: Sam Glover Bryan P. Bednarz Gulbarshyn Bozheyeva University of Cincinnati University of Wisconsin-Madison MELE Associates, Inc. Executive Advisory Board Executive Advisory Board: Executive Advisory Board: JongKyung Kim Meera Venkatesh Ron Cameron WCI, Secretary-General IAEA OECD-NEA President, KAERI Executive Advisory Board Member: President Elect, WCI International Coordinator WCI: Ilham Y. -
The Electrosynthesis of Organic Compounds
The Electrosynthesis of Organic Compounds By Professor Martin Fleischmann, Ph.D., and Derek Pletcher, Ph.D. Department of Chemistry, University of Southampton reactions such as substitutions and cyclisa- The decelopment of electrochemical tions. routes in the industrial production of In order to explain the interest in electro- organic compounds is beginning to chemistry it is convenient to contrast electro- attract considerable interest. Already chemical reactions with homogeneous or two large-scale processes are in opera- heterogeneous reductions and oxidations tion, one producing adiponitrile from using hydrogen and air or oxygen. The free acrylonitrile, an intermediate step in the energy change, AGO, of these processes is manufacture of Nylon 66, and the other equivalent to a cell potential, E”, given by producing lead tetra-ethyl anti-lcnock AG= --nFE’ compounds. This article reviews the By referring to a scale of free energies or basic electrochemistry involved in this electrode potentials, Figure I, it is evident type OJ; synthesis and outlines the great that such spontaneous reactions are only pos- possibilities being opened up by ad- sible within the potential range limited by the vances in technique, in reactor design reduction of oxygen or the oxidation of and in the development of new types of hydrogen. This driving force only amounts electrode structures in which platinum to approximately 0.5 eV or 10 kcals/mole. By and its associated metuls will play an contrast, it is possible to carry out electro- important part. chemical reactions at potentials between +3.5 V and -2.5 V even in aqueous solution, if suitable electrolytes and electrodes are In recent years research in the field of chosen. -
Improving Microbial Electrosynthesis of Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) From
bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/214577; this version posted November 7, 2017. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. Improving microbial electrosynthesis of polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) from CO2 by Rhodopseudomonas palustris TIE-1 using an immobilized iron complex modified cathode Karthikeyan Rengasamy, Tahina Onina Ranaivoarisoa, Rajesh Singh, Arpita Bose* Department of Biology, Washington University in Saint Louis, St. Louis, MO, 63130, USA. Abstract Microbial electrosynthesis (MES) is a promising bioelectrochemical approach to produce biochemicals. A previous study showed that Rhodopseudomonas palustris TIE-1 can directly use poised electrodes as electron donors for photoautotrophic growth at cathodic potentials that avoid electrolytic H2 production (photoelectroautotrophy). To make TIE-1 an effective biocatalyst for MES, we need to improve its electron uptake ability and growth under photoelectroautotrophic conditions. Because TIE-1 interacts with various forms of iron while using it as a source of electrons for photoautotrophy (photoferrotrophy), we tested the ability of iron-based redox mediators to enhance direct electron uptake. Our data show that soluble iron cannot act as a redox mediator for electron uptake by TIE-1 from a cathode poised at +100mV vs. Standard Hydrogen electrode. We then tested whether an immobilized iron-based redox mediator Prussian Blue (PB) can enhance electron uptake by TIE-1. Chronoamperometry indicates that cathodic current uptake by TIE-1 increased from 1.47 ± 0.04 to 5.6 ± 0.09 µA/cm2 (3.8 times) and the production of the bioplastic, polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) improved from 13.5 ± 0.2 g/L to 18.8 ± 0.5 g/L (1.4 times) on electrodes coated with PB. -
TO POPE BENEDICT XVI and HIS FELLOW BISHOPS on the Occasion of the Pope’S April 2008 Visit to the United States
TO POPE BENEDICT XVI AND HIS FELLOW BISHOPS On the occasion of the Pope’s April 2008 visit to the United States Please join Voice of the Faithful (VOTF) in calling all Catholics to transform our Church. Join your voice with thousands of others who must raise our voices through petition because the Pope has scheduled no discussions or listening sessions with ordinary laity. Will he hear the concerns of the faithful without such conversations? We Catholics are still addressing the clergy sex abuse scandal, one of the worst crises in the history of our Church. One-third of those raised Catholic in the U.S. no longer call themselves Catholics, accord- ing to a recent survey. Numbers of priests are declining; many parishes and schools are closing; we face massive financial crises. Voice of the Faithful, with more than 35,000 members, proposes concrete solutions to address this crisis: 1. Treat survivors of sexual abuse with the justice and compassion our faith demands. 2. Hold bishops accountable to the people they serve. 3. Embrace full participation of Catholic men and women in Church decision-making. 4. Require full financial transparency and accountability in all governance matters. We believe these steps will produce: ▪ An open, transparent and accountable Church ▪ A participative Church embracing the gifts and talents of the baptized ▪ A Church governed by compassion, informed by justice, empowered by equality, and animated to act collegially We urge all clergy to listen to the voices of the faithful as we join together to inspire our Church to become a community of believers worthy of our founder, Jesus Christ. -
Biology Chemistry III: Computers in Education High School
Abstracts 1-68 Relate to the Sunday Program Biology 1. 100 Years of Genetics William Sofer, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ Almost exactly 100 years ago, Thomas Hunt Morgan and his coworkers at Columbia University began studying a small fly, Drosophila melanogaster, in an effort to learn something about the laws of heredity. After a while, they found a single white-eyed male among many thousands of normal red-eyed males and females. The analysis of the offspring that resulted from crossing this mutant male with red-eyed females led the way to the discovery of what determines whether an individual becomes a male or a female, and the relationship of chromosomes and genes. 2. Streptomycin - Antibiotics from the Ground Up Douglas Eveleigh, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ Antibiotics are part of everyday living. We benefit from their use through prevention of infection of cuts and scratches, control of diseases such as typhoid, cholera and potentially of bioterrorist's pathogens, besides allowing the marvels of complex surgeries. Antibiotics are a wondrous medical weapon. But where do they come from? The unlikely answer is soil. Soil is home to a teeming population of insects and roots, plus billions of microbes - billions. But life is not harmonious in soil. Some microbes have evolved strategies to dominate their territory; one strategem is the production of antibiotics. In the 1940s, Selman Waksman, with his research team at Rutgers University, began the first ever search for such antibiotic producing micro-organisms amidst the thousands of soil microbes. The first antibiotics they discovered killed microbes but were toxic to humans. -
Glass-Ionomer Cements in Restorative Dentistry: a Critical Appraisal Mohammed Almuhaiza
JCDP Glass-ionomer Cements in Restorative10.5005/jp-journals-10024-1850 Dentistry: A Critical Appraisal REVIEW ARTICLE Glass-ionomer Cements in Restorative Dentistry: A Critical Appraisal Mohammed Almuhaiza ABSTRACT make them useful as restorative and luting materials. Glass-ionomer cements (GICs) are mainstream restorative Glass-ionomer (GI) material was introduced by Wilson materials that are bioactive and have a wide range of uses, such and Kent in 1972 as a “new translucent dental filling as lining, bonding, sealing, luting or restoring a tooth. Although material” recommended for the restoration of cervical the major characteristics of GICs for the wider applications in lesions. It consists of a powdered fluoroaluminosilicate dentistry are adhesion to tooth structure, fluoride releasing capacity and tooth-colored restorations, the sensitivity to glass and a polyalkenoic acid. Polyacrylic acid is often moisture, inherent opacity, long-term wear and strength are incorporated into the powder in its dehydrated form, not as adequate as desired. They have undergone remarkable leaving the liquid to consist of water or an aqueous changes in their composition, such as the addition of metallic ions or resin components to their composition, which contributed solution of tartaric acid. The positive characteristics of the to improve their physical properties and diversified their use as GICs include chemical adhesion to enamel and dentin in a restorative material of great clinical applicability. The light- the presence of moisture, resistance -
Wayne County Death Index, 1934-1939 1 SURNAME FIRST
SURNAME FIRST NAME MIDDLE AGE DATE LOCATION BOX FILE Aaron Phillip W 305 4/21/1938 WD 21 16 Aarons Victoria 149 10/9/1937 EC 13 16 Abbeg Minnie Manning 160 7/13/1938 SM TP 21 8 Abbey Thomas J 180 8/7/1939 HP 30 16 Abbote Vito 165 3/3/1938 NK TP 23 7 Abbott Ada 180 3/2/1938 HP 22 3 Abbott Blanche Maude 152 5/24/1938 HP 22 7 Abbott Chester 155 10/21/1938 WD 21 20 Abbott Ira W 190 8/20/1935 WY 6 11 Abbott Melvin J 102 3/31/1936 WD 9 15 Abbott Roy 142 6/24/1937 WD 15 19 Abbott William C 184 9/28/1936 RM TP 8 14 Abell Ellen 163 2/20/1937 NK TP 17 8 Abelson James H 183 11/27/1938 NK TP 24 12 Aben Augusta 171 11/25/1937 LP 14 15 Abernathy Paul 152 4/3/1939 NK TP 28 16 Abjorson Sven J 148 8/2/1938 GPF 19 16 Abraham Anna 155 4/3/1938 HP 22 5 Abraham Fay 142 9/17/1939 WD 27 22 Abraham Frank Wilson 119 2/18/1937 HP 16 4 Abraham Omar 150 8/2/1938 NK TP 24 1 Abrahamson John 157 12/22/1937 NK TP 18 16 Abram William 175 11/3/1937 NK TP 18 12 Abshagen William 163 2/11/1937 NK TP 17 7 Acciaccafero Dora 159 5/21/1939 NK TP 28 23 Acker Baby 0 4/12/1936 ML 7 27 Acker William H 187 8/12/1939 HP 30 16 Ackerman Jessie W 165 5/31/1939 WD 27 18 Ackerman Leo 174 4/15/1935 NK TP 4 14 Ackermann Joseph M 167 4/15/1936 HP 10 7 Ackersville William 141 10/30/1935 HP 3 19 Ackley Robert D 106 6/28/1936 HP 10 12 Adach John 150 8/17/1939 NK TP 29 7 Adair Baby 0 8/28/1939 WD 27 21 Adair Kristine Ann 105 5/6/1937 WD 15 17 Adamczak Baby 0 7/8/1935 HM 1 29 Adamczak Veronika 301 1/14/1939 HM 31 1 Adamczyk Baby 0 8/3/1937 HM 14 8 Adamczyk Donald 204 2/6/1937 HM 14 2 Adamczyk -
Organizational Psychology, 2019, Vol
ORGANIZATIONALSCIENTIFIC E-JOURNAL PSYCHOLOGY www.orgpsyjournal.hse.ru ISSN 2312-5942 2019. Vol. 9. No. 4. Organizational Psychology, 2019, Vol. 9, No. 4. www.orgpsyjournal.hse.ru 2019. Vol. 9. No. 4. Editor-in-chief (National Research University «Higher School of Economics», Russia) Wladimir A. Stroh Deputy Editor-in-chief (Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia) SergeyManaging A. Lipatov Editors Olga Vovna (National Research University «Higher School of Scientific e-journal Economics», Russia) URL: www.orgpsyjournal.hse.ru E-mail: [email protected] Editorial Board Lyudmila N. Aksenovskaya (Chernyshevsky Saratov State University, Russia) Founder: Takhir Yu. Bazarov (Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia) Stephen Benton (Westminster University, UK) National research university Alexander V. Bulgakov (Moscow State Humanitarian University, Russia) Higher School of Economics Alexey S. Chernyshev (Kursk State University, Russia) Rolf van Dick (Goethe University Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany) Karina M. Gaydar (Voronezh State University, Russia) Eugeny N. Emelyanov («Consultig Center «SHAG», Russia) Anatoly V. Karpov (Yaroslavl Demidov State University, Russia) Anna B. Leonova (Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia) Sergey A. Lipatov (Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia) Sergey A. Manichev (Saint Petersburg State University, Russia) Eugeny B. Morgunov (Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences, Russia) Published 4 times per year Dmitry Myakushkin (South Ural State University, Russia) Evgeny N. Osin (National Research University -
Microbial Electrosynthesis for Acetate Production from Carbon Dioxide: Innovative Biocatalysts Leading to Enhanced Performance
Downloaded from orbit.dtu.dk on: Oct 04, 2021 Microbial electrosynthesis for acetate production from carbon dioxide: innovative biocatalysts leading to enhanced performance Aryal, Nabin Publication date: 2017 Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Link back to DTU Orbit Citation (APA): Aryal, N. (2017). Microbial electrosynthesis for acetate production from carbon dioxide: innovative biocatalysts leading to enhanced performance. Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Biosustainability. General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Microbial electrosynthesis for acetate production from carbon dioxide: innovative biocatalysts leading to enhanced performance PhD Thesis written by Nabin Aryal Supervisor Tian Zhang Co-supervisor Pier-Luc Tremblay © PhD Thesis 2017 Nabin Aryal Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Biosustainability Technical University of Denmark Kemitorvet 220, 2800 kgs. Lyngby Denmark ii Preface The following PhD thesis is written as a partial fulfillment of the requirement from the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) to obtain a PhD degree.