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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Environmental science & technology 25 (1991), S. 127-133 
    ISSN: 1520-5851
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Environmental science & technology 28 (1994), S. 1550-1560 
    ISSN: 1520-5851
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Ground water monitoring & remediation 21 (2001), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1745-6592
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
    Notes: Refractive flow and treatment (RFT) systems are designed for passive or low-maintenance in situ ground water remediation for rock or soil of low to moderate permeability. An RFT system captures and refracts contaminated ground water and conveys it to an in situ permeable treatment zone without the need for pumping. Flow to the treatment zone is through one or more high-permeability collection cells, and flow from the treatment zone back into the adjacent native media is through one or more high-permeability dispersal cells.Conceptual, analytical, and numerical modeling demonstrates the potential for RFT systems to be successful. Analytical modeling shows that the most important factor for this success is that RFT system components be engineered to have comparatively high hydraulic conductivities. A numerical model, capable of representing site-specific conditions, is required for actual RFT system design.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Palo Alto, Calif. : Annual Reviews
    Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering 4 (2002), S. 93-107 
    ISSN: 1523-9829
    Source: Annual Reviews Electronic Back Volume Collection 1932-2001ff
    Topics: Technology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The new field of therapeutic aerosol bioengineering (TAB), driven primarily by the medical need for inhaled insulin, is now expanding to address medical needs ranging from respiratory to systemic diseases, including asthma, growth deficiency, and pain. Bioengineering of therapeutic aerosols involves a level of aerosol particle design absent in traditional therapeutic aerosols, which are created by conventionally spraying a liquid solution or suspension of drug or milling and mixing a dry drug form into respirable particles. Bioengineered particles may be created in liquid form from devices specially designed to create an unusually fine size distribution, possibly with special purity properties, or solid particles that possess a mixture of drug and excipient, with designed shape, size, porosity, and drug release characteristics. Such aerosols have enabled several high-visibility clinical programs of inhaled insulin, as well as earlier-stage programs involving inhaled morphine, growth hormone, beta-interferon, alpha-1-antitrypsin, and several asthma drugs. The design of these aerosols, limited by partial knowledge of the lungs' physiological environment, and driven largely at this stage by market forces, relies on a mixture of new and old science, pharmaceutical science intuition, and a degree of biological-impact empiricism that speaks to the importance of an increased level of academic involvement.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Industrial & engineering chemistry 36 (1944), S. 1038-1040 
    ISSN: 1520-5045
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Physics of Fluids 5 (1993), S. 837-848 
    ISSN: 1089-7666
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Darcy-scale convective–diffusive–reactive phenomenological coefficients characterizing the transport of a reactive solute through the interstices of a two-dimensional, spatially periodic, model porous medium (on whose surfaces the solute undergoes a first-order, irreversible chemical reaction) are herein determined numerically as functions of the microscale Péclet (Pe), Damköhler (Da), and Reynolds (Re) numbers. The role of bed porosity cursive-epsilon and (circular) cylindrical array configuration are also studied, the latter encompassing square, staggered, and hexagonal arrays. Calculations are effected via generalized Taylor dispersion theory. The Darcy-scale reactivity coefficient K¯* characterizing the effective (first-order, irreversible) volumetric reaction rate is found, inter alia, to be (approximately) inversely proportional to Pe, a conclusion confirmed by analytical results for the limiting case of small Da. Configurational properties of the porous medium are observed to significantly influence K¯*, especially for small porosities and large Da. Moreover, it is found that the mean interstitial velocity vector U¯* of the reactive solute generally differs (often dramatically) from the comparable velocity vector (1/cursive-epsilon)U¯ of the (inert) solvent as a consequence of the chemical reaction occurring at the surfaces of the cylindrical bed particles. These data reveal that the mean solute speed ||U¯*|| through the interstices may be larger or smaller than the comparable solvent speed (1/cursive-epsilon)||U¯||, depending upon the existence and nature of a diffusive boundary layer adhering to the cylindrical bed-particle surfaces. Finally, the longitudinal and lateral components of the solute's (transversely isotropic) dispersivity dyadic D¯*, parallel and perpendicular, respectively, to the direction of mean flow, are generally observed to decrease with increasing Da. This behavior stems from the fact that, in the diffusion boundary-layer limit, an increasing proportion of the total depletion of solute (via microscale reaction at the cylinder surfaces) arises from those interstitial zones characterized by the existence of large velocity gradients.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Physics of Fluids 5 (1993), S. 506-508 
    ISSN: 1089-7666
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: The role of interfacial viscosities in a two-dimensional vertically falling liquid film is examined. A nonlinear evolution equation for the free interface displacement from planar shape is found to possess classical form (i.e., combining the Korteweg–de Vries and Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equations), with interfacial viscosities supporting the existence of a dispersive term whose physical role has formerly been shown in the literature to effect an ordering of interfacial disturbances in the form of solitonlike patterns.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Industrial & engineering chemistry 40 (1948), S. 1105-1112 
    ISSN: 1520-5045
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
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    Unknown
    Dordrecht : Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
    Synthese. 65:3 (1985:dec.) 445 
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  • 10
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    Unknown
    Dordrecht : Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
    Synthese. 42:1 (1979:sept.) 1 
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