نتایج جستجو برای: and explosives slurry

تعداد نتایج: 16829060  

Journal: :Journal of environmental quality 2016
Tom Misselbrook John Hunt Francesca Perazzolo Giorgio Provolo

Storage of livestock slurries is a significant source of methane (CH) and ammonia (NH) emissions to the atmosphere, for which accurate quantification and potential mitigation methods are required. Methane and NH emissions were measured from pilot-scale cattle slurry (CS) and pig slurry (PS) stores under cool, temperate, and warm conditions (approximately 8, 11, and 17°C, respectively) and inclu...

Journal: :Veterinary parasitology 2014
Kiran Kumar Katakam Helena Mejer Anders Dalsgaard Niels Christian Kyvsgaard Stig Milan Thamsborg

Eggs of Ascaris suum from pigs are highly resistant and commonly used as a conservative indicator of pathogen inactivation during slurry storage. Eggs of Ascaridia galli, the poultry ascarid, are also known to be highly resistant but the suitability as an indicator of pathogen inactivation has never been tested. Pig slurry has to be stored for several months to inactivate pathogens but chemical...

Journal: :Journal of environmental quality 2014
Seok-Young Oh Yong-Deuk Seo

The feasibility of using biochar as a sorbent to remove nitro explosives and metals from contaminated water was investigated through batch experiments. Biochar, synthesized using various biomasses, showed a porous structure and a high surface area and includes embedded carbonate minerals. Compared with granular activated carbon, biochar was competitive as a sorbent for removing Cd, Cu, Pb, and ...

Journal: :journal of oil, gas and petrochemical technology 0
artur wodołażski central mining institute (gig) department of energy saving and air protection

in this paper, a cfd model of syngas flow in slurry bubble column was developed. the model is based on an eulerian-eulerian approach and includes three phases: slurry of solid particles suspended in paraffin oil and syngas bubbles. numerical calculations carried out for catalyst particles, bubble coalescence and breakup included bubble-fluid drag force and interfacial area effects. also, the ef...

2007
S A Formby

The pressure-time profiles produced by initiation in free-air of four commercial sector explosives covering a range of velocities of detonation are reported. The results indicate that there are no significant differences in the blast wave shapes from the explosives when measured between 5 and 20 m from the initiation point. The dependence of peak overpressure and positive phase impulse on scale...

Journal: :The Science of the total environment 2012
R B Brennan M G Healy J Grant T G Ibrahim O Fenton

Chemical amendment of dairy cattle slurry has been shown to effectively reduce incidental phosphorus (P) losses in runoff; however, the effects of amendments on incidental nitrogen (N) losses are not as well documented. This study examined P and N losses in runoff during three simulated rainfall events 2, 10 and 28 days after a single application of unamended/chemically amended dairy cattle slu...

In this paper, a CFD model of syngas flow in slurry bubble column was developed. The model is based on an Eulerian-Eulerian approach and includes three phases: slurry of solid particles suspended in paraffin oil and syngas bubbles. Numerical calculations carried out for catalyst particles, bubble coalescence and breakup included bubble-fluid drag force and interfacial area effects. Also, the ef...

Journal: :Journal of environmental quality 2005
O Grant Clark Brent Morin Yongcheng Zhang Willem C Sauer John J R Feddes

When livestock manure slurry is agitated, the sudden release of hydrogen sulfide (H(2)S) can raise concentrations to dangerous levels. Low-level air bubbling and dietary S reduction were evaluated as methods for reducing peak H(2)S emissions from swine (Sus scrofa) manure slurry samples. In a first experiment, 15-L slurry samples were stored in bench-scale digesters and continuously bubbled wit...

2003
Jerry J. Bromenshenk Colin B. Henderson Garon C. Smith

Honeybees offer the potential of using free-flying organisms to search wide areas for the presence of explosives, unexploded ordnance (UXO), and landmines. The use of bees is analogous to dogs for mine clearance, except that a colony of tens of thousands of bees can be trained in about one hour to fly over and search a field for explosives, does not require a leash, and will not set off any min...

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