• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Suspended solid levels in two chemically dosed sediment retention ponds during earthworks at SH20, Auckland

Jackson, Kate Maree January 2008 (has links)
Earthworking activities have the potential to accelerate soil erosion through vegetation clearance and soil compaction processes. The eroded sediment can have many detrimental effects on receiving aquatic environments, and thus its discharge is controlled under the Resource Management Act, 1991. Two chemically dosed sediment retentions ponds at the SH20 extension project in Mount Roskill, Auckland were investigated, and the impact of the discharge of one of these ponds on a receiving waterbody was assessed using the Stream Ecological Valuation (SEV) method. Rainfall and suspended solid data was collected for a nine month period between November 2006 and August 2007, although sampling did not commence at one of the ponds until March 2007. Two SEV samples were undertaken within the receiving waterbody; one in November 2006 and the other in November 2007 to assess environmental changes resulting from the sediment retention pond discharge. The suspended solids results measured within the sediment retention ponds during this study were much lower than those reported by other studies on earthwork sites. This is believed to be due to the effective implementation of sediment and erosion control measures onsite. The Somerset Road pond was very effective at removing suspended solids throughout the sampling period, with the majority of suspended solid removal occurring in the forebay as it typically did not become full enough to overflow into the main pond. When the forebay was full of water, the PAC dosing system resulted in large reductions in suspended solid levels over a short horizontal distance within the forebay. A smaller amount of suspended solid reduction was achieved in the main pond, predominately through dilution, with the major function of the main pond being additional storage capacity for runoff. Discharge from the Somerset Road Pond was not continuous due to low water levels in the main pond. However, when discharge did occur, the suspended solids levels were very low compared with other studies investigating sediment retention pond discharge. The Richardson Road pond was less effective at removing suspended solids due to the flow regime within the forebay. There were two runoff channels entering the forebay, as well as a continual flow of groundwater. Only one of the runoff channels was directly dosed with PAC, and as the water level in the forebay was typically at, or just below, the level spreader at all times, there was a decreased potential for the PAC to become evenly distributed through the forebay and achieve dosing of all runoff. Furthermore, the main pond discharged continuously during the study period, resulting in reduced residence times of runoff within the pond system. Nonetheless, the discharge from the main pond was much lower than other studies, implying suspended solid reduction was being achieved. The SEV method indicated that the receiving environment was already degraded due to modifications to the riparian vegetation, increased dissolved oxygen demand, and moderate bank erosion. This was reflected in the macroinvertebrate population, with only pollution tolerant taxa being collected, thus limiting the use of macroinvertebrates as an assessment tool in this study. However, the SEV method, which assesses a wide range of ecological functions, implied that very little environmental change occurred as a result of the sediment retention pond discharge. A small increase in deposited sediment was observed on the stream bed, however indications are that deposited sediment is rapidly washed away once earthworks are completed. Thus this deposited sediment may not have a permanent impact within the receiving environment.
2

Directing cell migration by dynamic control of laminar streams

Moorjani, Samira Gian 03 February 2011 (has links)
Interactions of cells with their chemical microenvironments are critical to many polarized processes, including differentiation, migration, and pathfinding. To investigate such cellular events, tools are required that can rapidly reshape the microscopic chemical landscapes presented to cultured cells. Existing chemical dosing technologies rely on use of pre-fabricated chemical gradients, thus offering static cell-reagent interactions. Such interactions are particularly limiting for studying migration and chemotaxis, during which cells undergo rapid changes in position, morphology, and intracellular signaling. This dissertation describes the use of laminar streams, containing cellular effector molecules, for precise delivery of effectors to selected subcellular regions. In this approach, cells are grown on an ultra-thin polymer membrane that serves as a barrier to an underlying reagent reservoir. By using a tightly-focused pulsed laser beam, micron-diameter pores can be ablated in the membrane upstream of desired subcellular dosing sites. Emerging through these pores are well-defined reagent streams, which dose the targeted regions. Multiple pores can be ablated to allow parallel delivery of effector molecules to an arbitrary number of targets. Importantly, both the directionality and the composition of the reagent streams can be changed on-the-fly under a second to present dynamically changing chemical signals to cells undergoing migration. These methods are applied to study the chemotactic responses of neutrophil precursor cells. The subcellular localization of the chemical signals emerging through pores is found to influence the morphological evolution of these motile cells as they polarize and migrate in response to rapidly altered effector gradients. / text

Page generated in 0.0868 seconds