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  • 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

Fragmentation studies of small molecules using synchrotron radiation

Melero García, Emilio January 2004 (has links)
<p>This thesis presents experimental data on the fragmentationof gas phase sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) and deutheromethane(CD4) molecules after their interaction with synchrotronradiation in the energy range of 70-200 eV. The data wasobtained using coincidence spectroscopy between energy resolvedelectrons and ions (EREICO).</p><p>Degradation of the molecular bond upon selective ionizationof different molecular orbitals has been studied by measuringionic fragments in coincidence with energy selected electrons.Besides the direct ionisation of the orbitals also the indirectprocess, in which the hole is created by the decay of a highlyenergetic core-excited state, was studied. The differencesdetected in the fragmentation after the direct and indirectionisation of a selected orbital can be related, in some cases,with the relaxation of the nuclei in the potential energysurface of the core excited state during its lifetime, thusproviding information on the neutral core excited state.</p><p>An experimental set-up capable of photon inducedfluorescence spectroscopy (PIFs) studies of core excitedmolecules in the visible range has been constructed. Thistechnique can yield complementary information to the EREICOdata about the energy distribution in the fragmentation sincethe internal energy of excited emitted fragments that decay inthe visible can be measured. It also allows the detection ofpossible neutral fragments.</p>
2

Synergy or segmentation? : students' perceptions of their learning across modular undergraduate programmes

Baron, Helen Susan January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
3

The price-size relationship: analyzing fragmenation of rural land in Texas

Miller, Crystelle Leigh 25 April 2007 (has links)
According to the USDA, Texas leads all other states in the loss of rural farming and ranching land. Most research on rural land value has been associated with trying to explain price per acre movements, yet few studies have analyzed the relationship of market factors such as size on the total purchase price. This research focused on the parcel size and price per acre relationship that exists for Texas rural lands. The objective of this research was to examine the relationship between size and price per acre of land parcels sold in Texas and to analyze the presence of fragmentation of agricultural lands. Data on Texas land sales of parcels greater than ten acres from 1965-2004 were used. The relationship between price per acre and parcel size was analyzed for Texas as a whole and for eight separate farmland regions. Each region was analyzed over eight time periods to test for changes in the land market for different periods. The results indicated a statistically significant inverse relationship between price per acre and parcel size which held in all eight regions and each of the eight five-year time periods. Personal income of the buyers had a greater influence on price per acre than net farm income. Fragmentation was verified by comparing percent of sales in eight categories of acres sold, ranging from 10 acres to over 1,280 acres. Over the time period 1966-2004, the percent of sales for smaller parcels, 21-40 acres, increased and for moderate size parcels, 81-320 acres, the percent of sales decreased. The increase in percent of sales for smaller parcels and the conversion of moderate size parcels of 81-320 acres into less than forty acre parcels, suggests that fragmentation has occurred. Furthermore, the percent of sales for parcels larger than 320 acres increased over the time period which mitigated the effects of fragmentation.
4

Mécanisme d'action des agents de mouture pour les matériaux cimentaires

Morasse, Stéphane. January 2000 (has links)
Thèses (Ph.D.)--Université de Sherbrooke (Canada), 2000. / Titre de l'écran-titre (visionné le 20 juin 2006). Publié aussi en version papier.
5

A novel photochemical approach towards the synthesis of gelsemine

Byrne, Paul January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
6

Fragmentation studies of small molecules using synchrotron radiation

Melero García, Emilio January 2004 (has links)
This thesis presents experimental data on the fragmentationof gas phase sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) and deutheromethane(CD4) molecules after their interaction with synchrotronradiation in the energy range of 70-200 eV. The data wasobtained using coincidence spectroscopy between energy resolvedelectrons and ions (EREICO). Degradation of the molecular bond upon selective ionizationof different molecular orbitals has been studied by measuringionic fragments in coincidence with energy selected electrons.Besides the direct ionisation of the orbitals also the indirectprocess, in which the hole is created by the decay of a highlyenergetic core-excited state, was studied. The differencesdetected in the fragmentation after the direct and indirectionisation of a selected orbital can be related, in some cases,with the relaxation of the nuclei in the potential energysurface of the core excited state during its lifetime, thusproviding information on the neutral core excited state. An experimental set-up capable of photon inducedfluorescence spectroscopy (PIFs) studies of core excitedmolecules in the visible range has been constructed. Thistechnique can yield complementary information to the EREICOdata about the energy distribution in the fragmentation sincethe internal energy of excited emitted fragments that decay inthe visible can be measured. It also allows the detection ofpossible neutral fragments.
7

'Islands' in an island: multiscale effects of forest fragmentation on lowland forest birds in Taiwan

Lin, Fang-yee 12 June 2013 (has links)
Intensive agricultural developments and increasing human population has caused severe lowland-forest loss and fragmentation in the western coastal plain in Taiwan over the past centuries. The goal of this study is to explore the multiscale impacts of forest fragmentation on species richness and community composition of lowland-forest birds in Taiwan. At a regional scale, Island Biogeography Theory was applied to examine area and isolation effects on species richness of lowland-forest birds using bird data derived from Breeding Bird Survey Taiwan in 2009 and 2010. I also investigate the differential responses of two functional groups (forest specialists and generalists) to area and isolation effects Furthermore, I examine the relative influences of environmental variables at regional, landscape and local scales on avian community indices and composition in northern Taiwan with a hierarchical multiscale approach. Finally, species vulnerable to forest fragmentation and the ecological traits associated with specie vulnerability to forest fragmentation were identified. Only forest specialist species responded to the regional-scale area and isolation effects. The species richness of forest specialists increased with the size of forest islands, and the community similarity of forest specialist species declined with increasing the distance from the sources of immigrants. Structurally isolated forests may not function as real habitat patches from the view of forest generalists because of their flexibility in utilizing the non-forest matrix. After accounting for the influences of environmental variables at other spatial scales, the regional-scale isolation effect still played a key role in determining avian community composition based on the  presence/absence data set. But local-scale forest condition also explained a considerable amount of variability in the presence/absence data set. The regional-scale isolation effect, however, didn't show significant influences on community composition based on the abundance data set. In contrast, the landscape-scale variables explained the largest amount of variability in the abundance data set at the entire community level. There were six bird species (Parus varius, Dicrurus aeneus, Treron sieboldii, Pericrocotu solaris, Erporniszan tholeuca and Alcippe brunnea) whose occurrence and abundance were both vulnerable to forest fragmentation. Habitat specialization was the ecological traits most strongly associated with their vulnerability / Ph. D.
8

Ions colliding with molecules and molecular clusters : fragmentation and growth processes

Chen, Tao January 2015 (has links)
In this work we will discuss fragmentation and molecular growth processes in collisions of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH) molecules, fullerenes, or their clusters with atoms or atomic ions. Simple collision models as well as molecular structure calculations are used to aid the interpretations of the present and other experimental results. Fragmentation features at center-of-mass collision energies around 10 keV are dominated by interactions between the fast ion/atom and the electron cloud in the molecules/clusters (electronic stopping processes). This electronic excitation energy is rapidly distributed on the vibrational degrees of freedom of the molecule or of the molecules in a cluster and may result in fragmentation. Here, the fragmentation is statistical and favors the lowest-energy dissociation channels which are losses of intact molecules from clusters, H- and C2H2-losses from isolated PAHs, and C2-loss from fullerene monomers. We will also discuss the possibility of formation of molecular H2 direct from native PAHs which reach high enough energies when interacting with ions, electrons, or photons. For the experiments at lower center of mass collision energies (~100 eV) a single atom may be knocked out in close atom-atom interaction. Such non-statistical fragmentation are due to nuclear stopping processes and gives highly reactive fragments which may form covalent bonds with other molecules in a cluster on very short time scales (picoseconds). This process may be important when considering the formation of new species. For collision between 12 keV Ar2+ and clusters of pyrene (C16H10) molecules, new molecules, e.g. C17H10+, C30H18+, C31H19+, etc are detected. We also observe molecular fusion processes for He and Ar ions colliding with clusters of C60 molecules. These and related molecular fusion processes may play a key role for understanding molecular growth processes under certain astrophysical conditions.
9

Mechanistic investigation into coenzyme B←1←2 enzymes

Ciceri, Daniele January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
10

Innocuité d'un nouvel agent spermicide (FTDBA) pour l'ADN des spermatozoïdes humains

Laforest, Geneviève January 2003 (has links)
Mémoire numérisé par la Direction des bibliothèques de l'Université de Montréal.

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