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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.
231

Diffusion fundamentals

Universität Leipzig 15 September 2015 (has links)
No description available.
232

Diffusion fundamentals

Universität Leipzig 15 September 2015 (has links)
No description available.
233

Modelling the geographical origin of rice cultivation in Asia using the Rice Archaeological Database: Modelling the geographical origin of rice cultivation in Asia using the RiceArchaeological Database

Silva, Fabio, Stevens, Chris J., Weisskopf, Alison, Castillo, Cristina, Qin, Ling, Bevan, Andrew, Fuller, Dorian Q. January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
234

Traveling Wave Magnetic Particle Imaging for determining the iron-distribution in rock: Traveling Wave Magnetic Particle Imaging for determining the iron-distribution in rock

Vogel, Patrick, Rückert, Martin Andreas, Klauer, Peter, Kullmann, Walter H., Jakob, Peter Michael, Behr, Volker Christian January 2014 (has links)
Determining the composition of solid materials is of high interest in areas such as material research or quality assurance. There are several modalities at disposal with which various parameters of the material can be observed, but of those only magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or computer tomography (CT) offer anon-destructive determination of material distribution in 3D. A novel non-destructive imaging method is Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI), which uses dynamic magnetic fields for a direct determination of the distribution of magnetic materials in 3D. With this approach, it is possible to determine and differentiate magnetic and non-magnetic behaviour. In this paper, the first proof-of-principle measurements of magnetic properties in solid environments are presented using a home-built traveling wave magnetic particle imaging scanner.
235

Accessible catalyst pore volumes, for water and organic liquids, as probed by NMR cryoporometry

Webber, John Beau W. January 2014 (has links)
Chemical reaction speed is frequently enhanced at a surface, particularly when materials like platinum are present. It is well known that porous materials such as sol-gel silicas, controlled pore glasses, templated porous materials such as SBA-15, MCM-41, MCM-48, and zeolites, offer large surface areas. This in turn makes them ideal for catalysing chemical reactions. Thus an important use for porous materials is as a substrate and media to promote chemical reactions. However small pores are not always easily accessed by some of the organic liquids in which these catalytic reactions ideally take place. Cryoporometric techniques offer the possibility of directly probing the fraction of a pore that is actually accessible to a probe liquid. This fractional volume has significant impact on the catalytic efficacy of a particular solvent that is used to promote a reaction in the pores. Pore size, pore geometry, pore throat, pore surface material (hydrophilic/hydrophobic) and choice of probe liquid all influence the accessible fraction. By performing an NMR cryoporometric measurement using a particular liquid of interest, it is possible to directly access this information, which is of prime importance for catalysis, and financially very significant on an industrial scale. Results are reported here for a set of liquids, some simple alkanes (dodecane, tetradecane and hexadecane) plus water and cyclohexane, accessing pores in sol-gel silicas of nominal pore diameters 60Å, 100Å, 200Å, 500 Å. The key conclusions were that for the alkanes, the dimension of chain length was not relevantto the filling fraction, however for the cyclohexane a molecular diameter of 3.8 Å fitted the data well.
236

Reconstructing undersampled MR Images by utilizingprincipal-component-analysis-based pattern recognition

Zong, Fangrong, D’Eurydice, Marcel Nogueira, Galvosas, Petrik January 2014 (has links)
Compressed sensing technique is a recent framework for signal sampling and recovery. It allows signal acquisition with less sampling than required by Nyquist-Shannon theorem and reduces data acquisition time in MRI. When the sampling rate is low, prior knowledge is essential to reconstruct the missing features. In this paper, a different reconstruction method is proposed by using the principal component analysis based on pattern recognition. The experiments demonstrate that this method can reduce aliasing artefacts and achieve a high peak signal-to-noise ratio compared to a compressed sensing reconstruction.
237

Surprises from single-particle imaging of passive and active diffusion

Granick, Steve January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
238

Hypothesis of unit rafts as organizers of the meso-scale domain structure and function in the plasma membrane

Kusumi, Akihiro January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
239

How diffusion might lead to non-linear response

van Hemert, Freek, Snaar-Jagalska, B. Ewa, Schmidt, Thomas January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
240

Weak ergodicity breaking for anomalous diffusion

Barkai, Eli January 2013 (has links)
No description available.

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