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Found 10000 publications. Showing page 292 of 400:

Publication  
Year  
Category

Elemental and organic carbon in PM10: A one year measurement campaign within the European Monitoring and Evaluation Programme EMEP.

Yttri, K. E.; Aas, W.; Bjerke, A.; Cape, J. N.; Cavalli, F.; Ceburnis, D.; Dye, C.; Emblico, L.; Facchini, M. C.; Forster, C.; Hanssen, J. E.; Hansson, H. C.; Jennings, S. G.; Maenhaut, W.; Putaud, J. P.; Tørseth, K.

2007

Electrochemical reactivity and wetting properties of anodes made from anisotropic and isotropic cokes.

Sommerseth, C.; Thorne, R.J.; Ratvik, A.P.; Sandnes, E.; Rørvik, S.; Lossius, L.P.; Linga, H.; Svensson, A.M.

2016

Electrochemical Behaviour of Carbon Anodes Produced with Different Mixing Temperatures and Baking Levels—A Laboratory Study

Sommerseth, Camilla; Thorne, Rebecca Jayne; Gebarowski, Wojciech; Ratvik, Arne Petter; Rørvik, Stein; Linga, Hogne; Lossius, Lorentz Petter; Svensson, Ann Mari

Anodes fabricated from a single source coke were used for investigations of effect of porosity and surface roughness on the electrochemical performance in laboratory scale cells. In order to fabricate anodes differing in porosity, the production parameters were varied with two levels of mixing temperatures (150 and 210 °C) and three baking levels (underbaking at 1150°E, normal baking at 1260°E, overbaking at 1350°E). °E denotes the equivalent temperature which is a function of both the temperature the anode sees, and the time kept at this temperature. The low mixing anodes were more inhomogeneous with respect to both micro- and macroporosity, which can be attributed to the wetting between pitch and coke. After electrolysis, the real surface area of the low mixing anodes was about 13% higher than the high mixing anodes. Also, the low mixing electrodes had slightly larger electrochemically active surface area after electrolysis compared to the high mixing electrodes, as evidenced by higher capacitance measured at low current densities. Still, the mixing and equivalent baking temperatures did not affect the electrochemical overpotential at 1 A/cm2 to any significant extent. This could be understood from the 3D computed tomography images, which also showed that the electrolyte does not generally penetrate into the pores on the surface, penetration will depend on the size and shape of the pore.

2019

Electrocatalytic performance of oxygen-activated carbon fibre felt anodes mediating degradation mechanism of acetaminophen in aqueous environments

Jakobczyk, Pawel; Skowierzak, Grzegorz; Kaczmarzyk, Iwona; Nadolska, Malgorzata; Wcislo, Anna; Lota, Katarzyna; Bogdanowicz, Robert; Ossowski, Tadeusz; Rostkowski, Pawel; Lota, Gregorz; Ryl, Jacek

Carbon felts are flexible and scalable, have high specific areas, and are highly conductive materials that fit the requirements for both anodes and cathodes in advanced electrocatalytic processes. Advanced oxidative modification processes (thermal, chemical, and plasma-chemical) were applied to carbon felt anodes to enhance their efficiency towards electro-oxidation. The modification of the porous anodes results in increased kinetics of acetaminophen degradation in aqueous environments. The utilised oxidation techniques deliver single-step, straightforward, eco-friendly, and stable physiochemical reformation of carbon felt surfaces. The modifications caused minor changes in both the specific surface area and total pore volume corresponding with the surface morphology.

A pristine carbon felt electrode was capable of decomposing up to 70% of the acetaminophen in a 240 min electrolysis process, while the oxygen-plasma treated electrode achieved a removal yield of 99.9% estimated utilising HPLC-UV-Vis. Here, the electro-induced incineration kinetics of acetaminophen resulted in a rate constant of 1.54 h−1, with the second-best result of 0.59 h−1 after oxidation in 30% H2O2. The kinetics of acetaminophen removal was synergistically studied by spectroscopic and electrochemical techniques, revealing various reaction pathways attributed to the formation of intermediate compounds such as p-aminophenol and others.

The enhancement of the electrochemical oxidation rates towards acetaminophen was attributed to the appearance of surface carbonyl species. Our results indicate that the best-performing plasma-chemical treated CFE follows a heterogeneous mechanism with only approx. 40% removal due to direct electro-oxidation. The degradation mechanism of acetaminophen at the treated carbon felt anodes was proposed based on the detected intermediate products. Estimation of the cost-effectiveness of removal processes, in terms of energy consumption, was also elaborated. Although the study was focussed on acetaminophen, the achieved results could be adapted to also process emerging, hazardous pollutant groups such as anti-inflammatory pharmaceuticals.

2022

El escarabajo verde - Ciudades

Castell, Nuria; Tarrasón, Leonor (interview subjects)

2019

Eksperter: Dette bør du ikke gjenbruke

Herzke, Dorte (interview subject); Eilertsen, Stine (journalist)

2024

Ekspert: Slik blir vi skadet av UV-stråling når sola gløder

Svendby, Tove Marit (interview subject); Kristiansen, Martin Næss (journalist)

2024

EIF-air. Environmental Impact Factor for assessment of emissions to air. Summary report. NIVA report, 5098-2005

Larssen, T.; Knudsen, S.; Bruteig, I.; Aarrestad, P.A.; Engen, S.; Kinn, S.J.; Johnsen, S.

2005

EIF-Air. Emissions from four different sources in the North Sea and the Norwegian Sea. NILU OR

Knudsen, S.; Mc. Innes, H.; Løken, T.; Larssen, T.; Høgåsen, T.

2007

EIF-air. Drilling, production and transport Norne. NILU OR

Knudsen, S.; Mc Innes, H.; Larssen, T.; Høgåsen, T.

2006

EIF-Air Phase II. Report. NILU OR

Knudsen, S.; Solberg, S.; Larssen, T.; Bruteig, I.

2005

EFOKS: Effekter av forurensninger og klimastress på skog. NILU PP

Solberg, S.; Kvaalen, H.; Andreassen, K.; Clarke, N.; Tveito, O.E.; Tørseth, K.

2004

Efficient use of a Lagrangian particle dispersion model for atmospheric inversions using satellite observations of column mixing ratios

Thompson, Rona Louise; Krishnankutty, Nalini; Pisso, Ignacio; Schneider, Philipp; Stebel, Kerstin; Sasakawa, Motoki; Stohl, Andreas; Platt, Stephen Matthew

Satellite instruments for measuring atmospheric column mixing ratios have improved significantly over the past couple of decades, with increases in pixel resolution and accuracy. As a result, satellite observations are being increasingly used in atmospheric inversions to improve estimates of emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs), particularly CO2 and CH4, and to constrain regional and national emission budgets. However, in order to make use of the increasing resolution in inversions, the atmospheric transport models used need to be able to represent the observations at these finer resolutions. Here, we present a new and computationally efficient methodology to model satellite column average mixing ratios with a Lagrangian particle dispersion model (LPDM) and calculate the Jacobian matrices describing the relationship between surface fluxes of GHGs and atmospheric column average mixing ratios, as needed in inversions. The development will enable a more accurate representation of satellite observations (especially high-resolution ones) via the use of LPDMs and, thus, help improve the accuracy of emission estimates obtained by atmospheric inversions. We present a case study using this methodology in the FLEXPART (FLEXible PARTicle dispersion model) LPDM and the FLEXINVERT inversion framework to estimate CH4 fluxes over Siberia using column average mixing ratios of CH4 (XCH4) from the TROPOMI (TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument) instrument aboard the Sentinel-5P satellite. The results of the inversion using TROPOMI XCH4 are evaluated against results using ground-based observations.

2025

Efficacy of individual and combined terrestrial and marine carbon dioxide removal

Sathyanadh, Anusha; Esfandiari, Homa; Bourgeois, Timothée; Schwinger, Jörg; Bergman, Tommi; Partanen, Antti-Ilari; Debolskiy, Matvey; Seifert, Miriam; Keller, David; Muri, Helene

Abstract Limiting global temperature rise below 2°C requires significant reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and likely large-scale carbon dioxide removal (CDR). This study assesses the CO2 sequestration and efficacy of two CDR approaches, Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) and Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement (OAE), applied individually and in combination. Using the Norwegian Earth System Model (NorESM2-LM), simulations were designed to ramp up deployment of BECCS and OAE, to an additional area of 5.2 million km² by 2100 for bioenergy feedstock for BECCS, and a CaO deployment rate of approximately 2.7 Gt/year for OAE within the exclusive economic zones of Europe, the United States and China. The combined land-ocean CDR simulation revealed a largely additive carbon removal effect. Over 2030-2100, OAE sequestered 7 ppm of CO 22 with an accumulated 82.3 Gt CaO, achieving a CDR effectiveness of 0.08 ppm (~ 0.17 PgC) per Gt CaO, while BECCS reduced 16 ppm of CO2, with CDR effectiveness of 3.1 ppm per million km² of bioenergy crops. Together, the carbon removal achieved by BECCS and OAE corresponds to anthropogenic CO₂ emissions of 5.4 Gt CO₂/year by 2100, slightly more than 60% of current global transport sector emissions. Notably, the efficiency of BECCS and OAE alone was unaffected by their concurrent deployment. Nevertheless, simulations revealed distinct non- linear interactions, such as declines in land and soil carbon sinks in the combined scenario. Furthermore, all simulations show negligible effects on the global annual mean temperature. These results highlight near-additive CDR responses even under net-negative emissions, but feedback on land and ocean carbon sinks must be considered when designing CDR portfolios. This study provides new insights into CDR portfolio design and Earth system feedback under an overshoot scenario, highlighting both their potential and the need for continued emissions cuts and supportive policies.

2026

Effekter av ulike tiltak for å redusere NO2-nivået - modellresultater.

Høiskar, B.A.K.; Sundvor, I.; Sousa Santos, G.; Vogt, M.; Haug, T.; Strand, A.; Fridstrøm, L.; Aas, H.

2016

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