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Found 2227 publications. Showing page 72 of 223:

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Year  
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Final report. Experimental Study Investigating Risks of selected Amines (ExSIRA). Task 4: Atmospheric corrosion due to amines. NILU OR

Grøntoft, T.; Ofstad, T.

The effect of selected amines on the corrosion of carbon steel and copper was investigated in the laboratory and in the field. The steel and copper samples were exposed to loads of the amines in the laboratory, representing possible 10 years maximum real exposure due to emission from a CO2 capturing plant, and to higher doses in the laboratory and in the field. No effect on the corrosion rate for steel was detected for the application of a possible 10 years real maximum dose of the amines in the laboratory as compared to blanks. Application of 700 times higher doses of amines in the laboratory was observed to give anodic protection, and thus reduced corrosion, of steel samples, but to dissolve the surface of a copper sample. The anodic protection was due to the formation of an amine surface film that protected the sample form oxidation. The dissolution of copper was probably due to formation of a copper-amine complex at high pH. A slight increase in corrosion was observed for samples that were exposed to the equivalent of possible 65 years maximum real exposure of amines in the field. This may be explained by freezing point depression and increased time of wetness of the sample surfaces due to accumulation of the amine solute on the sample surfaces in the season with frost.

2013

Using UncertWeb for improved decision making. UncertWeb Consortium Deliverable 3.5.

Heuvelink, G.; Helle, K.; Pebesma, E.; Rasouli, S.; Stasch, C.; Truong, P.; Walker, S.E.

2013

Report on integrating the traffic/individual modelling with the air quality modelling. UncertWeb Consortium Deliverable 8.3.

Gerharz, L.; Helle, K.; Pebesma, E.; Pross, B.; Stasch, C.; Rasouli, S.; Timmermans, H.; Denby, B.; Walker, S.E.

2013

Measurement, effect assessment and mitigation of pollutant impact on movable cultural assets. Innovative research for market transfer. Project final report. MEMORI. Grant agreement no. 265132.

Dahlin, E.; Grøntoft, T.; Wittstadt, K.; Drda-Kühn, K.; Colombini, M.P.; Bonaduce, I.; Vandenabeele, P.; Larsen, R.; Potthast, A.; Marincas, O.; Schieweck, A.; Thicket, D.; Odlyha, M.; Andrade, G.; Hackney, S.; McDonagh, C.; Ackerman, J.J.

2013

Real-world application of new sensor technologies for air quality monitoring. ETC/ACM Technical Paper, 2013/16

Castell, N.; Viana, M.; Minguillon, M.C.; Guerreiro, C.; Querol, X.

2013

Measurement of volcanic ash in Norwegian air space. WP 1.4.3 Improved estimates of ash cloud top temperature and surface temperature. NILU OR

Kylling, A.

For retrieval of ash mass loading from infrared satellite measurements, estimates of the ash cloud temperature and the surface temperature are required. The ash cloud temperature and surface temperature may be taken from satellite measurements, weather model forecast, or deduced by satellite retrievals.
The report describes various methods to estimate the ash cloud temperatue and surface temperature. The impact of varying cloud temperature and surface temperature on the signal measured by an IR-sensor in space is investigated.

2013

Measurement of volcanic ash in Norwegian air space. WP 1.4.4 Reduced uncertainty in satellite-based estimates of ash concentrations. NILU OR

Kylling, A.

Satellite-based measurements of volcanic ash give the total amount of volcanic ash per area, typically in units of grams of volcanic ash per square meter. To convert this to concentration the vertical thickness of the ash cloud is needed. The ash cloud thickness is not available from passive remote sensors, e.g. IR-sensors, but may be obtained from ground- and space-based lidars. Dispersion models will also provide information of the ash thickness.
This report gives an overview of volcanic ash cloud thickness as observed by space, aircraft and ground-based lidars. Also, ash cloud thickness as simulated by the Flexpart particle dispersion model is analysed. The impact of varying cloud thickness on the signal measured by IR-sensor in space is investigated. Focus is on the Eyjafjallajokull 2010 eruption for which a unique wealth of data are available.

2013

Measurement of volcanic ash in Norwegian air space. WP 1.4.2 Improved detection of ash clouds. NILU OR

Kylling, A.

Water and ice clouds and temperature conditions may often influence the detection of volcanic ash affected pixels in infrared satellite images. Several methods are available for the detection of ash clouds in SEVIRI images. Manual adjustments to the methods are often needed for a given ash situation. The report describes various methods for detection of ash affected pixels. A quantitative comparison of the methods is made based on synthetic SEVIRI images from the 2010 Eyafjallajokull eruption.

2013

Modellering av vulkanaske i norsk luftfrom. Pkt. 1.3 Enkle forbedringer av utslippsestimat. NILU OR

Kristiansen, N.I.

The report describes how a transport model is used to simulate the emission of ash from volcanic eruptions and how the ash emissions can be described in the model. A number of methods for calculating ash emissions are presented and the development of improved ash emissions by manual analysis of satellite data is presented.

2013

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