scholarly journals Non-Specific Adsorption of Hydrocarbons on Microporous Surfaces: A Comprehensive Molecular-Statistical/Chromatographic Approach

1992 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 54-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.V. Aksenenko ◽  
Yu. I. Tarasevich

The results are presented of a series of investigations concerning the application of the molecular-statistical approach to the calculation of thermodynamic quantities for the adsorption of molecules in the Henry region on adsorbent surfaces possessing certain surface symmetry properties, and in particular for systems characterized by dispersion and polarization attraction and short-range atom-atom repulsion. Computational methods have been developed and the results for particular adsorption systems are presented with emphasis on the adsorption properties of layer silicates. Good correspondence between the calculated results and chromatographic data for a number of adsorbents strongly supports the view that the combination of chromatographic and molecular-statistical methods provides a powerful tool for the investigation of the structural and adsorption-selective characteristics of surface-porous adsorbents.

2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 903-910 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kann ◽  
T. Haiden ◽  
C. Wittmann

Abstract. During recent years, numerical ensemble prediction systems have become an important tool for estimating the uncertainties of dynamical and physical processes as represented in numerical weather models. The latest generation of limited area ensemble prediction systems (LAM-EPSs) allows for probabilistic forecasts at high resolution in both space and time. However, these systems still suffer from systematic deficiencies. Especially for nowcasting (0–6 h) applications the ensemble spread is smaller than the actual forecast error. This paper tries to generate probabilistic short range 2-m temperature forecasts by combining a state-of-the-art nowcasting method and a limited area ensemble system, and compares the results with statistical methods. The Integrated Nowcasting Through Comprehensive Analysis (INCA) system, which has been in operation at the Central Institute for Meteorology and Geodynamics (ZAMG) since 2006 (Haiden et al., 2011), provides short range deterministic forecasts at high temporal (15 min–60 min) and spatial (1 km) resolution. An INCA Ensemble (INCA-EPS) of 2-m temperature forecasts is constructed by applying a dynamical approach, a statistical approach, and a combined dynamic-statistical method. The dynamical method takes uncertainty information (i.e. ensemble variance) from the operational limited area ensemble system ALADIN-LAEF (Aire Limitée Adaptation Dynamique Développement InterNational Limited Area Ensemble Forecasting) which is running operationally at ZAMG (Wang et al., 2011). The purely statistical method assumes a well-calibrated spread-skill relation and applies ensemble spread according to the skill of the INCA forecast of the most recent past. The combined dynamic-statistical approach adapts the ensemble variance gained from ALADIN-LAEF with non-homogeneous Gaussian regression (NGR) which yields a statistical \\mbox{correction} of the first and second moment (mean bias and dispersion) for Gaussian distributed continuous variables. Validation results indicate that all three methods produce sharp and reliable probabilistic 2-m temperature forecasts. However, the statistical and combined dynamic-statistical methods slightly outperform the pure dynamical approach, mainly due to the under-dispersive behavior of ALADIN-LAEF outside the nowcasting range. The training length does not have a pronounced impact on forecast skill, but a spread re-scaling improves the forecast skill substantially. Refinements of the statistical methods yield a slight further improvement.


2003 ◽  
Vol 17 (16) ◽  
pp. 885-896 ◽  
Author(s):  
Su-Long Nyeo ◽  
I-Ching Yang

The phase transition of DNA molecules is studied in an exactly solvable formalism with the Morse and Deng–Fan potentials for the interstrand hydrogen bonds of nucleotide base pairs. It is shown that although the two potentials have different short-range behaviors, the thermodynamic quantities of the DNA system in these potentials enjoy the same scaling laws with the associated critical exponents, which are explicitly calculated. These exactly solvable DNA models are shown to exhibit a phase transition of the second order and the results of the analysis agree with previous studies.


Author(s):  
Ephraim Nissan

This article is a concise overview of a field which until the late 1990s did not exist in its own right: computer and computational methods for modeling reasoning on legal evidence and crime analysis and detection. Yet, for various kinds of forensic tests, computer techniques were sometimes used, and statistical methods have had some currency in the evaluation of legal evidence. Until recently it would not have been possible to provide an overarching review such as the present one.


1993 ◽  
Vol 07 (27) ◽  
pp. 4555-4593 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. CRAIN

Recent advances in the understanding of pressure-induced structural and electronic effects in semiconductors have been made possible through developments in both experimental and computational physics. It is shown that the A N B 8−N compounds which include the tetrahedrally coordinated III–V semiconductors exhibit a far richer degree of pressure-induced structural polymorphism than was originally believed. In addition, entirely new factors such as defects, short-range order and irreversibility have been identified as playing potentially important roles in the high pressure behavior of semiconductors. The experimental results are reviewed and discussed in the context of models which are amenable to investigation by modern theoretical and computational methods.


1948 ◽  
Vol 7 (03) ◽  
pp. 126-143
Author(s):  
Kennedy Williams

The purpose of this note is to develop some of the formulae of the classical theory of risk by a uniform treatment in which the “deaths’ column of the life table is considered as a discontinuous frequency distribution. The paper thus forms an example of the application of standard statistical processes to actuarial theory, and also supplies demonstrations of certain of the results quoted without proof in the survey by E. Lukacs. The aim has been to provide an elementary introduction both to an actuarial subject long neglected in this country, and to statistical methods of general utility.The paper owes its origin to a stimulating series of talks on the Theory of Risk, given by S. Vajda to the statistical Study Group of the Society. The particular approach adopted and the treatment of composite policies are thought to be original.


2013 ◽  
Vol 42 (18) ◽  
pp. 6450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Greig C. Shearer ◽  
Valentina Colombo ◽  
Sachin Chavan ◽  
Elisa Albanese ◽  
Bartolomeo Civalleri ◽  
...  

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