scholarly journals City sewer collectors biocorrosion

2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariusz Ksia̧żek

AbstractThis paper presents the biocorrosion of city sewer collectors impregnated with special polymer sulphur binders, polymerized sulphur, which is applied as the industrial waste material. The city sewer collectors are settled with a colony of soil bacteria which have corrosive effects on its structure. Chemoautotrophic nitrifying bacteria utilize the residues of halites (carbamide) which migrate in the city sewer collectors, due to the damaged dampproofing of the roadway and produce nitrogen salts. Chemoorganotrophic bacteria utilize the traces of organic substrates and produce a number of organic acids (formic, acetic, propionic, citric, oxalic and other). The activity of microorganisms so enables the origination of primary and secondary salts which affect physical properties of concretes in city sewer collectors unfavourably.

1970 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 188-209
Author(s):  
Y. Minoura ◽  
M. Tsukasa

Abstract The reactions of rubber with aldehydes have previously been studied in latex or in solutions and the reaction products formed by cyclization, condensation, or addition, have been reported. In the present study, solid-state reactions of rubber with aldehydes were carried out. It was found that crosslinked rubbers may be obtained by press curing in the presence of aldehydes with acidic catalysts. Poly-chloroprene and Hypalon especially undergo these reactions without a catalyst or with a small amount of catalyst. In the experiments using various aldehydes, some improvements in the properties of the crosslinked rubber were observed when aldehydes such as paraformaldehyde or α-polyoxymethylene were used. Some Lewis acids such as SnCl2·2H2O were found to be more effective catalysts than the above, and it was found that organic acids such as p-toluenesulfonic acid could also be used. The curing seemed to be an ionic reaction. The physical properties of the crosslinked rubber are similar to those of sulfur-cured rubbers.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ella T. Sieradzki ◽  
Erin E. Nuccio ◽  
Jennifer Pett-Ridge ◽  
Mary K. Firestone

AbstractNitrogen is a common limiting nutrient in soil in part because most N is present as macromolecular organic compounds, not directly available to plants. The microbial community present in soil near roots (rhizosphere) is in many ways analogous to the human gut microbiome, transforming nutrients present in organic substrates to forms available to plants through extracellular enzymes. Many recent studies have focused on the genetic potential for nitrogen cycling by bacteria in the rhizosphere, and on measuring inorganic N pools and fluxes. Between those two bodies of knowledge, there is scarce information on functionality of macromolecular nitrogen decomposing bacteria and fungi and how it relates to life stages of the plant. This is particularly important as many soil bacteria identified in community composition studies can be inactive or not viable. Here we use a time-series of metatranscriptomes from rhizosphere and bulk soil bacteria and fungi to follow extracellular protease and chitinase expression during rhizosphere aging. In addition, we explore the effect of adding plant litter as a source of macromolecular carbon and nitrogen. Expression of extracellular proteases increased over time in the absence of litter, more so in the presence of roots, whereas the dominant chitinase (chit1) was upregulated with exposure to litter. Structural groups of proteases were surprisingly dominated by serineproteases, possibly due to the importance of betaproteobacteria and actinobacteria in this grassland soil. Extracellular proteases of betaprotebacterial origin were more highly expressed in the presence of roots, whereas deltaroteobacteria and fungi responded to the presence of litter. We found functional guilds specializing in decomposition of proteins in the rhizosphere, detritusphere and in the vicinity of aging roots. We also identify a guild that appears to specialize in protein decomposition in the presence of roots and litter and increases its activity in aging rhizosphere, which may imply that this guild targets rhizodeposits or the senescing root itself as a protein source. Different temporal patterns of guilds imply that rather than functional redundancy, microbial decomposers operate within distinct niches.


2012 ◽  
pp. 79-105
Author(s):  
Gianfranco Pomatto ◽  
Stefania Ravazzi

The article aims at analyzing the impact of deliberation on the dynamics of the conflicts in the policy making processes. We shall argue whether and how deliberation succeeds in stopping the typical escalation of the conflicts, lowering protests, generating more open-minded institutional decisions, reducing stereotypes and developing a new constructive approach in decision making. The analysis is based on the comparison of three recent cases of deliberative processes dealing with conflictual issues: a deliberative process on the hypothesis to write a bill regulating the use and power of the living will; a public debate on a new highway stretch in the city of Genova; a citizens' jury on the building of a small plant to dispose of industrial waste in the small tuscan town of Castelfranco.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 1568-1595
Author(s):  
Shaik Inayath Basha ◽  
Abdul Aziz ◽  
M. Maslehuddin ◽  
Shamsad Ahmad ◽  
Abbas Saeed Hakeem ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ashish Shukla ◽  
Nakul Gupta ◽  
Ankur gupta ◽  
Rajesh Goel ◽  
Sanjeev Kumar

1933 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 309-316
Author(s):  
E. R. Bridgwater ◽  
E. H. Krismann

Abstract These tests have clearly shown the desirability of compounding this polymer with zinc oxide, magnesia, and rosin, and have demonstrated that these three ingredients when used together have a desirable effect that cannot be obtained with, or even predicted from, the results obtained with any one of them alone or the combination of any two of them. It has been shown further that, although it is possible to obtain good vulcanized products from this polymer without the addition of sulfur, a great increase in the rate of cure and substantial improvement in physical properties of vulcanized products result from the use of as little as 0.5 per cent of sulfur on the weight of the polymer. it is further shown that pine tar and rosin oil may be substituted for rosin but that they are somewhat less efficacious. The authors postulate that the value of rosin, pine tar, and rosin oil is probably due to the organic acids that they contain. Coumarone resin and brown factice are shown to be desirable compounding ingredients for chloroprene polymers.


1994 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce E. Rittmann ◽  
John M. Regan ◽  
David A. Stahl

In complex, multispecies populations, exchange of substrates can be an important beneficial interaction. Prior experimental and theoretical work has led to the hypothesis that the formation of soluble microbial products (SMP) by nitrifying bacteria can provide a supplementary organic substrate for heterotrophic bacteria, thereby augmenting their accumulation and stability, especially when inputs of organic substrates are low. In this study, chemostat experiments carried out with a NO2−-oxidizing strain (Nitrobacter sp.) and an NH4+-oxidizing strain (Nitrosomonas europaea) demonstrated that both nitrifiers produce SMP that can support heterotrophic bacteria. The first evidence was the presence of significant concentrations of soluble COD in the chemostat effluent, even though the influent was free of organic compounds. Second, a small heterotrophic population was maintained, apparently through utilization of the nitrifier-produced SMP. A preliminary kinetic analysis suggested that SMP kinetic parameters can be adapted from parameters measured for heterotrophs.


AIChE Journal ◽  
1955 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 558-558 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morris Eisenberg ◽  
Pin Chang ◽  
Charles W. Tobias ◽  
C. R. Wilke

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