preparation variable
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2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlyn Muir ◽  
John Gilbert ◽  
Rebecca O’Hara ◽  
Lesley Day ◽  
Stuart Newstead

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the level of physical preparation for bushfire among Victorian residents in established high risk bushfire locations, and to assess whether these levels of preparation changed over time. Design/methodology/approach Data were analysed from a telephone survey among Victorian residents (n=614-629) living in high risk bushfire locations over a three-year period (2012-2014). The survey measured residents’ bushfire awareness, knowledge, planning, preparation and engagement with bushfire services. This paper focusses on the extent to which respondents undertook physical preparatory bushfire activities over the three-year period using: first, principal components analysis to generate a single preparation variable by identifying a smaller number of uncorrelated variables (or principal components) from a larger set of data, second, analysis of variance to assess differences in preparation scores between years, and third, Tukey’s honest significant difference test to confirm where the differences occurred between groups. Findings Results indicated only moderate levels of physical preparation for bushfires amongst respondents. The activities that respondents rated the lowest were: “having protective covers for windows” and “having firefighting equipment to protect the house”. A significant difference in total preparation scores over time was observed, F(2, 1,715)=6.159, p<0.005, with lower scores in 2012 compared with 2013 and 2014 scores. Social implications This study found some marginal improvements in levels of physical bushfire preparation from 2012 to 2014. However, the results indicate only moderate levels of preparation overall, despite respondents living in established high risk locations. Originality/value This study provides evidence for the current levels of preparedness in high risk bushfire communities, and emphasises the need for future initiatives to focus on specific bushfire preparation activities but also to consider the broader range of interventions that are likely to contribute to desired safety outcomes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 878 ◽  
pp. 101-107
Author(s):  
Guo Zhuo Gong ◽  
Ji Liu ◽  
Wen Fen Yang ◽  
Yun Yun Zhou ◽  
Hai Tao Sheng ◽  
...  

In the paper, a series of coal-based columnar activated carbons (CCACs) for adsorption of benzene were prepared using a factorial experiment method. The CCACs prepared were characterized, and their adsorption capacities toward benzene were measured in a differential fixed-bed reactor. Besides, through a statistical method, the importance degree of preparation variables was studied, and the effects of preparation variables on benzene adsorption capacities of the CCACs were fully evaluated. It was found that pore structure of CCACs prepared was beneficial for benzene adsorption, but preparation variable in the process has little effect on the surface chemistry of CCACs prepared. Based on statistic analysis, it was revealed that among the four process variables studied for the sorbent prepared in this work, the activation temperature was found to be the most significant one for benzene adsorption capacity, next ones are the activation time and the amount of KOH, and the last one is the flow rate of water vapor and their optimal levels were 950 °C, 3.0 h, 2.5 % and 1.25 mL/g/h respectively.


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