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Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm

Researcher at University of Maryland, College Park

Publications -  101
Citations -  4061

Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm is an academic researcher from University of Maryland, College Park. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nexus (standard) & Water scarcity. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 94 publications receiving 3377 citations. Previous affiliations of Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm include Florida International University & Inter-American Development Bank.

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Evaluation of nanoscale zerovalent iron particles for trichloroethene degradation in clayey soils.

TL;DR: Results suggest that TCE degradation in ORR clayey soil follows a pseudo-first-order kinetic model exhibiting reaction rate constants (k) of 0.05-0.24 day(-1) at varied iron-to-soil ratios, and a quantitative analysis of nZVI deactivation has the potential of predicting nZ VI longevity in order to improve the design strategy of TCE remediation.
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Humans drive future water scarcity changes across all Shared Socioeconomic Pathways

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the relative contributions of climate and socioeconomic systems on water scarcity under the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways-Representative Concentration Pathways framework and found that human systems dominate changes in water scarcity independent of socioeconomic or climate future.
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Seed limitation of woody plants in Neotropical savannas

TL;DR: This study shows that Neotropical savannah woody plants are strongly seed-limited because of low and poor distribution of seeds among sites, post-dispersal seed removal, and short seed longevity.
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Stochastic Analysis of Transport and Decay of a Solute in Heterogeneous Aquifers

TL;DR: In this paper, a stochastic analysis of transport and first-order decay for a solute plume in a three-dimensionalally heterogenous aquifer is presented, which shows that a spatially variable decay rate produces effects both in the transient and steady state characteristics of the effective decay rate, effective solute velocity, and longitudinal macrodispersivity.