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Heather D. Willauer

Researcher at United States Naval Research Laboratory

Publications -  77
Citations -  9437

Heather D. Willauer is an academic researcher from United States Naval Research Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Aqueous solution. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 75 publications receiving 8697 citations. Previous affiliations of Heather D. Willauer include University of Alabama & Naval Air Systems Command.

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Macroscale evaluation and testing of chemically hydrogenated graphene for hydrogen storage applications

TL;DR: In this paper, 75 grams of hydrogenated graphene (graphane) were synthesized using a scaled up Birch reduction, representing the largest reported synthesis of this material to date, and a controlled release of H2 gas from the bulk material using a sealed pressure reactor heated to 600°C, identifying a bulk hydrogen storage capacity of 3.2
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Temperature effects on polymer-based aqueous biphasic extraction technology in the paper pulping process

TL;DR: In this article, the authors applied a polymer-based aqueous biphasic system (ABS) extraction to the paper pulping process, and the partitioning behavior of six model lignin species (Indulin AC, Indulin C, Reax 85 A, reax 825 E, Polyfon T, and Alkali lignins) were studied in PEG-2000/NaOH ABS prepared from stock solutions of 40% (w/w) PEG2000 and increasing concentrations of NaOH.
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Recycled Soybean Cooking Oils As Blending Stocks for Diesel Fuels

TL;DR: In this paper, methylated recycled restaurant soybean cooking oils were used as blending stocks for ground transportation diesel fuels for storage stability, filterability, fuel solubility, oxidative stability, and induced instability reactions.
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Incompatibility of Fischer−Tropsch Diesel with Petroleum and Soybean Biodiesel Blends

TL;DR: In this article, the storage stability of a three-part mixture consisting of Fischer−Tropsch diesel, a petroleum diesel, and a 5% and 10% soy biodiesel under ambient conditions is compared.
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Economic comparisons of littoral production of low carbon fuel from non-fossil energy sources and seawater

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the remote military installation at Diego Garcia as an economic and strategic example of the many possible future naval or commercial sites and scenarios that could be utilized for the production of sustainable low carbon fuel from non-fossil electrical energy.