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Yasser A. Attia

Researcher at Cairo University

Publications -  66
Citations -  1621

Yasser A. Attia is an academic researcher from Cairo University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Catalysis. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 51 publications receiving 966 citations. Previous affiliations of Yasser A. Attia include Egypt Nanotechnology Center & University of Santiago de Compostela.

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Comparison of nanoparticles effects on biogas and methane production from anaerobic digestion of cattle dung slurry

TL;DR: The most effective concentrations of NPs additives were determined based on previous studies, and were 1.5mg/L Co NPs, 2.5 mg/L Ni NPs and 20 MG/L Fe NPs.
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Biodiesel production from microalgae: Processes, technologies and recent advancements

TL;DR: In this paper, the optimal bioenvironmental conditions for microalgae cultivation, process design of algal biodiesel production, physicochemical properties of lipids extracted from micro algae and the properties of the produced biodiesel fuel, and the transesterification process are discussed.
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Influence of zero valent iron nanoparticles and magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles on biogas and methane production from anaerobic digestion of manure

TL;DR: In this article, nanoparticles were hypothesized to enhance the anaerobic process and to accelerate the slurry digestion, which increases the biogas and methane production, and the best results of NPs additives were selected based on the statistical analysis (Least Significant Difference using M-Stat).
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Effects of Co and Ni nanoparticles on biogas and methane production from anaerobic digestion of slurry.

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of nanoparticles on biogas and methane production were investigated using a specially designed batch anaerobic system using a series of 2L biodigesters.
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Structure-directing and high-efficiency photocatalytic hydrogen production by Ag clusters

TL;DR: It is shown that sub-nanometric silver clusters can catalyze the anisotropic growth of gold nanostructures by preferential adsorption at certain crystal planes of Au seeds, with the result that the final nanostructure can be tuned via the cluster/seed ratio.