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Institution

Adama University

EducationNazrēt, Ethiopia
About: Adama University is a education organization based out in Nazrēt, Ethiopia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Adsorption. The organization has 840 authors who have published 1010 publications receiving 5547 citations. The organization is also known as: Adama Science and Technology University & ቴክኖሎጂ ዩኒቨርሲቲ, አዳማ ሳይንስና ቴክኖሎጂ ዩኒቨርሲቲ.


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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2021
TL;DR: In this article, the structural, morphological, and electrochemical properties of the prepared carbonized flakes epoxy (CFE) electrode has been analyzed using various characterization techniques and the electrochemical double layer capacitance behavior of the activated carbon has been evaluated.
Abstract: The present study confirms the application of phytochemicals of Lemon rind (LR) towards the synthesis of activated carbon using a low temperature carbonization method. The structural, morphological, and electrochemical properties of the prepared carbonized flakes epoxy (CFE) electrode has been analyzed using various characterization techniques. The electrochemical double layer capacitance (EDLC) behavior of the LR-activated carbon has been evaluated. The synthesized LR-activated carbon material exhibited flake like structure along with hydroxyl groups as confirmed by studies by scanning electron microscope (SEM), X-ray diffractometer (XRD), and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscope. In addition, the band gap energy (Eg) has been estimated using diffused reflectance spectroscopy (DRS-UV-Vis) and found to be 2.06 eV. The electrochemical property of CFE-electrode was studied utilizing cyclic voltammetric (CV) and electrochemical impedance spectroscopic (EIS) techniques. The galvanostatic charge–discharge tests for this prepared carbon flake electrode demonstrated excellent capacitance performance, making it favorable for the fabrication of supercapacitors. These progressive results could be considered for the enlargement of novel assets to scale for power-storage utility using low-cost carbon materials in various energy storage applications as well.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The original version of this article unfortunately contained two mistakes in the “Materials and methods” section, subsection “DNA extraction and PCR” of the article.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a micro-structural investigation of the aluminum (AA1100) feedstock material of 9.5mm diameter has been carried out at various extrusion wheel speeds and diameter of product before and after deformation on commercial continuous extrusion setup TBJ350.
Abstract: The challenge encountered in continuous forming process is the variation in mechanical strength of product formed with respect to process variables like extrusion wheel speed and diameter of product. In this research article, the micro-structural investigation of the aluminum (AA1100) feedstock material of 9.5-mm diameter has been carried out at various extrusion wheel speeds and diameter of product before and after deformation on commercial continuous extrusion setup TBJ350. The mechanical properties like yield strength as well as percentage elongation have been estimated and optimized using two variables with 3 levels through central composite rotatable design (CCRD) method. The mathematical modeling has been carried out to predict the optimum combination of process parameters for obtaining maximum value of yield strength and percentage elongation. The statistical significance of mathematical model is verified through analysis of variance (ANOVA). The optimum value of yield strength is found to be 70.939 MPa at wheel velocity of 8.63 rpm and product diameter of 9 mm respectively, whereas the maximum percentage elongation recorded is 46.457 at wheel velocity of 7.06 rpm and product diameter of 7.18 mm. The outcome may be useful in obtaining the best parametric combination of wheel speed and extrusion ratio for best strength of the product.

2 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
06 May 2021
TL;DR: In this article, the design technique based on the well-established concept of PV-STATCOM is implemented and the dual functionality of the proposed system to regulate the reliable voltage at PCC and mitigate low voltage issues is demonstrated through MATLAB simulation to make reliable effective use of available resources Arduino controller is used to switch between the functions depending on the system requirement.
Abstract: The design technique based on the well-established concept of PV-STATCOM is implemented. The main task towards the achievement of more reliable increased integration of distributed energy resources on to the grid requires new pattern shift to improve the efficiency as well as overall performance of the system. The inverter which can act as smart inverter by controlling active and reactive power, frequency control and regulation of voltage and power factor apart from its typical function of DC to AC conversion could be a potential solution. PV inverter based reactive power control strategies. The control algorithm is based on balancing the power production from a solar PV depends directly on solar isolation. Hence the solar PV remains idle when there is no isolation. Solar PV along with its inverter resembles the functionality of STATCOM. The PV-STATCOM concept allows utilization of solar farm throughout the day. During daytime, real power generation takes place normally and switches to compensate dynamic reactive power needs on critical times. The dual functionality of the proposed system to regulate the reliable voltage at PCC and mitigate low voltage issues is demonstrated through MATLAB simulation to make reliable effective use of available resources Arduino controller is used to switch between the functions depending on the system requirement.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
04 May 2021
TL;DR: AMF inoculation of C. africana seedlings could be merited and under wide range of field conditions and after-planting care could be more appropriate.
Abstract: . Asmelash F, Bekele T, Belay Z, Kebede F. 2021. Cordia africana but not Juniperus procera and Podocarpus falcatus respond positively to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi at the early stages of seedling development. Biodiversitas 22: 2971-2980. AMF (Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi) inoculation could be an important technology to improve the growth and field survival of trees. Hence, we evaluated the mycorrhizal responsiveness of Cordia africana Lam., Juniperus procera (Hoechst. ex Endl.), and Podocarpus falcatus (Thumb.) Mirb. seedlings. Seedlings germinated on sterile sand were transplanted to 1-liter plastic pots filled with sterile and non-sterile degraded bulk soil. Rhizospheric soil from adult C. africana and J. procera were used as whole-soil AMF inocula. Cordia africana and J. procera received conspecific whole-soil AMF inocula while P. falcatus received J. procera inoculum. Hence, in the two-by-two factorial experiment, we also evaluated the growth effects of AMF inoculation, soil type, and their interaction. On the sterile potting soil, MRi (mycorrhizal responsiveness due to AMF inoculation) of C. africana was positive and significantly (p<0.05) greater than the MRi of J. procera and P. falcatus. However, on the non-sterile potting soil, it was significantly greater than the MRi of P. falcatus only. MRs (MR due to the existing potting soil inocula) and considering all growth variables were mostly positive for C. africana but negative for J. procera and P. falcatus. AMF inoculation significantly increased most growth variables of C. africana seedlings and no significant “inoculation” x “soil type” interaction effects were detected. Hence, AMF inoculation of C. africana seedlings could be merited and under wide range of field conditions. In the case of J. procera and P. falcatus, after-planting care could be more appropriate

2 citations


Authors

Showing all 856 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Delfim F. M. Torres6070114369
Trilok Singh5437310286
Dattatray J. Late4620511647
Jung Ho Je403286264
Gobena Ameni372074732
Jong Heo372555289
Mahendra A. More362684871
Gyanendra Singh322483198
Dilip S. Joag301273014
Tesfaye Biftu281293225
Salmah Ismail22792151
Rabab Mohammed21921785
Mooha Lee1649821
T. Ganesh1526735
Pandi Anandakumar1518777
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20239
202226
2021332
2020203
2019125
2018101