Institution
British Columbia Institute of Technology
Education•Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada•
About: British Columbia Institute of Technology is a education organization based out in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Smart grid & Belief revision. The organization has 458 authors who have published 785 publications receiving 16140 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: An implementation of an IEC 61850-based real-time co-simulation platform for verification of the performance of a volt-VAR optimization (VVO) engine for smart distribution networks showed adequate performance of proposed VVO in grid operating scenarios.
Abstract: This paper presents an implementation of an IEC 61850-based real-time co-simulation platform for verification of the performance of a volt-VAR optimization (VVO) engine for smart distribution networks. The proposed VVO engine is able to minimize grid loss, volt-VAR control asset operational costs, and conservation voltage reduction operational costs through its comprehensive objective functions, weighted by fuzzification using advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) data. The optimization engine receives the AMI data stream through measurement aggregators. Moreover, it sends control commands to volt-VAR control components modeled in real-time digital simulator (RTDS) through DNP.3 protocol. To check the performance and the precision of proposed VVO, a fault scenario is imposed upon the system. IEC 61850 GOOSE messages are generated and sent to change the status of specified breakers, while the VVO engine receives system reconfiguration commands via IEC61850 Manufacturing Message Specification (MMS) protocol. The results of the study on 33-node feeder showed adequate performance of proposed VVO in grid operating scenarios.
78 citations
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TL;DR: Leaves of M. speciosa (kratom) had the most common documented ethnomedicinal uses as an opium substitute or remedy for addiction and other species of Mitragyna were reportedly used for treating pain, however the mode of preparation was most often cited as topical application.
78 citations
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TL;DR: The indices of plant diversity, floristic similarity indices, and species turno- ver rates indicated that the immature stands had their plant diversity at a minimum, but a drastic loss of diversity expected in the stem exclusion stage had not materialized.
Abstract: We studied plant diversity of the understory vascu- lar vegetation in 40 yr-old plantations (immature stands) and old-growth forest stands on southwestern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. Site-specific comparisons using several indices of species diversity were made between: (1) immature stands segregated according to the canopy cover and dominant canopy tree species; and (2) immature and old- growth stands. There were no significant differences ( P < 0.05) among immature stands in species richness (S) and the Shan- non-Wiener index (H'), in relation to the canopy cover or in S, H' and evenness (E) in relation to the dominant canopy tree species. Using the same indices, the plant diversity varied with edaphic conditions (represented by five site associations) and time (represented by two developmental stages). At both stand- and site levels, plant diversity increased with increasing soil moisture, from slightly dry to moist sites, and with in- creasing plant-available soil nitrogen in both immature and old-growth stands; and the plant diversity of immature stands across the sites studied was considerably lower than in old- growth stands, regardless of site association. The indices of plant diversity, floristic similarity indices, and species turno- ver rates indicated that the immature stands had their plant diversity at a minimum, but a drastic loss of diversity expected in the stem exclusion stage had not materialized. We attributed decline in plant diversity to the absence of old-growth struc- tural features in immature stands. Several measures to foster the stand-level diversity were proposed.
78 citations
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TL;DR: It is indicated that zinc intake should be routinely assessed in anorexia nervosa patients and that zinc supplementation of their diets may be indicated.
Abstract: Anorexia nervosa (AN) and zinc deficiency, found most frequently in young females, have a number of symptoms in common. These include weight loss, alterations in taste and appetite, depression, and amenorrhea. Approximately half of anorexia nervosa patients (ANs) are vegetarian (VANs), a practice that may increase their risk for zinc deficiency. This study compared the dietary intake of zinc and related nutrients in 9 outpatient VANs with that of 11 outpatient nonvegetarian patients with anorexia nervosa (NVANs). VANs reported significantly lower (p < .05) dietary intakes of zinc, fat, and protein, and a significantly higher (p < .05) intake of calories from carbohydrates than NVANs. There were no significant differences between the groups in dietary intake of calories, calcium, copper, iron, or magnesium. These findings indicate that zinc intake should be routinely assessed in VANs and that zinc supplementation of their diets may be indicated.
71 citations
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TL;DR: Environmental leaching results show that lead concentrations from CRT-Concrete are below the drinking water limits depending on the CRT volume replacement and if biopolymers are used.
70 citations
Authors
Showing all 459 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Michael Brauer | 106 | 480 | 73664 |
Sally Thorne | 58 | 242 | 15465 |
Anthony W.S. Chan | 37 | 105 | 4615 |
Thomas Berleth | 31 | 64 | 7845 |
Richard P. Chandra | 30 | 62 | 6941 |
Kirk W. Madison | 29 | 84 | 4238 |
David J. Sanderson | 29 | 61 | 2951 |
Zoheir Farhat | 24 | 90 | 1816 |
Rishi Gupta | 24 | 130 | 3830 |
John L.K. Kramer | 23 | 109 | 1539 |
Eric C. C. Tsang | 23 | 79 | 2875 |
Ellen K. Wasan | 22 | 55 | 2045 |
Paula N. Brown | 21 | 67 | 1275 |
Rodrigo Mora | 20 | 101 | 4927 |
Jaimie F. Borisoff | 18 | 86 | 1869 |