Institution
Clemson University
Education•Clemson, South Carolina, United States•
About: Clemson University is a education organization based out in Clemson, South Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Control theory. The organization has 20556 authors who have published 42518 publications receiving 1170779 citations. The organization is also known as: Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina.
Topics: Population, Control theory, Poison control, Optical fiber, Fiber
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Current available information on the microbiological safety of chicken litter or chicken litter-based organic fertilizers is reviewed, and further research on developing novel and effective disinfection techniques, including physical, chemical, and biological treatments, are discussed as an alternative to current methods.
Abstract: Chicken litter or chicken litter-based organic fertilizers are usually recycled into the soil to improve the structure and fertility of agricultural land. As an important source of nutrients for crop production, chicken litter may also contain a variety of human pathogens that can threaten humans who consume the contaminated food or water. Composting can inactivate pathogens while creating a soil amendment beneficial for application to arable agricultural land. Some foodborne pathogens may have the potential to survive for long periods of time in raw chicken litter or its composted products after land application, and a small population of pathogenic cells may even regrow to high levels when the conditions are favorable for growth. Thermal processing is a good choice for inactivating pathogens in chicken litter or chicken litter-based organic fertilizers prior to land application. However, some populations may become acclimatized to a hostile environment during build-up or composting and develop heat resistance through cross-protection during subsequent high temperature treatment. Therefore, this paper reviews currently available information on the microbiological safety of chicken litter or chicken litter-based organic fertilizers, and discusses about further research on developing novel and effective disinfection techniques, including physical, chemical, and biological treatments, as an alternative to current methods.
210 citations
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TL;DR: Carbon dots have emerged to represent a highly promising new platform for visible/natural light-activated microbicidal agents and the excellent opportunities for potentially extremely broad applications of this new platform, including theranostics uses.
Abstract: Carbon dots (CDots) have emerged to represent a highly promising new platform for visible/natural light-activated microbicidal agents. In this article, the syntheses, structures, and properties of CDots are highlighted, representative studies on their activities against bacteria, fungi, and viruses reviewed, and the related mechanistic insights discussed. Also highlighted and discussed are the excellent opportunities for potentially extremely broad applications of this new platform, including theranostics uses.
210 citations
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TL;DR: The planarity and hydrophobicity of SOCs were two important factors determining the effects of NOM, solution pH and ionic strength on their adsorption by CNTs.
210 citations
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University of Washington1, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign2, University of British Columbia3, University of California, Davis4, Virginia Tech5, Clemson University6, Tufts University7, University of California, Berkeley8, Kent State University9, Rutgers University10, University of Cape Town11
TL;DR: The second special issue in Progress in Planning explores emerging research agendas in planning as mentioned in this paper, including disaster recovery, climate change, especially opportunities for mitigation; shrinking cities in the First World; and rapidly urbanising informal and impoverished cities in a global South.
209 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, phase transformations in solution treated and quenched Ti-(13-26) Nb-(22-38) Ta (wt.%) and Ti(13-35.5) nb-(5-22) Ta-(4-7.2) Zr alloys have been studied.
Abstract: Phase transformations in solution treated and quenched Ti-(13-26) Nb-(22-38) Ta (wt.%) and Ti-(13-35.5) Nb-(5-22) Ta-(4-7.2) Zr alloys have been studied. It has been observed that phase transformations in these alloys are sensitive to both composition and cooling rate. In ternary alloys, water and oil quenching resulted in the formation of orthorhombic martensite (α′′) in a retained β + ωathermal matrix, whereas slower cooling showed evidence of fine α and ωisothermal formation within the β matrix. Increase of Nb + Ta content decreases the volume percentage of martensite. Moreover, addition of Zr stabilized the β phase, lowered the martensite start temperature and suppressed ω formation. Finally, dynamic moduli of air cooled quaternary alloys showed that the modulus was sensitive to the composition, a minima at Nb/Ta ratio of 12.0 and 5 at% Zr being observed, this minimum in dynamic modulus being consistent with ω phase suppression.
209 citations
Authors
Showing all 20718 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Yury Gogotsi | 171 | 956 | 144520 |
Philip S. Yu | 148 | 1914 | 107374 |
Aaron Dominguez | 147 | 1968 | 113224 |
Danny Miller | 133 | 512 | 71238 |
Marco Ajello | 131 | 535 | 58714 |
David C. Montefiori | 129 | 920 | 70049 |
Frank L. Lewis | 114 | 1045 | 60497 |
Jianqing Fan | 104 | 488 | 58039 |
Wei Chen | 103 | 1438 | 44994 |
Ken A. Dill | 99 | 401 | 41289 |
Gerald Schubert | 98 | 614 | 34505 |
Rod A. Wing | 98 | 333 | 47696 |
Feng Chen | 95 | 2138 | 53881 |
Jimin George | 94 | 331 | 62684 |
François Diederich | 93 | 843 | 46906 |