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Institution

Curtin University

EducationPerth, Western Australia, Australia
About: Curtin University is a education organization based out in Perth, Western Australia, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Zircon. The organization has 14257 authors who have published 48997 publications receiving 1336531 citations. The organization is also known as: WAIT & Western Australian Institute of Technology.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors classify fluid flow types based on scale and degree of equilibration between fluid and rock, wallrock permeability, and mode of fluid transport, and provide an understanding of key factors that control fluid flow.
Abstract: Mechanisms for kilometre-scale, open-system fluid flow during regional metamorphism remain problematic. Debate also continues over the degree of fluid flow channellization during regional metamorphism, and the mechanisms for pervasive fluid flow at depth. The requirements for pervasive long-distance fluid flow are an interconnected porosity and a large regional gradient in fluid pressure and hydraulic head (thermally or structurally controlled) that dominates over local perturbations in hydraulic head due to deformation. In contrast, dynamic or transient porosity interconnection and fluid flow accompanying deformation of heterogeneous rock suites should result in moderately to strongly channellized flow at a range of scales, of which there are many examples in the literature. Classification of fluid flow types based on scale and degree of equilibration between fluid and rock, wallrock permeability, and mode of fluid transport contributes to an understanding of key factors that control fluid flow. Closed-system fluid behaviour, with restricted fluid flow in microcracks or cracks and limited fluid–rock interaction, occurs over a range of strains and crustal depths, but requires low permeabilities and/or small fluid fluxes. Long-distance, open-system fluid flow in channels is favoured in heterogeneous rocks at high strains, moderate (but variable) permeabilities, and moderate to high fluid fluxes. Long-distance, broad, pervasive fluid flow during regional metamorphism requires that the rocks are not accumulating high strains and have high permeabilities, low permeability contrasts, and high fluid fluxes. The ideal situation for such fluid flow is in situations where the rocks are undergoing stress relaxation immediately after a major deformation phase. In the mid-crust, fairly specific conditions are thus required for pervasive fluid flow. During active orogenesis, structurally controlled fluid flow (with focused open systems surrounding regions of closed-system behaviour) predominates in most, but not all, regional metamorphic situations, at a range of scales.

243 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of perceived socially responsible human resource management on employee organizational commitment (OC) in the Chinese context were examined and the results showed that, in general, SR-HRM is positively related to OC.
Abstract: In this paper, we introduced the concept of socially responsible human resource management (SR-HRM) and examined the effects of perceived SR-HRM on employee organizational commitment (OC) in the Chinese context. After examining the psychometric properties of the scales, hierarchical multiple regression analysis was utilised to test the research hypotheses. The results showed that, in general, SR-HRM is positively related to OC. After demographic variables were controlled, labour-related legal compliance HRM and general corporate social responsibility facilitation HRMs have a significant positive relationship with affirmative commitment (AC), continuance commitment (CC) and normative commitment (NC). Employee-oriented HRM has a significant positive relationship with AC and NC, but not CC. The relationship between SR-HRM and AC is stronger than those between SR-HRM and CC and NC.

243 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the state-of-the-art development of short fibre reinforced geopolymer composites and its mechanical properties with emphasis on compressive strength, tensile strength, flexural strength, impact strength and toughness capacities are discussed.

243 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A mixed ionic-electronic conducting (MIEC) double perovskite, PrBaCo2O5+δ (PBC), was synthesized and evaluated as the heterogeneous catalyst to generate radicals from peroxymonosulfate (PMS) for the oxidative degradation of organic wastes in aqueous solution.
Abstract: A mixed ionic–electronic conducting (MIEC) double perovskite, PrBaCo2O5+δ (PBC), was synthesized and evaluated as the heterogeneous catalyst to generate radicals from peroxymonosulfate (PMS) for the oxidative degradation of organic wastes in aqueous solution. A superior catalytic activity was obtained for PBC, which was much higher than that of the most popular Co3O4 nanocatalyst. More importantly, a detailed mechanism of PMS activation on the MIEC perovskite was proposed. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and radical competitive reactions suggested that both sulfate radicals (SO4•–) and hydroxyl radicals (•OH) participated in and played important roles in the catalytic oxidation processes. Oxygen temperature-programmed desorption (O2-TPD) demonstrated that the PBC perovskite oxide is capable of facilitating an easier valence-state change of the B-site cation (cobalt ions) to mediate a redox process. Additionally, the oxygen vacancies could facilitate the bonding with PMS molecules and promote the rea...

242 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although comorbidity differs among ADHD subtypes, there were no significant gender differences in comorbridity for externalizing disorders.
Abstract: Objective To examine gender differences in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (“ADHD”) symptom comorbidity with “oppositional defiant disorder”, “conduct disorder”, “separation anxiety disorder”, “generalized anxiety disorder”, speech therapy, and remedial reading in children. Method From 1994 to 1995, data from a large sample (N = 4,371) of twins and siblings studied in the Australian Twin ADHD Project were obtained by mailed DSM-IV-based questionnaires, investigating patterns of comorbidity in the three subtypes of “ADHD”: “inattentive”, “hyperactive/impulsive”, and “combined”. A total of 1,550 questionnaires were returned (87%) over the next 12 to 18 months. Results Analysis of variance showed significant between-group differences in males and females for inattention and hyperactive/impulsive symptom counts with higher rates of “oppositional defiant disorder” and “conduct disorder” in males, and higher rates of “separation anxiety disorder” in females indicating internalizing disorders are more common in females and externalizing disorders are occurring more often in males. Differences were found between the “ADHD” subtypes and the no ADHD category for all comorbid conditions, for both males and females. Children without ADHD consistently had fewer symptoms, while children with the combined subtype showed consistently more comorbid symptoms indicating a strong relationship between high rates of externalizing symptoms and high rates of internalizing symptoms. Gender differences in speech therapy were significant only for the children without ADHD. The rates of “separation anxiety disorder” were higher in females with the “inattention” subtype and the rate of “generalized anxiety disorder” higher for females with the “combined” subtype, indicating that the subtypes of ADHD were associated with these internalizing disorders in different ways. Conclusions Although comorbidity differs among ADHD subtypes, there were no significant gender differences in comorbidity for externalizing disorders. Inattentive girls may present with anxiety. Clinical approaches for both males and females should be sensitive to possible language and reading problems.

242 citations


Authors

Showing all 14504 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David Smith1292184100917
Christopher G. Maher12894073131
Mike Wright12777564030
Shaobin Wang12687252463
Mietek Jaroniec12357179561
John B. Holcomb12073353760
Simon A. Wilde11839045547
Jian Liu117209073156
Meilin Liu11782752603
Guochun Zhao11340640886
Mark W. Chase11151950783
Robert U. Newton10975342527
Simon P. Driver10945546299
Peter R. Schofield10969350892
Gao Qing Lu10854653914
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202398
2022454
20214,200
20203,818
20193,822
20183,543