Institution
DECHEMA
Nonprofit•Frankfurt am Main, Germany•
About: DECHEMA is a nonprofit organization based out in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Corrosion & Oxide. The organization has 756 authors who have published 1307 publications receiving 25693 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: It is argued that transferring knowledge from photobiotechnology to electrobiotechnology can speed up the development of the emerging field of electrobiotech, and a combination of scale up and numbering up may well lead to industrially relevant scales in electrobiotechnological processes allowing an industrial application of the technology in near future.
Abstract: Facing energy problems, there is a strong demand for new technologies dealing with the replacement of fossil fuels. The emerging fields of biotechnology, photobiotechnology and electrobiotechnology, offer solutions for the production of fuels, energy, or chemicals using renewable energy sources (light or electrical current e.g. produced by wind or solar power) or organic (waste) substrates. From an engineering point of view both technologies have analogies and some similar challenges, since both light and electron transfer are primarily surface-dependent. In contrast to that, bioproduction processes are typically volume dependent. To allow large scale and industrially relevant applications of photobiotechnology and electrobiotechnology, this opinion first gives an overview over the current scales reached in these areas. We then try to point out the challenges and possible methods for the scale up or numbering up of the reactors used. It is shown that the field of photobiotechnology is by now much more advanced than electrobiotechnology and has achieved industrial applications in some cases. We argue that transferring knowledge from photobiotechnology to electrobiotechnology can speed up the development of the emerging field of electrobiotechnology. We believe that a combination of scale up and numbering up, as it has been shown for several photobiotechnological reactors, may well lead to industrially relevant scales in electrobiotechnological processes allowing an industrial application of the technology in near future.
21 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a number of parameters can be used to characterize the behavior of oxide scales under mechanical loading quantitatively, such as elastic and plastic or creep properties as well as fracture mechanical properties.
Abstract: The protective effect of oxide scales is strongly linked with their behaviour under mechanical loading. Scale cracking may occur at relatively low strains and a decisive part is played by the process of scale crack healing due to ongoing oxidation. It can even be maintained that many technical high temperature materials only survive in service for a long time due to the good healing capability of the protective oxide scales formed on them. This illustrates the fact that the characterization of the mechanical behaviour of protective oxide scales also has to include oxidation-induced effects. In order to characterize the behaviour of protective scales under mechanical loading quantitatively a number of parameters can be used. On the one hand, there are the conventional parameters used for bulk materials as well, such as elastic and plastic or creep properties as well as fracture mechanical properties. On the other hand, for growing oxide scales parameters describing the oxidation-related mechanical properti...
21 citations
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21 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, an effective approach combining electrochemical impedance spectroscopy with other spectroscopic techniques such as UV-vis and electron paramagnetic resonance was proposed to derive important information about band structure and following electron dynamics triggered by photon absorption.
20 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the significance of in situ dissolution of calcium carbonate above its saturation horizons using observations from the open subpolar North Atlantic [sNA] and to a lesser extent a 3-D biogeochemical model.
Abstract: . We investigate the significance of in situ dissolution of calcium carbonate above its saturation horizons using observations from the open subpolar North Atlantic [sNA] and to a lesser extent a 3-D biogeochemical model. The sNA is particularly well suited for observation-based detections of in situ, i.e. shallow-depth CaCO3 dissolution [SDCCD] as it is a region of high CaCO3 production, deep CaCO3 saturation horizons, and precisely-defined pre-formed alkalinity. Based on the analysis of a comprehensive alkalinity data set we find that SDCCD does not appear to be a significant process in the open sNA. The results from the model support the observational findings by indicating that there is not a significant need of SDCCD to explain observed patterns of alkalinity in the North Atlantic. Instead our investigation points to the importance of mixing processes for the redistribution of alkalinity from dissolution of CaCO3 from below its saturation horizons. However, mixing has recently been neglected for a number of studies that called for SDCCD in the sNA and on global scale.
20 citations
Authors
Showing all 760 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Wolf B. Frommer | 105 | 345 | 30918 |
Michael W. Anderson | 101 | 808 | 63603 |
João Rocha | 93 | 1521 | 49472 |
Martin Muhler | 77 | 606 | 25850 |
Michael Hunger | 60 | 295 | 11370 |
Ivars Neretnieks | 44 | 224 | 7159 |
Michael Schütze | 40 | 343 | 6311 |
Jens Schrader | 38 | 129 | 4239 |
Roland Dittmeyer | 31 | 206 | 3762 |
Lei Li | 29 | 198 | 4003 |
Dirk Holtmann | 29 | 107 | 3033 |
Lasse Greiner | 26 | 74 | 1994 |
Klaus-Michael Mangold | 23 | 57 | 1590 |
A. Rahmel | 23 | 59 | 1967 |
Gerhard Kreysa | 22 | 78 | 1305 |