Institution
Dublin City University
Education•Dublin, Ireland•
About: Dublin City University is a education organization based out in Dublin, Ireland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Machine translation & Laser. The organization has 5904 authors who have published 17178 publications receiving 389376 citations. The organization is also known as: National Institute for Higher Education, Dublin & DCU.
Topics: Machine translation, Laser, Irish, Population, Context (language use)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Bacterial adherence to hydrocarbons (BATH) assays showed cells grown on the higher concentrations of mono-chlorophenol to be more hydrophobic than those grown on phenol and lower concentrations of Mono- chlorophenol, suggesting that increased hydrophobicity and autoaggregation of P. putida CP1 were a response to toxicity of the added substrates.
Abstract: A bacterium, CP1, identified as Pseudomonas putida strain, was investigated for its ability to grow on and degrade mono-chlorophenols and phenols as sole carbon sources in aerobic shaking batch culture. The organism degraded up to 1.56 mM 2- and 3-chlorophenol, 2.34 mM 4-chlorophenol and 8.5 mM phenol using an ortho-cleavage pathway. P. putida CP1, acclimated to degrade 2-chlorophenol, was capable of 3-chlorocatechol degradation, while P. putida, acclimated to 4-chlorophenol degradation, degraded 4-chlorocatechol. Growth of P. putida CP1 on higher concentrations of the mono-chlorophenols, >or=1.56 mM 4-chlorophenol and >or=0.78 mM 2- and 3-chlorophenol, resulted in decreases in cell biomass despite metabolism of the substrates, and the formation of large aggregates of cells in the culture medium. Increases in cell biomass with no clumping of the cells resulted from growth of P. putida CP1 on phenol or on lower concentrations of mono-chlorophenol. Bacterial adherence to hydrocarbons (BATH) assays showed cells grown on the higher concentrations of mono-chlorophenol to be more hydrophobic than those grown on phenol and lower concentrations of mono-chlorophenol. The results suggested that increased hydrophobicity and autoaggregation of P. putida CP1 were a response to toxicity of the added substrates.
114 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the formation of a thiolate intermediate is supported by the presence of aromatic vibrations in HREELS spectra, carbon (1s) and sulfur (2p) XPS lineshapes and binding energies consistent with thiolates stoichiometry and chemical shift expectations and assignment of benzene-like molecular orbitals.
114 citations
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TL;DR: The current status of ion sensors in their main application, clinical chemistry, is highlighted in this article, where the reasons for the practical success of sensors in this particular area are discussed together with the expected influence of novel technical possibilities for the next generation of clinical ion analyzers.
114 citations
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TL;DR: This review outlines the research that has been carried out on strategies for the protection of marine and riverine sensors against fouling.
Abstract: Traditionally, water quality has been monitored by sampling and lab based analysis. However, there are disadvantages associated with this method, for example, deterioration of samples with time, limited sampling points, limited temporal monitoring. This has provided impetus for the development of sensors which can be deployed from remote locations over extended deployment periods. However, a major limitation of these systems is their vulnerability to biofouling. This review outlines the research that has been carried out on strategies for the protection of marine and riverine sensors against fouling.
114 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the sol-gel technique was followed in the preparation of cobalt ferrite amorphous powder following the same procedure which was selected as the best approach as described in a previous study.
114 citations
Authors
Showing all 6059 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Joseph Wang | 158 | 1282 | 98799 |
David Cameron | 154 | 1586 | 126067 |
David Taylor | 131 | 2469 | 93220 |
Gordon G. Wallace | 114 | 1267 | 69095 |
David A. Morrow | 113 | 598 | 56776 |
G. Hughes | 103 | 957 | 46632 |
David Wilson | 102 | 757 | 49388 |
Muhammad Imran | 94 | 3053 | 51728 |
Haibo Zeng | 94 | 604 | 39226 |
David Lloyd | 90 | 1017 | 37691 |
Vikas Kumar | 89 | 859 | 39185 |
Luke P. Lee | 84 | 413 | 22803 |
James Chapman | 82 | 483 | 36468 |
Muhammad Iqbal | 77 | 961 | 23821 |
Michael C. Berndt | 76 | 228 | 16897 |