Institution
ExxonMobil
Company•Irving, Texas, United States•
About: ExxonMobil is a company organization based out in Irving, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Polymer. The organization has 16969 authors who have published 23758 publications receiving 535713 citations. The organization is also known as: Exxon Mobil Corporation & Exxon Mobil Corp..
Topics: Catalysis, Polymer, Polymerization, Hydrocarbon, Alkyl
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, a decomposition strategy is presented to separate economical and control objectives by formulating two subproblems in closed-loop, model-based and model-free at the implementation level.
Abstract: This paper summarizes recent developments and applications of dynamic real-time optimization (D-RTO). A decomposition strategy is presented to separate economical and control objectives by formulating two subproblems in closed-loop. Two approaches (model-based and model-free at the implementation level) are developed to provide tight integration of economical optimization and control, and to handle uncertainty. Simulated industrial applications involving different dynamic operational scenarios demonstrate significant economical benefits.
105 citations
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14 Jan 2000TL;DR: In this article, the ratio of Group VIB metal to Group VIII non-noble metal is from about 10:1 to 1:10, where VIB is the ratio between two groups.
Abstract: A process fo hydroprocessing petroleum and chemical feedstocks by use of a bulk multimetallic catalyst comprised of at least one Group VIII non-noble metal and at least one, preferably two Group VIB metal wherein the ratio of Group VIB metal to Group VIII metal is from about 10:1 to 1:10.
105 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate and reject the hypothesis that solid-state reordering of 13C-18O bonds has destroyed the primary clumped isotope temperature signal of most fossils during sedimentary burial at elevated temperatures.
105 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a generic model for the emplacement of wedge-shaped sedimentary deposits by Froude-supercritical density currents has been proposed and experiments on a generic configuration have been conducted.
Abstract: Rapidly decelerating sediment-laden flows typically emplace confined sedimentary deposits. In the fluvial environment, when sediment-laden rivers reach lakes the decelerating flow emplaces a subaerial delta with distinctive topset, foreset, and bottomset deposits. In the submarine environment, turbidity currents undergoing rapid deceleration commonly emplace sedimentary wedges (i.e., deposits thinning in the downstream direction). Froude-supercritical turbidity currents have an intrinsic self-regulating mechanism for deceleration, in that the faster they flow, the more they incorporate ambient sea water through mixing at their interface. In addition, special topographic configurations, such as the entrance into a zone of much lower slope and/or lateral confinement, or the passage into a confined minibasin, may trigger sudden flow deceleration by forcing a transition to subcritical flow through an internal hydraulic jump. The present paper and its companion present experiments on a generic configuration aimed at studying the emplacement of wedge-shaped sedimentary deposits by continuous supercritical density currents. The deceleration is achieved both by natural entrainment of ambient water and by the presence of an obstructing barrier downstream. Lightweight plastic sediment was used as an analog for sand, and was transported mostly as bedload, but with some suspension, by a saline underflow. The saline underflow served as a surrogate for a turbidity current driven by fine mud that does not easily settle out. The companion paper is focused on the flow patterns associated with the decelerating current. The present paper focuses on the depositional sequences. The decelerating supercritical flows produced a wedge with a distinct pattern of aggradation and progradation. In addition, a foreset-like structure is attributed to the presence of an internal hydraulic jump forced by the downstream barrier. Although they do not reproduce any specific field-scale setting, the experiments are deemed a good generic model for several wedge-shaped submarine deposits in various settings, from slope aprons to deposits in minibasins or on the external flanks of channel levees. The paper also documents the regimes of bedforms associated with the diverse flow regions. It provides the first evidence for the formation of trains of the upstream-migrating sediment waves known as cyclic steps, similar to those commonly observed on channel levees and also along the thalwegs of some steep canyons. In addition, the experiments provide convincing evidence for the formation of downstream-migrating antidunes as well.
105 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the long-term fate of CO2 was simulated by extending the modeling period to 10,000 years and the results indicated that most of the injected CO2 remains within a radius of 3300 m lateral distribution.
105 citations
Authors
Showing all 16987 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
David A. Weitz | 178 | 1038 | 114182 |
Avelino Corma | 134 | 1049 | 89095 |
Peter Hall | 132 | 1640 | 85019 |
James A. Dumesic | 118 | 615 | 58935 |
Robert H. Crabtree | 113 | 678 | 48634 |
Costas M. Soukoulis | 108 | 644 | 50208 |
Nicholas J. Turro | 104 | 1131 | 53827 |
Edwin L. Thomas | 104 | 606 | 40819 |
Israel E. Wachs | 103 | 427 | 32029 |
Andrew I. Cooper | 99 | 389 | 34700 |
Michael J. Zaworotko | 97 | 519 | 44441 |
Enrique Iglesia | 96 | 416 | 31934 |
Yves J. Chabal | 94 | 519 | 33820 |
George E. Gehrels | 92 | 454 | 30560 |
Ping Sheng | 90 | 593 | 37141 |