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Institution

King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals

EducationDhahran, Saudi Arabia
About: King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals is a education organization based out in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Adsorption. The organization has 7603 authors who have published 24030 publications receiving 443803 citations. The organization is also known as: College of Petroleum and Minerals.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the stability, thermal conductivity, viscosity, specific heat, density and electrical conductivity of deionized water/ethylene glycol (GONs-DW/EG) were experimentally examined.

112 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented an analysis of energy and exergy utilization in the transportation sector of Saudi Arabia by considering the sectoral energy and energy flows for the years of 1990-2001.

112 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Several challenges in the integration process of high-level RESs to the existing grid are summarized and the respective solutions to each challenge are presented and discussed.
Abstract: The utilization of renewable energy sources (RESs) has become significant throughout the world, especially over the last two decades. Although high-level RESs penetration reduces negative environmental impact compared to conventional fossil fuel-based energy generation, control issues become more complex as the system inertia is significantly decreased due to the absence of conventional synchronous generators. Some other technical issues, high uncertainties, low fault ride through capability, high fault current, low generation reserve, and low power quality, arise due to RESs integration. Renewable energy like solar and wind are highly uncertain due to the intermittent nature of wind and sunlight. Cutting edge technologies including different control strategies, optimization techniques, energy storage devices, and fault current limiters are employed to handle those issues. This paper summarizes several challenges in the integration process of high-level RESs to the existing grid. The respective solutions to each challenge are presented and discussed. A comprehensive list of challenges and solutions, for both wind and solar energy integration cases, are well documented. Finally, the future recommendations are provided to solve the several problems of renewable energy integration which could be key research areas for the industry personnel and researchers.

112 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of ozone depletion on the service life of common plastic materials is quantified, and the effectiveness of existing light stabilizers (such as hindered amine light stabilizer, HALS) used in plastics exposed to harsh solar UV conditions coupled with climate change factors are evaluated.
Abstract: The outdoor service life of common plastic materials is limited by their susceptibility to solar ultraviolet radiation. Of the solar wavelengths the UV-B component is particularly efficient in bringing about photodamage in synthetic and naturally occurring materials. This is particularly true of plastics, rubber and wood used in the building and agricultural industries. Any depletion in the stratospheric ozone layer and resulting increase in the UV-B component of terrestrial sunlight will therefore tend to decrease the service life of these materials. The extent to which the service life is reduced is, however, difficult to estimate as it depends on several factors. These include the chemical nature of the material, the additives it contains, the type and the amount of light-stabilizers (or protective coatings) used, and the amount of solar exposure it receives. Concomitant climate change is likely to increase the ambient temperature and humidity in some of the same regions likely to receive increased UV-B radiation. These factors, particularly higher temperatures, are also well known to accelerate the rate of photodegradation of materials, and may therefore further limit the service life of materials in these regions. To reliably assess the damage to materials as a consequence of ozone layer depletion, the wavelength sensitivity of the degradation process, dose-response relationships for the material and the effectiveness of available stabilizers need to be quantified. The data needed for the purpose are not readily available at this time for most of the commonly used plastics or wood materials. Wavelength sensitivity of a number of common plastic materials and natural biopolymers are available and generally show the damage (per photon) to decrease exponentially with the wavelength. Despite the relatively higher fraction of UV-A in sunlight, the UV-B content is responsible for a significant part of light-induced damage of materials. The primary approach to mitigation relies on the effectiveness of the existing light stabilizers (such as hindered amine light stabilizers, HALS) used in plastics exposed to harsh solar UV conditions coupled with climate change factors. In developing advanced light-stabilizer technologies, more light-resistant grades of common plastics, or surface protection technologies for wood, the harsh weathering environment created by the simultaneous action of increased UV-B levels due to ozone depletion as well as the relevant climate change factors need to be taken into consideration. Recent literature includes several studies on synergism of HALS-based stabilizers, stabilizer effectiveness in the new m-polyolefins and elucidation of the mechanism of stabilization afforded by titania pigment in vinyl plastics.

111 citations


Authors

Showing all 7786 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Omar M. Yaghi165459163918
Vinod Kumar Gupta16571383484
Robert H. Grubbs137101383140
Craig J. Hawker13474172032
Avelino Corma134104989095
C. N. R. Rao133164686718
Bharat Bhushan116127662506
Ibrahim Dincer110147956573
Sabu Thomas102155451366
Lajos Hanzo101204054380
Rahman Saidur9757634409
Gareth H. McKinley9746734624
Mohamed-Slim Alouini96178862290
Robert J. Young9064031962
Emmanuel P. Giannelis8838738528
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023103
2022347
20211,990
20201,877
20191,601
20181,589