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Institution

Tallinn University of Technology

EducationTallinn, Estonia
About: Tallinn University of Technology is a education organization based out in Tallinn, Estonia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: European union & Computer science. The organization has 3688 authors who have published 10313 publications receiving 145058 citations. The organization is also known as: Tallinn Technical University & Tallinna Tehnikaülikool.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the ionic conductivity of barium fluoride ion batteries with trivalent cations was analyzed using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and AC conductivity analysis.
Abstract: Fluoride ion batteries (FIB) provide an interesting alternative to lithium ion batteries, in particular because of their larger theoretical energy densities. These batteries are based on a F anion shuttle between a metal fluoride cathode and a metal anode. One critical component is the electrolyte that should provide fast anion conduction. So far, this is only possible in solid so-called superionic conductors, at elevated temperatures. Herein, we analyze in detail the ionic conductivity in barium fluoride salts doped with lanthanum (Ba1–xLaxF2+x). Doping by trivalent cations leads to an increase of the quantity of point defects in the BaF2 crystal. These defects participate in the ionic motion and therefore improve the ionic conductivity. We demonstrate that further improvement of the conductivity is possible by using a nanostructured material providing additional conduction paths through the grain boundaries. Using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and AC conductivity analysis, we show that the ioni...

137 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The chronic 21-day toxicity of silver NPs to D. magna in natural water was at the part-per-billion level, and adult mortality was more sensitive toxicity test endpoint than the reproduction (the number of offspring per adult).
Abstract: Although silver nanoparticles (NPs) are increasingly used in various consumer products and produced in industrial scale, information on harmful effects of nanosilver to environmentally relevant organisms is still scarce. This paper studies the adverse effects of silver NPs to two aquatic crustaceans, Daphnia magna and Thamnocephalus platyurus. For that, silver NPs were synthesized where Ag is covalently attached to poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP). In parallel, the toxicity of collargol (protein-coated nanosilver) and AgNO3 was analyzed. Both types of silver NPs were highly toxic to both crustaceans: the EC50 values in artificial freshwater were 15–17 ppb for D. magna and 20–27 ppb for T. platyurus. The natural water (five different waters with dissolved organic carbon from 5 to 35 mg C/L were studied) mitigated the toxic effect of studied silver compounds up to 8-fold compared with artificial freshwater. The toxicity of silver NPs in all test media was up to 10-fold lower than that of soluble silver salt, AgNO3. The pattern of the toxic response of both crustacean species to the silver compounds was almost similar in artificial freshwater and in natural waters. The chronic 21-day toxicity of silver NPs to D. magna in natural water was at the part-per-billion level, and adult mortality was more sensitive toxicity test endpoint than the reproduction (the number of offspring per adult).

136 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Carbon isotope changes during post-hunnebergian Ordovician time were investigated in this paper, where a total of 326 new whole-rock analyses and published data from 18 drill cores and 4 outcrops in Estonia, Latvia and Sweden were considered.

135 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a cost optimal and as energy efficient as possible facade solution, including window properties, external wall insulation, window-to-wall ratio and external shading were determined with energy and daylight simulations in the cold climate of Estonia.

134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
27 Apr 2011-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: This work tested for evolutionary changes in shell albedo that might have been driven by the warming of the climate in Europe over the last half century by compiling an historical dataset for 6,515 native populations of C. nemoralis and comparing this with new data on nearly 3,000 populations.
Abstract: Organisms provide some of the most sensitive indicators of climate change and evolutionary responses are becoming apparent in species with short generation times. Large datasets on genetic polymorphism that can provide an historical benchmark against which to test for recent evolutionary responses are very rare, but an exception is found in the brown-lipped banded snail (Cepaea nemoralis). This species is sensitive to its thermal environment and exhibits several polymorphisms of shell colour and banding pattern affecting shell albedo in the majority of populations within its native range in Europe. We tested for evolutionary changes in shell albedo that might have been driven by the warming of the climate in Europe over the last half century by compiling an historical dataset for 6,515 native populations of C. nemoralis and comparing this with new data on nearly 3,000 populations. The new data were sampled mainly in 2009 through the Evolution MegaLab, a citizen science project that engaged thousands of volunteers in 15 countries throughout Europe in the biggest such exercise ever undertaken. A known geographic cline in the frequency of the colour phenotype with the highest albedo (yellow) was shown to have persisted and a difference in colour frequency between woodland and more open habitats was confirmed, but there was no general increase in the frequency of yellow shells. This may have been because snails adapted to a warming climate through behavioural thermoregulation. By contrast, we detected an unexpected decrease in the frequency of Unbanded shells and an increase in the Mid-banded morph. Neither of these evolutionary changes appears to be a direct response to climate change, indicating that the influence of other selective agents, possibly related to changing predation pressure and habitat change with effects on micro-climate.

134 citations


Authors

Showing all 3757 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
James Chapman8248336468
Alexandre Alexakis6754017247
Bernard Waeber5637035335
Peter A. Andrekson5457312042
Charles S. Peirce5116711998
Lars M. Blank493018011
Fushuan Wen494659189
Mati Karelson4820710210
Ago Samoson461198807
Zebo Peng453597312
Petru Eles443006749
Vijai Kumar Gupta433016901
Eero Vasar432636930
Rik Ossenkoppele421926839
Tõnis Timmusk4110511056
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202342
2022107
2021883
2020951
2019882
2018745