Institution
University of South Africa
Education•Pretoria, South Africa•
About: University of South Africa is a education organization based out in Pretoria, South Africa. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Population. The organization has 8478 authors who have published 19960 publications receiving 237688 citations. The organization is also known as: Unisa.
Papers published on a yearly basis
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TL;DR: A survey of medical superintendents revealed that an estimated 1.5 million trauma cases presented to South Africa's 356 secondary and tertiary level hospitals in 1999 showed considerable inter-provincial variation, with violence accounting for more than half of the trauma caseload.
Abstract: A survey of medical superintendents revealed that an estimated 1.5 million trauma cases presented to South Africa's 356 secondary and tertiary level hospitals in 1999. Injury rates for traffic, violence and other injuries showed considerable inter-provincial variation, with violence accounting for more than half of the trauma caseload. This type of survey is a simple low cost alternative for monitoring injury patterns and supplementing burden of disease and injury costing studies.
55 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the generalized compound Rayleigh model, exhibiting flexible hazard rate, is highlighted for modeling survival times of patients showing characteristics of a random hazard rate and the Bayes estimators are derived for the parameters of this model and some survival time parameters from a right censored sample.
Abstract: In this paper the generalized compound Rayleigh model, exhibiting flexible hazard rate, is high¬lighted. This makes it attractive for modelling survival times of patients showing characteristics of a random hazard rate. The Bayes estimators are derived for the parameters of this model and some survival time parameters from a right censored sample. This is done with respect to conjugate and discrete priors on the parameters of this model, under the squared error loss function, Varian's asymmetric linear-exponential (linex) loss function and a weighted linex loss function. The future survival time of a patient is estimated under these loss functions. A Monte Carlo simu¬lation procedure is used where closed form expressions of the estimators cannot be obtained. An example illustrates the proposed estimators for this model.
54 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, organic template-free MFI-type ZSM-5 zeolites were successfully synthesized by the hydrothermal method using waste materials such as rice husk ash (RHA), rice hull ash, and rice straw ash.
Abstract: Herein, organic template-free MFI-type ZSM-5 zeolites were successfully synthesized by the hydrothermal method using waste materials such as rice husk ash (RHA), rice hull ash (RHuA), and rice straw ash (RSA). The waste materials were locally obtained, precleaned, and properly heat-treated to produce a high-purity crystalline SiO2 that was used in the synthesis of ZSM-5 zeolites under autogenous pressure in a short reaction time (5 days). The mineralogical phases, morphology, textural and thermal properties of the synthesized products were investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR), Raman spectroscopy, high-resolution scanning electron microscopy (HR-SEM), N2 adsorption/desorption isotherms (BET), temperature-programmed desorption (NH3-TPD), and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA/DTA). The as-synthesized ZSM-5 zeolites showed good crystallinity, and no amorphous material existed in the framework of the ZSM-5 zeolites after calcination and ammonium exchange processes. The characterization results prove that the high crystallinity of RHA as compared to that of the other materials (RHuA and RSA) is due to the high silica content in RHA. The transformation occurs from high-crystallinity RHA into ZSM-5 zeolite and also increases the crystallinity of zeolites. In addition, we have investigated hierarchical ZSM-5 zeolites at various concentrations for their potential cytotoxicity effect against the human lung epithelial cancer A549 cells.
54 citations
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54 citations
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TL;DR: The capability of Chromolaena odorata (L) to grow in the presence of different concentrations of three heavy metals in crude oil-contaminated soil and its capability to remediate the contaminated soil was investigated using pot experiments.
Abstract: The capability of Chromolaena odorata (L) to grow in the presence of different concentrations of three heavy metals in crude oil-contaminated soil and its capability to remediate the contaminated soil was investigated using pot experiments. C. odorata plants were transplanted into contaminated soil containing 50,000 mg kg−1 crude oil and between 100 and 2,000 mg kg−1 of cadmium, nickel, and zinc and watered weekly with water containing 5% NPK fertilizer for 180 days. C. odorata did not show any growth inhibition in 50,000 mg kg−1 crude oil. Plants in experiments containing 2,000 mg kg−1 Cd showed little adverse effect compared to those in Zn-treated soil. Plants in 1,000 and 2,000 mg kg−1 Ni experiments showed more adverse effects. After 180 days, reduction in heavy metals were: 100 mg kg−1 experiments, Zn (35%), Cd (33%), and Ni (23%); 500 mg kg−1, Zn (37%), Cd (41%), and Ni (25%); 1,000 mg kg−1, Zn (65%), Cd (55%), and Ni (44%); and 2,000 mg kg−1, Zn (63%), Cd (62%), and Ni (47%). The results showed that the plants accumulated more of the Zn than Cd and Ni. Accumulation of Zn and Cd was highest in the 2,000 mg kg−1 experiments and Ni in the 500 mg kg−1 experiments. Crude oil was reduced by 82% in the experiments that did not contain heavy metals and by up to 80% in the heavy metal-treated soil. The control experiments showed a reduction of up to 47% in crude oil concentration, which was attributed to microbial action and natural attenuation. These results show that C. odorata (L) has the capability of thriving and phytoaccumulating heavy metals in contaminated soils while facilitating the removal of the contaminant crude oil. It also shows that the plant’s capability to mediate the removal of crude oil in contaminated soil is not significantly affected by the concentrations of metals in the soil.
54 citations
Authors
Showing all 8743 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Alvaro Avezum | 93 | 279 | 48888 |
Jordan J. Louviere | 93 | 356 | 38739 |
Jürgen Eckert | 92 | 1368 | 42119 |
Simon Henry Connell | 83 | 506 | 25147 |
Elina Hyppönen | 81 | 258 | 33011 |
David Wilkinson | 80 | 631 | 27578 |
Béla Bollobás | 78 | 566 | 34767 |
Richard A. Matzner | 72 | 317 | 16389 |
Tim Olds | 71 | 412 | 21758 |
Nicolin Govender | 71 | 412 | 18740 |
Paul A. Webley | 70 | 374 | 18633 |
Dusan Losic | 70 | 398 | 16550 |
Alexander Shapiro | 70 | 252 | 26450 |
Kerin O'Dea | 69 | 359 | 16435 |
Shrikant I. Bangdiwala | 68 | 359 | 21650 |