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Institution

University of Victoria

EducationVictoria, British Columbia, Canada
About: University of Victoria is a education organization based out in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 14994 authors who have published 41051 publications receiving 1447972 citations. The organization is also known as: Victoria College.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Improved performance as compared to previous microfluidic fuel cells is demonstrated, including power densities at room temperature up to 131 mW cm-2 and high overall energy conversion efficiency is obtained through a combination of relatively high levels of fuel utilization and cell voltage.
Abstract: A microfluidic fuel cell architecture incorporating flow-through porous electrodes is demonstrated. The design is based on cross-flow of aqueous vanadium redox species through the electrodes into an orthogonally arranged co-laminar exit channel, where the waste solutions provide ionic charge transfer in a membraneless configuration. This flow-through architecture enables improved utilization of the three-dimensional active area inside the porous electrodes and provides enhanced rates of convective/diffusive transport without increasing the parasitic loss required to drive the flow. Prototype fuel cells are fabricated by rapid prototyping with total material cost estimated at 2 USD/unit. Improved performance as compared to previous microfluidic fuel cells is demonstrated, including power densities at room temperature up to 131 mW cm-2. In addition, high overall energy conversion efficiency is obtained through a combination of relatively high levels of fuel utilization and cell voltage. When operated at 1 microL min-1 flow rate, the fuel cell produced 20 mW cm-2 at 0.8 V combined with an active fuel utilization of 94%. Finally, we demonstrate in situ fuel and oxidant regeneration by running the flow-through architecture fuel cell in reverse.

306 citations

Book
01 Jan 1985
TL;DR: Lucid is a functional language, but one which supports variables, i.e. values which change with time, so programmers can use iteration (repetition) as well as recursion.
Abstract: Lucid is a functional language, but one which supports variables, i.e. values which change with time. Lucid programmers can therefore use iteration (repetition) as well as recursion. The statements of a Lucid program are equations which can be thought of as defining a network of processors and communication lines. Lucid's dataflow approach to programming has more in common with that of the UNIX (TM) shell, with its filters and pipelines, than with the imperative, one-step-at-a-time approach of a conventional language like C or Pascal.

306 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Morad Aaboud, Alexander Kupco, Samuel Webb1, Timo Dreyer  +2942 moreInstitutions (56)
TL;DR: In this article, the observed significance is 5.8 standard deviations, compared to an expectation of 4.9 standard deviations and the observed (expected) significance is 6.3 (5.1) standard deviations.

306 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined whether variables reflecting self-interest (from the theory of planned behavior) and variables reflecting moral considerations were able to explain self-reported car use for commuting and intentions to reduce it in a sample of Canadian office workers.
Abstract: Car use for commuting contributes to various environmental and traffic problems, such as pollution and congestion. Policies aimed at reducing commuter car use will be more effective when they target important determinants of car use and willingness to reduce it. This study examined whether variables reflecting self-interest (from the theory of planned behavior [Ajzen, I. (1985). From intentions to actions: A theory of planned behavior. In J. Kuhl & J. Beckmann (Eds.), Action control: From cognition to behavior (pp. 11–39). Berlin: Springer]) and variables reflecting moral considerations (from the norm-activation model [Schwartz, S. H. (1977). Normative influences on altruism. In L. Berkowitz (Ed.). Advances in experimental social psychology (Vol. 10, pp. 221–279). New York: Academic Press]) were able to explain self-reported car use for commuting and intentions to reduce it in a sample of Canadian office workers. Car use for commuting was mostly explained by variables related to individual outcomes (perceived behavioral control and attitudes) whereas the intention to reduce car use was mostly explained by variables related to morality (personal norms). The study also found that perceived behavioral control moderated the relation between personal norms and behavioral intentions: stronger personal norms were associated with stronger behavioral intentions, but only when perceived behavioral control was low. Some issues evoked by these results are discussed.

306 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a constantescapement feedback policy is shown to be optimal in maximizing expected discounted net revenue from an animal resource whose dynamics are described by a stochastic stock-recruitment model, provided that unit harvesting costs satisfy certain conditions.

306 citations


Authors

Showing all 15188 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Jie Zhang1784857221720
D. M. Strom1763167194314
Sw. Banerjee1461906124364
Robert J. Glynn14674888387
Manel Esteller14671396429
R. Kowalewski1431815135517
Paul Jackson141137293464
Mingshui Chen1411543125369
Ali Khademhosseini14088776430
Roger Jones138998114061
Tord Ekelof137121291105
L. Köpke13695081787
M. Morii1341664102074
Arnaud Ferrari134139287052
Richard Brenner133110887426
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202379
2022348
20212,108
20202,200
20192,212
20181,926