Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Engineering and Physical Research

He is an Engineering and Physical Research Council (EPSRC, UK) Advanced Research Fellow, and thanks the BBSRC (UK), and the Wellcome Trust, for support of his research. [Pg.647]

This work was supported by Engineering and Physical Research Council and the Petroleum Research Fund, administered by the American Chemical Society. GU also acknowledges a grant from VBL, University of Hiroshima, during his sabbatical leave. [Pg.422]

This volume is one of the products of a six-year study between 1998 and 2004 funded by the Engineering and Physical Research Council in the UK into the development, use and performance of management tools and techniques (the other major outputs from this study can be found in Cox,... [Pg.13]

This work wa.s supported by the Engineering and Physical Research Council. The synchrotron studies were performed at the CCLRC Daresbury SRS. We thank Jim Woodcock and Clark Balague for the essential design and construction of the flow stages and Aqualon Ltd for the provision of the samples of Klucel E. [Pg.403]

Swansea, Wales. At Swansea, he is an executive member of the Centre for NanoHealth and associate director of the Centre for Complex Fluids Processing. He graduated from the University of Wales in 1996 with a PhD in biochemical engineering. In 2001, he was awarded a prestigious advanced research fellowship from the Engineering and Physical Research Council (EPSRC), United Kingdom, in recognition of his... [Pg.737]

We wish to thank Dr M O Neill at the University of Hull for valuable discussions during the course of this work. One of us (RAJS ) was supported by an Engineering and Physical Sciences Research studentship. [Pg.685]

This work was supported by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. References... [Pg.720]

Hutson J M and Green S 1994 MOLSCAT computer code, version 14, distributed by Collaborative Computational Project No 6 of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (UK)... [Pg.1086]

EA.E.T thanks the financial support by the University of Valencia for the V Segles" grant provided and W.C.S. the industrial case award by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council in collaboration with LGC limited. [Pg.197]

This research was funded by a grant from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), and by the award of a Royal Society University Research Fellowship to SCA. [Pg.39]

The anthors wonld hke to acknowledge the snpport of Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Conncil and Johnson Matthey pic under the ATHENA grant. [Pg.102]

P. J. D. and P. J.M. thank The UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, The European Commission, The Royal Society, ICI Paints, Unilever Research, Uniqema and Disperse Technologies for financial support. They acknowledge the considerable input and help of their colleagues, especially Dr. Paul Glover (University of Nottingham), Dr. Joe Keddie (University of Surrey) and Dr. Peter Aptaker (Laplacian Ltd.) in carrying out much of the work reviewed here. [Pg.106]

Research into swimming pool water treatment has been conducted on both the bench and pilot scale at the School of Water Sciences at Cranfield University over the past six years. Much of this has been sponsored jointly by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and the Pool Water Treatment Advisory Group (PWTAG). The most recent work has been based on a 2.2m3-capacity pilot plant (Figure 5), a one-seventh linear scale model of an actual operating pool, incorporating all conventional unit... [Pg.141]

Work at Warwick funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and British Gas is underway to test the concept in a laboratory scale... [Pg.352]

We express our thanks to the students with whom we have worked on these subjects and whose results we have used, in particular Herve Borrion, Shirley Coetzee and Michele Vespe, and to the organisations, including the UK Ministry of Defence, the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, QinetiQ and its predecessors, BAE SYSTEMS, Thales Sensors and AMS, who have supported the various projects. We also thank Erik De Witte and Herve Borrion for their help in rendering this document into DTj X. [Pg.186]

Acknowledgments I would like to thank Dr. Joachim Steinke for valuable discussions and useful comments to this review. EPSRC (The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council) is acknowledged for financial support. [Pg.140]

Acknowledgements The authors would like to acknowledge the tremendous help of Dr. Alex Norquist, who drew many of the figures in this work, and also of Dr. Dave Taylor and Mr. Alfie Neild at the SRS. Additionally, the financial help of the EPSRC (Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council) is gratefully acknowledged. [Pg.190]

We would like to thank Dr. Nick Besley for useful discussions. This research was partly supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council through a project studentship (GR/R81121) to D.P.O. [Pg.34]

Committee on Review and Evaluation of the Army Chemical Stockpile Disposal Program Board on Army Science and Technology Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences National Research Council... [Pg.2]

EPSRC project is to support basic strategic and applied research and related postgraduate training in the engineering and physical sciences. 1.13 million has been allocated for the period 1998-2003. [Pg.183]

Interest in the crucial processes of nucleation and the growth of solids from fluid phases has a long and multidisciplinary history [50-53]. This research topic involves chemistry, chemical physics, material science, chemical engineering and physics, and, as a consequence, both theoretical and experimental studies were carried out by specialists in these fields. Thus, the following discussion does not pretend to be an exhaustive literature coverage of what is known about nucleation and growth, but rather, through recent articles, tries to review contributions especially relevant to controlled chemical vapour deposition of nanoparticles, always from a multidisciplinary point of view. [Pg.159]

Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences (FEPS), Environmental Flow (EnFlo) Research Centre, University of Surrey, Guildford GU2 7XH, UK e-mail P.Kumar surrey.ac.uk Prashant.Kumar cantab.net... [Pg.339]


See other pages where Engineering and Physical Research is mentioned: [Pg.496]    [Pg.429]    [Pg.496]    [Pg.429]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.491]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.518]    [Pg.177]   


SEARCH



Engineering research

© 2024 chempedia.info