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Goals common

Shu I man Tamir 1973 Secondary EfRcacy of laboratory work There were five goals common to laboratory instruction addressing the affective, cognitive, and psychomotor domains. [Pg.73]

In this experiment the effect of a mixed aqueous-organic solvent on the color transition range of common indicators is investigated. One goal of the experiment is to design an appropriate titrimetric method for analyzing sparingly soluble acids and bases. [Pg.359]

For different types of collections, this balance is differently defined. For example paper conservation treatments commonly undertaken in the museum conservation laboratory would be impractical in a Hbrary archive having a far greater collection size. The use of treatments for mass paper quantities would be unacceptable in the art museum. Documents in archives and books in Hbraries serve a different goal from art objects in a museum. Their use value Hes primarily in their information rather than in an intrinsic esthetic value. Whereas optimal preservation of that information value requires preservation of the object itself, a copy or even a completely different format could serve the same purpose. [Pg.430]

The NRC safety goal can be evaluated by comparison to the risks from accidents incurred from other human activities (Eig. 2) (29). The safety goal and the safety record of the nuclear power industry indicate much lower societal risks from commercial nuclear power than from a wide range of other common human activities. [Pg.237]

Pulverized-Goal Firing. This is the most common technology used for coal combustion in utiUty appHcations because of the flexibiUty to use a range of coal types in a range of furnace sizes. Nevertheless, the selection of cmshing, combustion, and gas-cleanup equipment remains coal dependent (54,100,101). [Pg.526]

Waste Treatment Methods. Technical and legal specialized knowledge and experience are needed to ensure that goals are to be met when selecting waste treatment methods. A support iadustry concentrating on waste treatment process and equipment has developed. Table 3 Hsts several estabhshed waste treatment methods commonly used. [Pg.154]

For every new tolling situation a process hazard analysis should be conducted using one of several acceptable methodologies in common use. The goal is to select a methodology appropriate to evaluate the hazards of the toll process in question. [Pg.89]

These difficulties have led to a revival of work on internal coordinate approaches, and to date several such techniques have been reported based on methods of rigid-body dynamics [8,19,34-37] and the Lagrange-Hamilton formalism [38-42]. These methods often have little in common in their analytical formulations, but they all may be reasonably referred to as internal coordinate molecular dynamics (ICMD) to underline their main distinction from conventional MD They all consider molecular motion in the space of generalized internal coordinates rather than in the usual Cartesian coordinate space. Their main goal is to compute long-duration macromolecular trajectories with acceptable accuracy but at a lower cost than Cartesian coordinate MD with bond length constraints. This task mrned out to be more complicated than it seemed initially. [Pg.122]

Injection of Steam in the Combustor of the Gas Turbines Utilizing Present Dual Fuel Nozzles. Steam injection in the combustor has been commonly used for NO control as seen in Figure 2-43. The amount of steam, which can be added, is limited due to combustion concerns. This is limited to about 2-3% of the airflow. This would provide an additional 3-5% of the rated power. The dual fuel nozzles on many of the industrial turbines could easily be retrofitted to achieve the goal of steam injection. The steam would be produced using an HRSG. Multiple turbines could also be tied into one HRSG. [Pg.104]

Define Iq to be the intensity of the light incident upon the sample and I to be the intensity of the beam after it has interacted with the sample. The goal of the basic inftared experiment is to determine the intensity ratio I/Iq as a function of the frequency of the light (w). A plot of this ratio versus the frequency is the infrared spectrum. The inftared spectrum is commonly plotted in one of three formats as transmittance, reflectance, or absorbance. If one is measuring the fraction of light transmitted through the sample, this ratio is defined as... [Pg.419]

The setting of quantitative goals for indoor air quality also supports an organization s quality policy in the area of safety and health. Furthermore, the introduction of the target level concept for indoor quality will enhance the development of more advanced and efficient control technologies on a voluntary basis. One can assume that the diffusion of technology will make the present-day benchmark air quality common practice in, say, 10 to 20 years. [Pg.404]

Special thanks are due to the patience and determination of the contributors who tirelessly prepared drafts and redrafts, attended meetings and more meetings, and reviewed proofs, more proofs, and then the final proofs. It has been a pleasure to work with all members of the professional team at Academic Press toward the common goal of publishing this book on schedule. [Pg.1545]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.264 , Pg.314 ]




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