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โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

Antig shows products, receives UL approval


Book ID
104436719
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
80 KB
Volume
2008
Category
Article
ISSN
1464-2859

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โœฆ Synopsis


Birmingham opens hydrogen station

T he University of Birmingham in the UK has unveiled a hydrogen fueling station. The Air Products Series 100 station is located in the Department of Chemical Engineering, where research projects are under way to ascertain the viability of hydrogen in transport applications as part of Birmingham's Science City hydrogen energy project.

The engineers will compare five hydrogen vehicles with the university's own fleet of gasoline, diesel and pure electric vehicles, to learn more about efficiency and performance. The team, led by Professor Kevin Kendall, will determine how these vehicles need to be adapted to make hydrogen an attractive and cost-effective option as a future fuel.

Air Products designed the Series 100 station to meet the fueling needs of the first hydrogen vehicles to appear on the roads. The integrated compression, hydrogen storage and dispensing system is optimized to fuel up to six vehicles per day. Minimal onsite utilities are required for the fueler, which can be easily moved from site to site, making it ideal for startup hydrogen stations.

'It is essential, now, that we begin to develop a supply chain of businesses which can generate jobs and growth in these new technologies,' says Dr Bruno Pollet, of the university's fuel cells group. 'Hydrogen-powered vehicles will help to create new working partnerships and to bring about a sense of cohesion among those already working in the industry.'

The university has purchased five hydrogen vehicles from Microcab Industries. The Microcab weighs 500 kg and has a maximum speed of 40 mph (64 km/h), with a maximum range of approximately 160 km (100 miles).

The research is part of the university's hydrogen energy project, with funding from the Advantage West Midlands regional development agency to develop hydrogen energy in collaboration with the University of Warwick. The 'green' hydrogen for the trial -produced using renewable energy -comes from Green Gases Ltd.

Last fall the university's engineers unveiled a zero-emission hydrogen hybrid canal boat. The boat is fully operational, and demonstrates how a combination of magnet and fuel cell technologies could be used to power inland waterways craft.


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Bio-Assays for Oxidative Stress Status |
Bio-Assays for Oxidative Stress Status || IN VIVO TOTAL ANTIOXIDANT CAPACITY: COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT ANALYTICAL METHODS11Mention of a trade name, proprietary product, or specific equipment does not constitute a guarantee by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and does not imply its approval to the exclusion of other products that may be suitable.Address correspondence to: R. L. Prior, Ph.D., USDA, ARS, HNRCA, 711 Washington St., Boston, MA 02111, USA; Tel: (617) 556โ€“3311; Fax: (617) 556-3222; E-Mail: [email protected]. Ronald Prior is a Nutritionist and Laboratory Chief of the Phytochemical Laboratory at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts University, Boston, MA. Dr. Prior received his B.S. degree with honors from the University of Nebraska and he received his Ph.D. in Nutrition and Biochemistry from Cornell University in 1972. Dr. Prior has worked with the USDA for more than 20 years.During the past 12 years at the HNRCA, he has been Scientific Program Officer and has directed research activities dealing with the role of flavonoid and other phenolic food components on antioxidant status, their metabolism, and relationships to diseases of aging.Guohua Cao, M.D., Ph.D., is currently a Scientist II at HNRCA. Dr. Cao studied medicine in Nantong Medical College in 1979 and at Nanjing Medical University in 1984. He obtained his Ph.D. in nutritional biochemistry from Beijing Medical University in 1990. Dr. Cao came to the United States in 1991 and worked at NIH where he was instrumental in developing the ORAC method.
โœ PRIOR, RONALD L. ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2001 ๐Ÿ› Elsevier ๐ŸŒ English โš– 986 KB

This work contains over thirty chapters by leading researchers in the field of oxidative biology, originally presented as articles in an extended Forum in the highly-cited journal, *Free Radical Biology & Medicine*. The papers in this Forum (or Symposium-in-print) spanned seven issues of the journal