Harry Kroto speaking about his first result as a researcher: "The year was 1962 when Simons and Yarwod published a paper on the flash photolysis of bromoform CCl3Br at low resolution which indicated ...
This high performance was associated with water photolysis that effectively generated hydroxyl radicals (oxidizing species ...
This excellent performance was attributed to water photolysis, which produced hydroxyl radicals—oxidizing species that can ...
MANY of the short lived chemical species studied by methods such as flash photolysis and pulse radiolysis are known to exist naturally as well as in the laboratory, and to play a vital part in ...
Multiple pollutants affect the transfer, adsorption, photolysis and degradation of each other throughout the soil–plant–water system. Prof. Xinping Chen from Southwest University and his team ...
Each optical table is also equipped with high power lasers for photolysis or fluorescence spectroscopy. Microfluidic attachments are available for use, and a small microfluidic fabrication facility ...
Photolysis of ozone occurs at wavelengths below approximately 310–320 nanometres. This reaction initiates the chain of chemical reactions that remove carbon monoxide, methane, and other hydrocarbons ...
B.S., Chemical Engineering, Minor in Biochemistry, University of Colorado, Boulder, 2000 Ph.D., Chemical Engineering,Minor in Environmental Science, California Institute of Technology, 2009 The Murphy ...
One pathway for the production of active chlorine is the photolysis of nitryl chloride into chlorine and nitrogen dioxide by sunlight. On page 324 of this issue, Osthoff and colleagues 1 report ...
Lord Porter (Professor of Physical Chemistry 1955-66) shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1967 with Ronald Wreyford for their discovery of flash photolysis, a technique which enabled chemists for ...
2014-2016: Associate Head Graduate, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, University of Calgary. 2005-2015: Tier II Canada Research Chair, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, ...
Definition: A technique in which a sample is first excited by a strong pulse (the 'pump' pulse) of light from a laser. This first pulse starts a chemical reaction or leads to an increased population ...