Results 131 to 140 of about 698,572 (306)
Bioprospecting Ulleungdo‐isolated microalgae for carbon valorization and utilization
Abstract The growing demand for renewable energy alternatives has intensified global interest in microalgae as versatile bioresources for carbon valorization and bioenergy production. Owing to their rapid growth and biochemical versatility, microalgae provide a sustainable route for converting captured carbon into bioenergy and high‐value products ...
Ha‐Neul Choi +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Deep-Sea Biomimetic Manta Ray Robots: A Comprehensive Review Based on Operational Depth Spectrum, Structures, Energy Optimization, and Control Systems. [PDF]
Ye L +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
‘Let's talk about the weather’: The activist curriculum and global climate change education
Abstract Activist movements have garnered significant global attention on a range of sustainability issues, often involving collectives of citizens coming together. Invoked is the idea of citizens informed to act, emerging not from a common‐sense understanding of everyday life, but rather from a deep political understanding of the world—one that is ...
Richard Pountney
wiley +1 more source
Editorial: Life under pressure: microbial adaptation and survival in high pressure environments. [PDF]
Jebbar M, Li XG.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT The design of biological carbon capture systems to uptake carbon dioxide by photoautotrophic cultivation of algae has been proposed to mitigate atmospheric carbon emissions. Multiple models to predict algal growth as a function of nutrients have been proposed, but few have delved into the complex dynamic reactions of algal growth as influenced
Elizabeth Flanagan +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Real-Time Deep-Sea Mooring System with Inductive Telemetry and Multi-Sensor Integration: Deployment and Performance in the South China Sea. [PDF]
Liu T +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Marine silicon for biomedical sustainability
Schematic illustrating marine silicon for biomedical engineering. Abstract Despite momentous divergence from oceanic origin, human beings and marine organisms exhibit elemental homology through silicon utilization. Notably, silicon serves as a critical constituent in multiple biomedical processes.
Yahui Han +3 more
wiley +1 more source

