Results 211 to 220 of about 2,269,689 (267)
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Productivity Testing Using Production Logging Techniques
Middle East Technical Conference and Exhibition, 1981ABSTRACT A method of individual zone productivity and inflow performance relationship testing has been employed in two prolific offshore oil fields. The procedures involving downhole measure ment of flow and pressure data using production logging combination tools are explained.
Ernst Weiss +2 more
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Product use and product improvement
Research Policy, 1990Abstract This paper presents a conceptual framework for the analysis of product improvement. It begins by establishing that in the process by which products are improved, knowledge of user requirements, of product characteristics, of how to redesign products, and about the production process needs to be acquired.
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The use of agroindustrial by‐products for biosurfactant production
Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society, 1994AbstractTraditionally, hydrocarbons have been used for biosurfactant production. However, urban waste, peat pressate and agroindustrial by‐products, such as olive oil mill effluent and acid whey, are possible substitutes for microbial growth and biosurfactant production.
M. E. Mercade, M. A. Manresa
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Productive Water Use in Rice Production: Opportunities and Limitations
Journal of Crop Production, 2000Summary It is crucial for food security to produce more rice with decreasing availability of water for rice production. This article seeks to answer the question “Does rice really require an abundance of water?” and discusses strategies and options to make rice production more water-efficient.
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1995
What can be more annoying than ready to cook food that doesn’t tell you to take it out of the packet first; a packet of tea bags that doesn’t tell you how to make tea; a shampoo that gives no clue to how to apply it? Not everyone automatically knows how to do these things. There is a first time for all of us.
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What can be more annoying than ready to cook food that doesn’t tell you to take it out of the packet first; a packet of tea bags that doesn’t tell you how to make tea; a shampoo that gives no clue to how to apply it? Not everyone automatically knows how to do these things. There is a first time for all of us.
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Farm Products and By Products for Industrial Use
1940Excerpt from the Foreword: Industrial use of farm products has made rapid strides in the last few years. For example, there has been a constantly increasing use of soybeans as an industrial raw material. The factory consumption of soybean oil has increased practically 10-fold since 1931.
Holman, H. P. +4 more
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The Production and Use of Coal Combustion Products
2003Coal combustion byproducts (CCBs) arising from energy generation are the most abundant waste streams worldwide. Legislation aimed at reducing environmental pollution associated with coal combustion will continue to add to this waste stream into the future, increasing the need to develop pertinent and safe end uses for these materials.
Tracy Punshon +2 more
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Using Compost Products in Vegetable Production
1998Six compost products and nitrogen (N) from ammonium nitrate fertilizer were utilized in field experiments to grow lettuce (Lactuca sativa var. ‘Lollarosa’) and broccoli (Brassica oleracea botrytis, var. ‘Brigadeer’) crops to evaluate the effect of various compost products and N application on crop yields.
Aziz Shiralipour +2 more
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Use of Blood and Blood Products
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 1999It is sometimes necessary for the practitioner to transfuse the ruminant with whole blood or plasma. These techniques are often difficult to perform in practice, are time-consuming, expensive, and stressful to the animal. Acute loss of 20% to 25% of the blood volume will result in marked clinical signs of anemia, including tachycardia and maniacal ...
E, Hunt, B, Wood
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Productivity does not equal usefulness
Scientometrics, 2018For a recent commentary in Nature, Ioannidis et al. (Nature 561(7722):167–169, 2018) searched the Scopus database and identified those “hyperprolific” authors who have published more than one paper every 5 days. The 265 authors who belong to this very productive class contribute disproportionately to the archive.
Lutz Bornmann, Alexander Tekles
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