Academic literature on the topic 'Cincinnati Iron Fence Co'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cincinnati Iron Fence Co"

1

Ikeda, K., K. Tsumori, H. Nakano, K. Nagaoka, Y. Takeiri, S. Masaki, E. Rattanawongnara, and M. Osakabe. "Difference of co-extracted electron current and beam acceleration in a negative ion source with hydrogen-isotope ions." Journal of Physics: Conference Series 2244, no. 1 (April 1, 2022): 012060. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/2244/1/012060.

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Abstract Improvement of the performance on a hydrogen/deuterium negative ion source for a nuclear fusion device is reported. In particular, the suppression of the co-extracted electron current, Ie, is an important issue to ensure the stable beam acceleration. Improvement of the Ie has been confirmed by optimizing the magnetic field of the electron deflection magnet in the extraction grid. Two other new methods for reduction of the Ie were validated. The first was an electron fence whose rods were set between the rows of apertures on a plasma grid. The electron and negative ion current ratio, approximately Ie/I acc, was greatly improved from 0.7 to 0.25 in deuterium. The second was an outer iron yoke which enhanced the magnetic flux density 19% inside the arc discharge chamber. The Ie/Iacc using the outer yoke decreased by 0.1 compared with using a normal magnetic filter in a deuterium operation. These attempts have improved the total deuterium injection beam power of 8.4 MW by three negative ion based NBIs.
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2

Ikeda, K., K. Tsumori, H. Nakano, K. Nagaoka, Y. Takeiri, S. Masaki, E. Rattanawongnara, and M. Osakabe. "Difference of co-extracted electron current and beam acceleration in a negative ion source with hydrogen-isotope ions." Journal of Physics: Conference Series 2244, no. 1 (April 1, 2022): 012060. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/2244/1/012060.

Full text
Abstract:
Abstract Improvement of the performance on a hydrogen/deuterium negative ion source for a nuclear fusion device is reported. In particular, the suppression of the co-extracted electron current, Ie, is an important issue to ensure the stable beam acceleration. Improvement of the Ie has been confirmed by optimizing the magnetic field of the electron deflection magnet in the extraction grid. Two other new methods for reduction of the Ie were validated. The first was an electron fence whose rods were set between the rows of apertures on a plasma grid. The electron and negative ion current ratio, approximately Ie/I acc, was greatly improved from 0.7 to 0.25 in deuterium. The second was an outer iron yoke which enhanced the magnetic flux density 19% inside the arc discharge chamber. The Ie/Iacc using the outer yoke decreased by 0.1 compared with using a normal magnetic filter in a deuterium operation. These attempts have improved the total deuterium injection beam power of 8.4 MW by three negative ion based NBIs.
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3

Rosing, Joanna L., Rami S. Komrokji, and E. Gordon Margolin. "Anemia in Elderly Hospitalized Veterans: Prevalence, Causes, and Clinical Impact." Blood 106, no. 11 (November 16, 2005): 3756. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v106.11.3756.3756.

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Abstract Anemia occurs frequently in elderly and has been identified as a public health issue. The purpose of our study was to identify the prevalence, causes and clinical impact of anemia among hospitalized elderly veterans. We performed retrospective review of all medical records of patients 65 years or older admitted over 6-month period to the general internal medicine service at Cincinnati Veteran Medical Center. Anemia was defined according to WHO criteria (< 13.0 g/dl in males and < 12.0 g/dl in females). Data were collected reviewing the electronic medical records. Variables included demographics, functional status, reason of admission, co-morbidities, medications, hemoglobin level on admission, and selected laboratory results. Causes of anemia were identified from the medical records or interpretation of laboratory data. Outcome variables included duration of hospitalization, end-of-hospitalization death, re-admissions, and survival at the end of the study. Database was generated using SPSS software. Descriptive statistics were used to describe rate, and causes of anemia. Chi-square test was used to compare categorical variables between patients with anemia and patients with no anemia and t-test was used for continuous variables. Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox-regression analysis were used for survival analysis. Between January 2004-June 2004, 500 hundred patients 65 years or older were admitted to general medicine service. Mean age was 76 years. Majority of patients were males (97%) and white (71%). Coronary artery disease was the commonest identified reason for admission. Anemia was observed in 298 patients (59.6%) on admission. Mean hemoglobin level on admission was 12.2 +/− 2.39. The most common causes of anemia were iron deficiency anemia (25%), anemia of chronic disease/chronic renal disease 14%, blood loss 7%, vitamin B 12 deficiency (6%), Myelodysplastic syndrome (4%). Anemia was mutli-factorial in 10% of patients, 34% of patients had other causes of anemia or unknown cause. Baseline characteristics were similar between patients identified with anemia and non-anemic group except for race; where more Afro-American patients were in the anemia group 31% compared to 10 % in the non-anemic group (p-value < 0.0005). Malignancy, diabetes melitus, chronic renal failure, and cirrhosis were comorbidities more seen in the anemic group. There was no statistically significant difference between the anemic patients and non-anemic group regarding duration of hospitalization, re-admission, and end-of-hospitalization death rate. Survival was inferior among anemic patients within 6 month, 41% of patients died compared to 24% among non-anemic patients (Log Rank test, P value 0.0001) (Figure-1). Anemia was a statistically significant co-morbidity affecting survival among multivariable analysis using cox-regression analysis. This study is the first to address the high prevalence of anemia among hospitalized elderly veterans and suggests a clinical impact on survival. It raises questions to be better addressed in a prospective fashion. Figure Figure
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4

Liang, Jiaming, Jiangtao Liu, Lisheng Guo, Wenhang Wang, Chengwei Wang, Weizhe Gao, Xiaoyu Guo, et al. "CO2 hydrogenation over Fe-Co bimetallic catalysts with tunable selectivity through a graphene fencing approach." Nature Communications 15, no. 1 (January 13, 2024). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44763-9.

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AbstractTuning CO2 hydrogenation product distribution to obtain high-selectivity target products is of great significance. However, due to the imprecise regulation of chain propagation and hydrogenation reactions, the oriented synthesis of a single product is challenging. Herein, we report an approach to controlling multiple sites with graphene fence engineering that enables direct conversion of CO2/H2 mixtures into different types of hydrocarbons. Fe-Co active sites on the graphene fence surface present 50.1% light olefin selectivity, while the spatial Fe-Co nanoparticles separated by graphene fences achieve liquefied petroleum gas of 43.6%. With the assistance of graphene fences, iron carbides and metallic cobalt can efficiently regulate C-C coupling and olefin secondary hydrogenation reactions to achieve product-selective switching between light olefins and liquefied petroleum gas. Furthermore, it also creates a precedent for CO2 direct hydrogenation to liquefied petroleum gas via a Fischer-Tropsch pathway with the highest space-time yields compared to other reported composite catalysts.
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Books on the topic "Cincinnati Iron Fence Co"

1

US Supreme Court Transcript of Record Dayton Coal Iron Co V Cincinnati N O T P R Co. Gale, U.S. Supreme Court Records, 2011.

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