Catálogo de publicaciones - libros

Compartir en
redes sociales


Encyclopedic Dictionary of Polymers

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

No disponibles.

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-0-387-31021-3

ISBN electrónico

978-0-387-30160-0

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag 2007

Tabla de contenidos

Popping

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- P | Pp. 775-775

Prism (prismatic)

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- P | Pp. 792-792

Probit

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- P | Pp. 793-793

PS

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- P | Pp. 798-798

Raveling

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- R | Pp. 818-818

Resistance heating

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- R | Pp. 833-833

Resistance thermometer

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- R | Pp. 834-834

Rotary joint

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- R | Pp. 849-849

Rotary-vane feeder

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- R | Pp. 849-849

Slush molding

Jan W. Gooch (eds.)

The reliable assessment of hazards or risks arising from groundwater contamination problems and the design of efficient and effective techniques to mitigate these problems require the capability to predict the behavior of chemical contaminants in flowing water. To choose an appropriate remediation strategy, knowledge of the contaminant release source and time release history becomes pertinent. With more and more contamination sites being detected nowadays, it is almost impossible to perform exhaustive drilling, testing, and chemical fingerprint analysis every time, especially in the case of pollution being generated by highway construction and repair materials. Moreover, most of the time, chemical finger printing, state and federal agency records, and private parties' history records of handling hazardous substances are not sufficient to allow a unique solution for the timing of source releases. The purpose of this chapter is to present and review mathematical methods that have been developed during the past 15 years to perform hydrologic inversion and specifically to identify the contaminant source location and time-release history.

- S | Pp. 895-895