Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Geostatistics for Environmental Applications: Proceedings of the Fifth European Conference on Geostatistics for Environmental Applications
Philippe Renard Hélène Demougeot-Renard Roland Froidevaux
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No disponible.
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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2005 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-26533-7
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-26535-1
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2005
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
doi: 10.1007/b137753
Geostatistics for Environmental Applications
Philippe Renard; Hélène Demougeot-Renard; Roland Froidevaux
Pp. No disponible
Change of support: an inter-disciplinary challenge
C. A. Gotway Crawford; L. J. Young
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 1-13
Combining categorical and continuous information using Bayesian Maximum Entropy
P. Bogaert; M.-A. Wibrin
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 15-26
Geostatistical prediction of spatial extremes and their extent
N. Cressie; J. Zhang; P.F. Craigmile
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 27-37
Monitoring network optimisation using support vector machines
A. Pozdnoukhov; M. Kanevski
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 39-50
Bayesian Kriging with lognormal data and uncertain variogram parameters
J. Pilz; P. Pluch; G. Spöck
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 51-62
Kriging of scale-invariant data: optimal parameterization of the autocovariance model
R. Sidler; K. Holliger
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 63-74
Scaling Effects on Finite-Domain Fractional Brownian Motion
S. Cintoli; S. P. Neuman; V. Di Federico
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 75-86
The delineation of fishing times and locations for the Shark Bay scallop fishery
U. Mueller; L. Bloom; M. Kangas; N. Caputi; T. Tran
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 87-98
A spatial extension of CART: application to classification of ecological data
L. Bel; J.M. Laurent; A. Bar-Hen; D. Allard; R. Cheddadi
Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.
Pp. 99-109