Monday, July 1, 2013

Diamond catalyst shows promise in breaching age-old barrier

Diamond catalyst shows promise in breaching age-old barrier [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jun-2013
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Contact: Robert J. Hamers
rjhamers@wisc.edu
608-262-6371
University of Wisconsin-Madison

MADISON -- In the world, there are a lot of small molecules people would like to get rid of, or at least convert to something useful, according to University of Wisconsin-Madison chemist Robert J. Hamers.

Think carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas most responsible for far-reaching effects on global climate. Nitrogen is another ubiquitous small-molecule gas that can be transformed into the valuable agricultural fertilizer ammonia. Plants perform the chemical reduction of atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia as a matter of course, but for humans to do that in an industrial setting, a necessity for modern agriculture, requires subjecting nitrogen to massive amounts of energy under high pressure.

"The current process for reducing nitrogen to ammonia is done under extreme conditions," explains Hamers, a UW-Madison professor of chemistry. "There is an enormous barrier you have to overcome to get your final product."

Breaching that barrier more efficiently and reducing the huge amounts of energy used to convert nitrogen to ammonia by some estimates 10 percent of the world's electrical output has been a grail for the agricultural chemical industry. Now, that goal may be on the horizon, thanks to a technique devised by Hamers and his colleagues and published today (June 30, 2013) in the journal Nature Methods.

Like many chemical reactions, reducing nitrogen to ammonia is a product of catalysis, where the catalytic agent used in the traditional energy-intensive reduction process is iron. The iron, combined with high temperature and high pressure, accelerates the reaction rate for converting nitrogen to ammonia by lowering the activation barrier that otherwise keeps nitrogen, one of the most ubiquitous gases on the planet, intact.

"The nitrogen molecule is one of the happiest molecules around," notes Hamers. "It is incredibly stable. It doesn't do anything."

One of the big obstacles, according to Hamers, is that nitrogen binds poorly to catalytic materials like iron.

Hamers and his team, including Di Zhu, Linghong Zhang and Rose E. Ruther, all of UW-Madison, turned to synthetic industrial diamond a cheap, gritty, versatile material as a potential new catalyst for the reduction process. Diamond, the Wisconsin team found, can facilitate the reduction of nitrogen to ammonia under ambient temperatures and pressures.

Like all chemical reactions, the reduction of nitrogen to ammonia involves moving electrons from one molecule to another. Using hydrogen-coated diamond illuminated by deep ultraviolet light, the Wisconsin team was able to induce a ready stream of electrons into water, which served as a reactant liquid that reduced nitrogen to ammonia under temperature and pressure conditions far more efficient than those required by traditional industrial methods.

"From a chemist's standpoint, nothing is more efficient than electrons in water," says Hamers, whose work is funded by the National Science Foundation. With the diamond catalyst, "the electrons are unconfined. They flow like lemmings to the sea."

While the method was demonstrated in the context of reducing nitrogen to a valuable agricultural product, the new diamond-centric approach is exciting, Hamers argues, because it can potentially fit a wide range of processes that require catalysis. "This is truly a different way of thinking about inducing reactions that may have more efficiency and applicability. We're doing this with diamond grit. It is infinitely reusable."

The technique devised by Hamers and his colleagues, he notes, still has kinks that need to be worked out to make it a viable alternative to traditional methods. The use of deep ultraviolet light, for example, is a limiting factor. Inducing reactions with visible light is a goal that would enhance the promise of the new technique for applications such as antipollution technology.

###

Contact:

Terry Devitt
608-262-8282
trdevitt@wisc.edu


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Diamond catalyst shows promise in breaching age-old barrier [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Robert J. Hamers
rjhamers@wisc.edu
608-262-6371
University of Wisconsin-Madison

MADISON -- In the world, there are a lot of small molecules people would like to get rid of, or at least convert to something useful, according to University of Wisconsin-Madison chemist Robert J. Hamers.

Think carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas most responsible for far-reaching effects on global climate. Nitrogen is another ubiquitous small-molecule gas that can be transformed into the valuable agricultural fertilizer ammonia. Plants perform the chemical reduction of atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia as a matter of course, but for humans to do that in an industrial setting, a necessity for modern agriculture, requires subjecting nitrogen to massive amounts of energy under high pressure.

"The current process for reducing nitrogen to ammonia is done under extreme conditions," explains Hamers, a UW-Madison professor of chemistry. "There is an enormous barrier you have to overcome to get your final product."

Breaching that barrier more efficiently and reducing the huge amounts of energy used to convert nitrogen to ammonia by some estimates 10 percent of the world's electrical output has been a grail for the agricultural chemical industry. Now, that goal may be on the horizon, thanks to a technique devised by Hamers and his colleagues and published today (June 30, 2013) in the journal Nature Methods.

Like many chemical reactions, reducing nitrogen to ammonia is a product of catalysis, where the catalytic agent used in the traditional energy-intensive reduction process is iron. The iron, combined with high temperature and high pressure, accelerates the reaction rate for converting nitrogen to ammonia by lowering the activation barrier that otherwise keeps nitrogen, one of the most ubiquitous gases on the planet, intact.

"The nitrogen molecule is one of the happiest molecules around," notes Hamers. "It is incredibly stable. It doesn't do anything."

One of the big obstacles, according to Hamers, is that nitrogen binds poorly to catalytic materials like iron.

Hamers and his team, including Di Zhu, Linghong Zhang and Rose E. Ruther, all of UW-Madison, turned to synthetic industrial diamond a cheap, gritty, versatile material as a potential new catalyst for the reduction process. Diamond, the Wisconsin team found, can facilitate the reduction of nitrogen to ammonia under ambient temperatures and pressures.

Like all chemical reactions, the reduction of nitrogen to ammonia involves moving electrons from one molecule to another. Using hydrogen-coated diamond illuminated by deep ultraviolet light, the Wisconsin team was able to induce a ready stream of electrons into water, which served as a reactant liquid that reduced nitrogen to ammonia under temperature and pressure conditions far more efficient than those required by traditional industrial methods.

"From a chemist's standpoint, nothing is more efficient than electrons in water," says Hamers, whose work is funded by the National Science Foundation. With the diamond catalyst, "the electrons are unconfined. They flow like lemmings to the sea."

While the method was demonstrated in the context of reducing nitrogen to a valuable agricultural product, the new diamond-centric approach is exciting, Hamers argues, because it can potentially fit a wide range of processes that require catalysis. "This is truly a different way of thinking about inducing reactions that may have more efficiency and applicability. We're doing this with diamond grit. It is infinitely reusable."

The technique devised by Hamers and his colleagues, he notes, still has kinks that need to be worked out to make it a viable alternative to traditional methods. The use of deep ultraviolet light, for example, is a limiting factor. Inducing reactions with visible light is a goal that would enhance the promise of the new technique for applications such as antipollution technology.

###

Contact:

Terry Devitt
608-262-8282
trdevitt@wisc.edu


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-06/uow-dcs062713.php

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Secrets of a world-class gym | Stuff.co.nz

The latest greatest equipment, friendly staff and flexibility are the secrets to a successful gym franchise, according to Justin McDonell, who owns the master franchise for the Anytime Fitness chain of 24-hour gyms in Australia.

McDonell should know. In five years he's built the franchise into a national network of 260 gyms and is on track to reach 350 gyms by Christmas, with an ultimate goal of 400 gyms.

Not a bad result for a business that opened its first franchise in the New South Wales country town of Gunnedah in 2007, population 7888.

He says he chose Gunnedah as a test location for the network because the site fit the global business model - it was located next to a supermarket. The rent was also low, allowing him a relatively risk-free first foray into the market. Just two months later, he opened a second gym, in Wodonga on the NSW/Victorian border.

According to McDonell, who founded the business with his sister Jacinta McDonell-Jimenez, although it's easy to assume gyms are more city than country, rolling out the strategy throughout country towns initially allowed the pair to keep costs low and test the market.

When the siblings were considering taking the master franchise for Australia they looked at two different gym franchises that were already successful in the United States and also considered going it alone.

But being able to access the Anytime Fitness infrastructure, marketing and IT support, as well as the name, convinced them to go ahead with the agreement.

McDonell says the major sticking point when signing the master agreement was making sure it clearly stipulated exactly what they were getting for their money.

"We wanted a tight agreement and they came to the party. But they wanted to keep ongoing support [agreed the under arrangement] loose," he explains.

The Australian franchisees pay a monthly network fee of $900, of which a third goes back to the US parent. For that, franchisees receive support and access to a dashboard of metrics so they can tell how their business is performing. They are required under the terms of their five-year contracts to do a complete refit every five years to keep the gyms looking (and no doubt smelling) fresh.

"We also give franchisees support acquiring property or signing a lease," says McDonell, who explains franchisees also get access to an inhouse architect and the business's five-strong support team, as well as coaching.

He says so far none of the franchises has failed, although one agreement was terminated. McDonell bought back this business, which he says is now performing well.

One of the reasons the franchise has been so popular with franchisees is because it can be run by one or two people. Although every outlet is open 24/7, it doesn't have to be staffed around the clock. Cameras are mounted in every gym so franchisees can monitor cameras online when they're not on the premises. (Members are given a key and access code and can let themselves in.)

Most of the gyms are also located in residential areas with plenty of parking, so gym members can get in and out easily. Memberships can be used at more than 2000 gyms around the world.

As to how the business has managed to sustain such stellar growth since it launched, McDonell says many franchisees own multiple franchises - the top franchisee has 10 gyms - which has helped drive expansion.

"Growth has come from our internal networks and through referrals from existing franchisees," he says, explaining that when selecting potential franchisees what he looks for is a passion for health and fitness, good business acumen or previous sales and marketing experience.

"I've just been in a training session and we had accountants and personal trainers as well as people who have been involved with other franchises who are attracted to the low-staffing model," McDonell says.

In terms of the lessons he's learned since opening the business, he says if he had his time again he would have self-funded the enterprise - initially two partners were involved, of which one has since been bought out.

Right now McDonell is rolling out a new product through 60 gyms called "fitness on request", which involves rooms where members can dial up exercise classes. He's also trialling cost-effective personal trainers for small groups and new cardio equipment.

"We try to be driven by technology because we're very conscious that the product needs to keep evolving."

Here are his five tips for running a successful gym:

1. Make sure you have the latest technology and gadgets.

2. Offer members services others don't.

3. Be flexible - if members want to train at 8pm on a Sunday night, facilitate it.

4. Offer a friendly, professional service.

5. Keep the gym clean.

- Sydney Morning Herald

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/better-business/8862989/Secrets-of-a-world-class-gym

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130 degrees? Death Valley could hit 100-year high as deadly heat wave bakes West

Parts of the country are experiencing triple-digit temperatures as Sunday marked day three of a heat wave that has punished much of the western United States. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

The Southwest again saw soaring temperatures on Sunday, with Las Vegas tying an all-time high of 117 degrees and forecasters predicting the aptly named Furnace Creek in the heart of Death Valley, Calif., might hit a 100-year high of 130 degrees.

The deadly scorcher in the West led the National Weather Service to post excessive heat warnings for large parts of California as well as Nevada and?Arizona, and heat advisories for other parts of Nevada as well four other western states.

David McNew / Getty Images

Death Valley National Park employee Anna Gilay makes her usual seven-mile morning run at 6:55 a.m. with the unofficial temperature already reaching 103 degrees as a heat wave spreads across the West on Sunday.

In Las Vegas, the temperature hit 117 degrees at McCarran International Airport on Sunday, tying an all-time high for any month of the year, Weather.com reported. That temperature was last reached on July 24, 1942 and July 19, 2005.?The normal high temperature for this time of year in Vegas is 103 degrees.

Seven people were hospitalized for heat-related health illnesses on Sunday, the Las Vegas Sun reported.

The heat wave turned deadly in Sin City Saturday when a Las Vegas Fire & Rescue crew responded to a report of an elderly man in cardiac arrest at a residence without air conditioning.

When paramedics arrived, they found the man was dead,?NBC station KSNV reported. The man, who was not identified, did have medical issues, but paramedics characterized his death as heat-related.

In Furnace Creek ??one of the hottest places on Earth ??temperatures didn't quite reach the forecast 130. Instead, the weather station at Death Valley National Park reported a high of 128 degrees, still tying the record for the highest reading in the United States during the month of June. The Weather Service extended the excessive heat warning for parts of California and Nevada into the July 4 holiday.


?If it does hit 130, that would be the hottest it?s been in a century,? Chris Stachelski, a meteorologist with the Weather Service in Las Vegas, told NBC News.

Saturday?s high at Furnace Creek was also 128 degrees.

The highest-ever recorded air temperature on the planet, according to the Weather Service, was 134 degrees on July 10, 1913, in Death Valley?s Greenland Ranch.

Heat advisories were also in effect Sunday into Tuesday for the Pacific Northwest, where highs in Seattle and Portland could reach into the 90s. East of the Cascade Mountains and into the Columbia River Gorge temperatures could even soar to more than 105 degrees, according to the Weather Service.

In Arizona on Sunday, 50 homes in the central Arizona community of Yarnell had to be evacuated as searing temperatures, low humidity and winds allowed a wildfire to spread.

And in Pasadena, Calif., where temperatures soared into triple digits, at least 12 runners in a marathon event experienced heat-related illnesses, Pasadena Fire Department spokeswoman Lisa Derderian told NBCLosAngeles.com. Four men in their 20s were transported to hospitals in serious condition during the race, she said.

Saturday saw a slew of weather records broken, Weather.com reported, including in Phoenix, Ariz., which saw its fourth-hottest day in history, with a?temperature of 119 degrees.

Salt Lake City, Utah, had its hottest June day on record ? 105 degrees ? for the second day in a row.

It was so hot that two forecasters with the Weather Service in Phoenix decided to demonstrate the oven-like temperatures Saturday and baked cookies on?the dash of a 2008 Dodge van.

Two guys from the National Weather Service harnessed the power of the sun and took advantage of the extreme heat wave scorching the Western U.S. to bake up some fresh cookies on the dashboard of their car. TODAY's Dylan Dreyer reports.

?We were joking around that we should bake some cookies, because that sounds a lot better than frying an egg,? meteorologist Charlotte Dewey told the Los Angeles Times. ?More tasty, anyway.?

One report recorded the temperature in the van at 200 degrees. It took about four hours to bake the cookies ? when the temperature hit 116, the cookies were done. Apparently frying an egg on the sidewalk was seen as pass?.

In an another unusual occurrence, commuter airline US Airways Express was forced to ground some planes out of Phoenix on Saturday afternoon when temperatures soared above 115, NBC station KPNX reported.

The extreme heat creates less dense air, which does not allow some planes to get the lift they need to fly, according to the station?s meteorologist Matt Pace.

NBC News' Tracy Jarrett and Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report.

Dozens of people have been hospitalized due to heat-related injuries in the high temperatures that are gripping the Western U.S. Some cities have seen temperatures soar far past the hundred-degree mark, while the heat continues. TODAY's Dylan Dreyer reports.

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NBA Free Agency 2013: Pelicans reportedly 'strongly interested' in Andre Iguodala

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Saugerties highway boss Doug Myer, snubbed by GOP, turns to Democrats for ballot line

SAUGERTIES, N.Y. ? Denied the backing of his own party in his bid for re-election, Saugerties Highway Superintendent Doug Myer, a Republican, said he plans to seek the support of the town Democratic Committee instead.?

In a letter last week, Myer said he would seek the Democratic nomination at the party?s annual caucus, scheduled for 7 p.m. July 9 at the Greco Senior Center on Market Street in the village.?

Myer said he already has been endorsed by the party?s search committee.?

In his letter, Myer said ?the position of highway superintendent ?requires extreme emphasis placed upon qualifications, a proven track record in this field, accompanied by firm professional approaches on accomplishing the needs of the town?s infrastructure.??

Also, Myer said, because the town Highway Department?s budget is $3 million and is accompanied by a Federal Emergency Management Agency allocation of $3.5 million for special repair projects, the position requires complete dedication, professionalism and a business-like approach.

?When taking office in 2012, I promised to bring ?honesty, integrity and experience? to these positions that the taxpayers within the town of Saugerties entrusted in me to manage on their behalf,? Myer said. ?I have done just that. Many decisions have had to be made, some easy and some very difficult.??

Myer said he has worked tirelessly since taking office to accomplish a number of positive changes for the town. He said the safety of his employees is the No. 1 priority, ?along with maximizing the amount of work completed while staying within or under our current budgets.? Myer encouraged town residents to scrutinize his performance to date.

?I feel that you will be more than satisfied with the outcome of your critique from all sides,? Myer said. He said anyone who looks at his track record will find that he has kept all his promises, applied sound business principles to the department and has proven his leadership ability.?

Earlier this month, town Republicans voted to back Ray Mayone, the owner of a construction business, over Myer during a nominating caucus.?

Source: http://www.freemanonline.com/articles/2013/06/30/news/doc51cf81d91f27e395033117.txt

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First family touring Mandela's island prison

JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? President Barack Obama is paying tribute on Sunday to the man who inspired his political activism by taking his family on a tour of the island prison where anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela spent 18 years confined to a tiny cell.

Obama's visit to Robben Island comes as Mandela is hospitalized for a third week in critical condition. Obama was near Mandela's Pretoria hospital Saturday, but did not see him due to the family's wishes and instead met privately with Mandela's relatives.

His schedule Sunday begins with a flight to Cape Town, near Africa's southernmost tip and then a helicopter ride to the museum on Robben Island. Obama visited when he was a senator but this time is bringing his family. He said he's eager to teach them about Mandela's role in overcoming white racist rule, first as an activist and later as a president who forged a unity government with his former captors.

He told reporters Saturday he wants to "help them to understand not only how those lessons apply to their own lives but also to their responsibilities in the future as citizens of the world, that's a great privilege and a great honor."

Obama, who has spoken movingly about Mandela throughout his trip to Africa, praised the former South African president's "moral courage" during remarks from the grand Union Buildings where Mandela was inaugurated as his nation's first black president.

"We as leaders occupy these spaces temporarily and we don't get so deluded that we think the fate of our country doesn't depend on how long we stay in office," Obama said during a news conference with South African President Jacob Zuma.

Obama's ascent to the White House has drawn inevitable comparisons to Mandela. Both are their nations' first black presidents, symbols of racial barrier breaking and winners of the Nobel Peace Prize. And Obama attended his first political rally while a 19-year-old college student protesting apartheid.

Zuma said Obama and Mandela "both carry the dreams of millions of people in Africa and in the diaspora who were previously oppressed."

Mandela's legacy also will be a prominent theme throughout Obama's speech later Sunday at the University of Cape Town, said White House deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes. The president will emphasis "the ability for societies to change," Rhodes said, along with the need for democratic development and empowering young people.

Rhodes said Mandela's vision was always going to feature prominently in the speech given that the address will follow Obama's visit to Robben Island, the prison where Mandela was confined for 18 years. But the former South African leader's deteriorating health "certainly puts a finer point on just how much we can't take for granted what Nelson Mandela did."

Obama is also expected to emphasize how Mandela's democratic vision is hardly complete. While there has been progress here that "nobody could have possibly imagined," Rhodes said, millions of people on the continent still live in poverty and governments still struggle with corruption.

Harkening back to a prominent theme from his speech in Ghana in 2009, Obama will emphasize that Africans must take much of the responsibility for finishing the work started by Mandela and his contemporaries.

"The progress that Africa has made opens new doors, but frankly, it's up to the leaders in Africa and particularly young people to make sure that they're walking through those doors of opportunity," Rhodes said.

Obama will speak at the University of Cape Town nearly 50 years after Robert F. Kennedy delivered his famous "Ripple of Hope" speech from the school. Kennedy spoke in Cape Town two years after Mandela was sentenced to life in prison.

___

Follow Nedra Pickler on Twitter at https://twitter.com/nedrapickler

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/first-family-touring-mandelas-island-prison-081446620.html

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Chinese media warns Philippines of counterstrike in disputed South China Sea spat

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  • Best-paid man in Obamas team earns $225000 per year

    Times of India - Saturday 29th June, 2013

    WASHINGTON: Twenty-two of US President Barack Obama's top advisers make the top White House salary of $172,200 per year -- but there is one official who earns 30% more. It's not chief of staff Denis McDonough. Not Obama's senior adviser and close friend Valerie Jarrett. Not Cecilia Munoz, who is overseeing White House efforts on immigration reform, nor Lisa Monaco, who advises ...

  • Source: http://www.uzbekistannews.net/index.php/sid/215527847/scat/bf053b50c46383e0

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