905 results on '"Huw Griffiths"'
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2. Shakespeare's Body Parts: Figuring Sovereignty in the History Plays. Huw Griffiths. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2020. xii + 148 pp. $100
- Author
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Ursula Clayton
- Subjects
History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Shakespeare's Body Parts: Figuring Sovereignty in the History Plays. Huw Griffiths. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2020. xii + 148 pp. $100.
- Author
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Clayton, Ursula, primary
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Shakespeare’s Body Parts: Figuring Sovereignty in the History Plays. By <scp>Huw Griffiths</scp>
- Author
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Lisa Hopkins
- Subjects
Literature ,Figuring ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Sovereignty ,business.industry ,Philosophy ,business - Published
- 2020
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5. Shakespeare’s Body Parts: Figuring Sovereignty in the History Plays. By Huw Griffiths
- Author
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Hopkins, Lisa, primary
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. TerrANTALife 1.0 Biodiversity data checklist of known Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater life forms
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Luis Pertierra, Gilda Varliero, Andrés Barbosa, Elisabeth Biersma, Peter Convey, Steven Chown, Don Cowan, Asunción De Los Rios, Pablo Escribano-Alvarez, Diego Fontaneto, Ceridwen Fraser, Mathew Harris, Kevin Hughes, Huw Griffiths, Peter le Roux, Xiaoyue Liu, Heather Lynch, Roksana Majewska, Pablo Martinez, Marco Molina-Montenegro, Miguel Olalla-Tarraga, Lloyd Peck, Antonio Quesada, Cristina Ronquillo, Yan Ropert-Coudert, Leopoldo Sancho, Aleks Terauds, Juliana Vianna, Annick Wilmotte, Joaquín Hortal, and Michelle Greve
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Antarctica ,biodiversity ,polar fauna ,polar flora ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Incomplete species inventories for Antarctica represent a key challenge for comprehensive ecological research and conservation in the region. Additionally, data required to understand population dynamics, rates of evolution, spatial ranges, functional traits, physiological tolerances and species interactions, all of which are fundamental to disentangle the different functional elements of Antarctic biodiversity, are mostly missing. However, much of the fauna, flora and microbiota in the emerged ice-free land of the continent have an uncertain presence and/or unresolved status, with entire biodiversity compendia of prokaryotic groups (e.g. bacteria) being missing. All the available biodiversity information requires consolidation, cross-validation, re-assessment and steady systematic inclusion in order to create a robust catalogue of biodiversity for the continent.We compiled, completed and revised eukaryotic species inventories present in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems in Antarctica in a new living database: terrANTALife (version 1.0). The database includes the first integration in a compendium for many groups of eukaryotic microorganisms. We also introduce a first catalogue of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) of prokaryotic biodiversity. Available compendia and literature to date were searched for Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater species, integrated, taxonomically harmonised and curated by experts to create comprehensive checklists of Antarctic organisms. The final inventories comprises 470 animal species (including vertebrates, free-living invertebrates and parasites), 306 plants (including all Viridiplantae: embryophytes and green algae), 997 fungal species and 434 protists (sensu lato). We also provide a first account for many groups of microorganisms, including non-lichenised fungi and multiple groups of eukaryotic unicellular species (Stramenophila, Alveolata and Rhizaria (SAR), Chromists and Amoeba), jointly referred to as "protists". In addition, we identify 1753 bacterial (obtained from 348117 ASVs) and 34 archaeal genera (from 1848 ASVs), as well as, at least, 14 virus families. We formulate a basic tree of life in Antarctica with the main lineages listed in the region and their “known-accepted-species” numbers.
- Published
- 2024
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7. Mollusca collected by Agassiz trawl from the 2016 SO-AntEco (JR15005) expedition to the South Orkney Islands, Antarctica - data
- Author
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Jan Steger, Katrin Linse, Yi-Ming Gan, and Huw Griffiths
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benthic biodiversity ,Southern Ocean ,continental ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
This dataset contributes to the knowledge of macro- and megafaunal Mollusca associated with a range of benthic habitat types in the South Orkney Islands, Antarctica, an exceptionally diverse region of the Southern Ocean. The information presented is derived from Agassiz trawl samples collected on the archipelago’s shelf plateau and slope, within and outside of the South Orkney Islands Southern Shelf Marine Protected Area (SOISS MPA). Sampling was conducted in the framework of the British Antarctic Survey/SCAR “South Orkneys - State of the Antarctic Ecosystem” (SO-AntEco) project aboard RRS James Clark Ross during expedition JR15005 in Austral summer 2016. This dataset is published by the British Antarctic Survey under the licence CC-BY 4.0. We would appreciate it if you could follow the guidelines from the SCAR Data Policy (SCAR 2023) when using the data. If you have any questions regarding this dataset, do not hesitate to contact us via the contact information provided in the metadata or via data-biodiversity-aq@naturalsciences.be. Issues with the dataset can be reported at https://github.com/biodiversity-aq/data-publication/. This dataset is part of the Biodiversity, Evolution and Adaptation Project of the Environmental Change and Evolution Program of the British Antarctic Survey. The cruise report of the expedition is available at https://www.bodc.ac.uk/resources/inventories/cruise_inventory/reports/jr15005.pdf.We report occurrences of Mollusca from individual samples taken with a 2 m-wide Agassiz trawl (AGT) in the framework of the February – March 2016 research expedition JR15005 of RRS James Clark Ross to the SOISS MPA and adjacent shelf and slope areas. Of 78 successful AGT deployments, 44 trawls at depths ranging from 235-2194 m yielded living Mollusca, totalling 2276 individuals, 67 morphospecies and 163 distributional records. One hundred and fifteen empty shells were also collected and recorded in the dataset. Three morphospecies (one Bivalvia and two Gastropoda) were sampled exclusively as empty shells, yielding a total of 70 morphospecies and 2391 specimens represented in the dataset. All specimens were preserved in 96% undenatured ethanol and are stored as vouchers in the collections of the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Cambridge, United Kingdom. The publication of this dataset aims at increasing the knowledge on the biodiversity, abundance and geographical and bathymetric distribution of larger-sized epi- and shallow infaunal Mollusca of the South Orkney Islands.
- Published
- 2023
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8. Sea spiders (Arthropoda, Pycnogonida) from ten recent research expeditions to the Antarctic Peninsula, Scotia Arc and Weddell Sea - data
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Jamie Maxwell, Yi Ming Gan, Claudia Arango, Jana Doemel, A. Louise Allcock, Anton P. van de Putte, and Huw Griffiths
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occurrence ,abundance ,Southern Ocean ,biodiversit ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
This dataset contains information on specimens of Southern Ocean Pycnogonida (Arthropoda), that were collected from ten different research cruises, spanning 13 years. The individual aims and objectives of each cruise can be found in their cruise reports. The specimens have been collated into a single dataset, forming the basis of J. Maxwell’s PhD. The dataset will be used to investigate the community structure of Antarctic pycnogonids and the factors which influence its composition. This dataset is published by SCAR-AntOBIS under the licence CC-BY 4.0. Please follow the guidelines from the SCAR and IPY Data Policies (https://www.scar.org/excom-meetings/xxxi-scar-delegates-2010-buenos-aires-argentina/4563-scar-xxxi-ip04b-scar-data-policy/file/) when using the data. If you have any questions regarding this dataset, please do not hesitate to contact us via the contact information provided in the metadata or via data-biodiversity-aq@naturalsciences.be.This dataset adds vital occurrence and abundance data for pycnogonids from 10 previously unexamined research cruises from the Weddell Sea, Antarctic Penisula and the islands of the Scotia Arc. It includes the first pycnogonid data from the Prince Gustav Channel. The 197 sampling stations within this dataset represent an 11% increase in the number of stations where pycnogonids have been recorded in the Southern Ocean, southern South America and New Zealand waters and an 18% increase for above 60 degrees latitude. Presence data for any observed epifauna are also included.
- Published
- 2022
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9. Understanding the Impact of Lime Stabilization on Expansive Soil for Grounding and Analysis Adopting LIBS.
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G. Parvathy, Myneni Sukesh Babu, P. Sriram Karthick Raja, T. Thyagaraj, Nilesh J. Vasa, Ramanujam Sarathi, Noureddine Harid, and Huw Griffiths
- Published
- 2022
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10. Sea cucumbers (Echinodermata, Holothuroidea) from the JR275 expedition to the eastern Weddell Sea, Antarctica
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Melanie Mackenzie, P. Mark O'Loughlin, Huw Griffiths, and Anton Van de Putte
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Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Thirty-seven holothuroid species, including six potentially new, are reported from the eastern Weddell Sea in Antarctica. Information regarding sea cucumbers in this dataset is based on Agassiz Trawl (AGT) samples collected during the British Antarctic Survey cruise JR275 on the RRS James Clark Ross in the austral summer of 2012. Species presence by site and an appendix of holothuroid identifications with registrations are included as supplementary material. Species occurrence in the Weddell Sea is updated to include new holothuroids from this expedition.
- Published
- 2021
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11. Classification of thermal ageing impact of ester fluid‐impregnated pressboard material adopting LIBS
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Arputhasamy J. Amalanathan, Nilesh J. Vasa, Noureddine Harid, Huw Griffiths, and Ramanujam Sarathi
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ageing ,laser beam effects ,learning (artificial intelligence) ,neural nets ,power engineering computing ,power transformer insulation ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 ,Electricity ,QC501-721 - Abstract
Abstract This article reports the thermal ageing of ester fluid‐impregnated pressboard material along with its performance evaluation using optical emission spectroscopy (OES) and classification using machine‐learning algorithms adopting laser‐induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS). The surface discharge analysis on ester‐impregnated pressboard (EIP) is studied using OES and the plasma temperature was evaluated based on the Cu I emission lines which were higher under the negative DC compared with the positive DC and AC voltages. The LIBS analysis was performed on the EIP material operated at different energy levels in order to acquire the optimal energy required to be used for its classification algorithm. The intensity ratio and electron density evaluated from LIBS studies correlated well with the plasma temperature. The lower limit of detection (LOD) calculated based on linear regression analysis for copper peak was around 3.5 times higher than the identification of carbon peak. The machine‐learning techniques like principal component analysis and neural network algorithm have been performed on the LIBS spectral dataset in order to classify the ageing of EIP material. Artificial neural network adopting LIBS provided a better classification accuracy on all the aged samples compared with principal component analysis which classified only for the samples aged at higher temperatures.
- Published
- 2021
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12. John Russell Brown, Hamlet. A Guide to the Text and its Theatrical Life / Shakespeare: Hamlet. A Reader’s Guide to Criticism. Ed. Huw Griffiths / William Shakespeare’s Hamlet: A Sourcebook. Ed. Sean Mc Evoy / Critical Responses to Hamlet. Vol. 4, 1850–1900 Ed. John Manning, David Farley-Hills, and Johanna Procter / Heiko Uecker: Der nordische Hamlet
- Author
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Dieter Mehl
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Art history ,Criticism ,General Medicine ,Art ,Hamlet (place) ,media_common - Published
- 2007
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13. John Russell Brown, Hamlet. A Guide to the Text and its Theatrical Life / Shakespeare: Hamlet. A Reader’s Guide to Criticism. Ed. Huw Griffiths / William Shakespeare’s Hamlet: A Sourcebook. Ed. Sean Mc Evoy / Critical Responses to Hamlet. Vol. 4, 1850–1900 Ed. John Manning, David Farley-Hills, and Johanna Procter / Heiko Uecker: Der nordische Hamlet
- Author
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Mehl, Dieter, primary
- Published
- 2007
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14. Anametrix Welcomes Jay Baer, Huw Griffiths and Jim Sterne to Advisory Board
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Business ,Business, international - Abstract
- Convince & Convert Founder Jay Baer, UM Chief Performance Officer Huw Griffiths and DAA Founder Jim Sterne Join Cooley SVP Eric Otterson to Provide Strategic Guidance to Marketing Analytics [...]
- Published
- 2013
15. Responses of Southern Ocean Seafloor Habitats and Communities to Global and Local Drivers of Change
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Madeleine J. Brasier, David Barnes, Narissa Bax, Angelika Brandt, Anne B. Christianson, Andrew J. Constable, Rachel Downey, Blanca Figuerola, Huw Griffiths, Julian Gutt, Susanne Lockhart, Simon A. Morley, Alexandra L. Post, Anton Van de Putte, Hanieh Saeedi, Jonathan S. Stark, Michael Sumner, and Catherine L. Waller
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benthos ,Antarctica ,Southern Ocean ,marine protected areas ,vulnerable marine ecosystems ,fishing ,Science ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
Knowledge of life on the Southern Ocean seafloor has substantially grown since the beginning of this century with increasing ship-based surveys and regular monitoring sites, new technologies and greatly enhanced data sharing. However, seafloor habitats and their communities exhibit high spatial variability and heterogeneity that challenges the way in which we assess the state of the Southern Ocean benthos on larger scales. The Antarctic shelf is rich in diversity compared with deeper water areas, important for storing carbon (“blue carbon”) and provides habitat for commercial fish species. In this paper, we focus on the seafloor habitats of the Antarctic shelf, which are vulnerable to drivers of change including increasing ocean temperatures, iceberg scour, sea ice melt, ocean acidification, fishing pressures, pollution and non-indigenous species. Some of the most vulnerable areas include the West Antarctic Peninsula, which is experiencing rapid regional warming and increased iceberg-scouring, subantarctic islands and tourist destinations where human activities and environmental conditions increase the potential for the establishment of non-indigenous species and active fishing areas around South Georgia, Heard and MacDonald Islands. Vulnerable species include those in areas of regional warming with low thermal tolerance, calcifying species susceptible to increasing ocean acidity as well as slow-growing habitat-forming species that can be damaged by fishing gears e.g., sponges, bryozoan, and coral species. Management regimes can protect seafloor habitats and key species from fishing activities; some areas will need more protection than others, accounting for specific traits that make species vulnerable, slow growing and long-lived species, restricted locations with optimum physiological conditions and available food, and restricted distributions of rare species. Ecosystem-based management practices and long-term, highly protected areas may be the most effective tools in the preservation of vulnerable seafloor habitats. Here, we focus on outlining seafloor responses to drivers of change observed to date and projections for the future. We discuss the need for action to preserve seafloor habitats under climate change, fishing pressures and other anthropogenic impacts.
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- 2021
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16. Analysis of space charge and charge trap characteristics of gamma irradiated silicone rubber nanocomposites
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Baskar Thangabalan, Ramanujam Sarathi, Noureddine Harid, and Huw Griffiths
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permittivity ,alumina ,pulsed electroacoustic methods ,nanocomposites ,space charge ,surface potential ,silicone rubber ,filled polymers ,dielectric losses ,electron traps ,charge trap characteristics ,gamma irradiated silicone rubber nanocomposites ,electrical insulation ,harsh environment ,insulation properties ,fundamental space charge ,pulsed electroacoustic analysis ,surface potential measurement ,dielectric properties ,gamma irradiation ,fundamental properties ,space charge performance ,loss factor ,alumina added nanocomposites ,nanofillers ,al(2)o(3) ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
Silicone rubber is widely used for electrical insulation and may be exposed to a harsh environment. The present study envisaged to improve insulation properties of silicone rubber by adding an optimised quantity of nanofillers. The fundamental space charge and charge trap characteristics were studied by adopting the pulsed electroacoustic analysis technique and through surface potential measurement. The dielectric properties of the materials were analysed through measurement of permittivity and loss factor of the material at different frequencies and temperatures. The influence of gamma irradiation on variations in fundamental properties of the material was characterised. The results of the study indicate that 5 wt.% alumina added nanocomposites had better space charge performance under gamma irradiation compared with virgin silicone rubber.
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- 2020
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17. Editorial: Antarctic Biology: Scale Matters
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Bruno Danis, Anton Van de Putte, Peter Convey, Huw Griffiths, Katrin Linse, and Alison E. Murray
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biodiversity ,Antarctica ,global change ,eco-evo ,spatial scale ,temporal scale ,Evolution ,QH359-425 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Published
- 2020
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18. Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic Asteroidea database
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Camille Moreau, Christopher Mah, Antonio Agüera, Nadia Améziane, David Barnes, Guillaume Crokaert, Marc Eléaume, Huw Griffiths, Charlène Guillaumot, Lenaïg G. Hemery, Anna Jażdżewska, Quentin Jossart, Vladimir Laptikhovsky, Katrin Linse, Kate Neill, Chester Sands, Thomas Saucède, Stefano Schiaparelli, Jacek Siciński, Noémie Vasset, and Bruno Danis
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Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
The present dataset is a compilation of georeferenced occurrences of asteroids (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) in the Southern Ocean. Occurrence data south of 45°S latitude were mined from various sources together with information regarding the taxonomy, the sampling source and sampling sites when available. Records from 1872 to 2016 were thoroughly checked to ensure the quality of a dataset that reaches a total of 13,840 occurrences from 4,580 unique sampling events. Information regarding the reproductive strategy (brooders vs. broadcasters) of 63 species is also made available. This dataset represents the most exhaustive occurrence database on Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic asteroids.
- Published
- 2018
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19. Anametrix Welcomes Jay Baer, Huw Griffiths and Jim Sterne to Advisory Board
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Advertising, marketing and public relations - Abstract
By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Marketing Weekly News -- Anametrix, the first cloud-based, real-time marketing analytics platform, announces analytics and social business luminaries Jay Baer, Huw Griffiths and [...]
- Published
- 2013
20. Jay Baer, Huw Griffiths and Jim Sterne to Join Anametrix Advisory Board
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Computer software industry -- Officials and employees ,Business ,Business, international ,Telecommunications industry - Abstract
Anametrix, a cloud-based, real-time marketing analytics platform, announced Jay Baer, Huw Griffiths and Jim Sterne have joined Eric Otterson on the Anametrix advisory board. In a release, Pelin Thorogood, CEO [...]
- Published
- 2013
21. Modelling of a 400-kV MSCDN Reactor for Computation of Voltage and Field Distributions During Switching Transients.
- Author
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Haziah Abdul Hamid, Noureddine Harid, Manu A. Haddad, and Huw Griffiths
- Published
- 2018
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22. Understanding the Surface Condition of Silicone Rubber Nanocomposite Due to Corona Aging Using AFM Imaging and LIBS Spectroscopy
- Author
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Baskar Thangabalan, null Neelmani, Neelesh J. Vasa, Ramanujam Sarathi, Noureddine Harid, and Huw Griffiths
- Subjects
Electrical and Electronic Engineering - Published
- 2022
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23. ^1H NMR tests on damaged and undamaged XLPE and SiR samples
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Lydia Gkoura, Taiji Wang, Athanasios Anastasiou, Noureddine Harid, Huw Griffiths, Manu Haddad, Michalis Fardis, and Marina Karayianni
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silicone rubber ,bonds (chemical) ,XLPE insulation ,nuclear spin-lattice relaxation ,proton magnetic resonance ,spin-spin relaxation ,discharges (electric) ,undamaged XLPE ,SiR samples ,damaged samples ,damaged XLPE ,inclined plane test ,XLPE test sample ,visible damage ,virgin samples ,nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,stressed samples ,^1H NMR tests ,high-voltage AC stress plane-plane configuration ,cross-linked polyethylene ,silicone rubber samples ,discharge ,^1H NMR spin-lattice relaxation time measurements ,^1H NMR spin-spin relaxation time measurements ,chemical bonding ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 ,Electricity ,QC501-721 - Abstract
Cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) and silicone rubber (SiR) samples were subjected to a high-voltage AC stress plane–plane configuration and inclined plane test, respectively. The voltage was applied such that discharge was observed across the surface of the XLPE test sample for several hours and for visible damage to occur on SiR samples also after several hours. Selected stressed samples together with virgin samples from the same manufactured batch were tested using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Specifically, ^1H NMR spin–lattice (T(1)) and spin–spin (T(2)) relaxation time measurements were employed to examine potential changes in the chemical bonding of undamaged and damaged XLPE and SiR samples. Preliminary results show that there may be a moderate increase in the T(1) and T(2) values of the damaged samples in comparison with the undamaged ones. This raises the possibility that NMR can be a useful additional experimental tool in characterising material degradation.
- Published
- 2019
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24. Quantarctica, an integrated mapping environment for Antarctica, the Southern Ocean, and sub-Antarctic islands.
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Kenichi Matsuoka, Anders Skoglund, George Roth, Jean de Pomereu, Huw Griffiths, Robert Headland, Brad Herried, Katsuro Katsumata, Anne M. Le Brocq, Kathy Licht, Fraser Morgan, Peter D. Neff, Catherine Ritz, Mirko Scheinert, Takeshi Tamura, Anton Van de Putte, Michiel van den Broeke, Angela von Deschwanden, César Deschamps-Berger, Brice Van Liefferinge, Stein Tronstad, and Yngve Melvær
- Published
- 2021
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25. Investigation Into Variation of Resistivity and Permittivity of Aqueous Solutions and Soils With Frequency and Current Density
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Ashwin Desai Belaguppa Manjunath, Fatima Khan, Nurym Noyanbayev, Noureddine Harid, Huw Griffiths, Ricardo Pereira Nogueira, Nilson Tadeu Camarinho De Oliveira, Manu Haddad, and Sarathi Ramanujam
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Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics - Abstract
Soil parameter characterization and the variation of permittivity and resistivity with frequency (dispersion) and current density have been the subject of many experimental studies but significant differences in measured values are found in the literature due to different testing approaches, apparatus, and test sample composition. This article first presents a comprehensive review of this previous body of work. Then, new experiments on soils and electrolytes with test frequencies in the range 1 Hz to 10 MHz and with current densities from 1 to 35 mA/m2 are described. Such results help clarify the effects of frequency, soil moisture, electrolyte concentration, and electrode material on the measured test medium parameters. The contribution of the electrode-electrolyte interface (EEI) and the influence of current density are particularly highlighted. These findings indicate that some previous measurements may have overestimated the measured values of resistivity and permittivity due to the EEI effect. Finally, the test results are compared with soil parameter equations from CIGRE TB781.
- Published
- 2022
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26. A Wireless System for Monitoring Leakage Current in Electrical Substation Equipment.
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Noureddine Harid, A. C. Bogias, Huw Griffiths, Stephen Robson, and Abderrahmane Haddad
- Published
- 2016
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27. Death of a Salesman
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Huw Griffiths
- Published
- 2022
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28. The Antarctic Seafloor Annotated Imagery Database
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Jan Jansen, Victor Shelamoff, Charley Gros, Thomas Windsor, Nicole A. Hill, David K. Barnes, David A. Bowden, Julian Gutt, Narissa Bax, Rachel Downey, Marc Eléaume, Alexandra L. Post, Huw Griffiths, Katrin Linse, Dieter Piepenburg, Autun Purser, Craig R. Smith, Amanda F. Ziegler, and Craig R. Johnson
- Abstract
Marine imagery is a comparatively cost-effective way to collect data on seafloor organisms, biodiversity and habitat morphology. However, annotating these images to extract detailed biological information is time-consuming and expensive, and reference libraries of consistently annotated seafloor images are rarely publicly available. Here, we present the Antarctic Seafloor Annotated Imagery Database (AS-AID), a result of a multinational collaboration to collate and annotate regional seafloor imagery datasets from 19 Antarctic research cruises between 1985 and 2019. AS-AID comprises of 3,599 georeferenced downward facing seafloor images that have been labelled with a total of 615,051 expert annotations. Annotations are based on the CATAMI (Collaborative and Automated Tools for Analysis of Marine Imagery) classification scheme and have been reviewed by experts. In addition, because the pixel location of each annotation within each image is available, annotations can be viewed easily and customised to suit individual research priorities.This dataset can be used to investigate species distributions, community patterns, it provides a reference to assess change through time, and can be used to train algorithms to automatically detect and annotate marine fauna.
- Published
- 2023
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29. East Weddell Sea echinoids from the JR275 expedition
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Thomas Saucède, Huw Griffiths, Camille Moreau, Jennifer A. Jackson, Chester Sands, Rachel Downey, Adam Reed, Melanie Mackenzie, Paul Geissler, and Katrin Linse
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Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Information regarding the echinoids in this dataset is based on the Agassiz Trawl (AGT) and epibenthic sledge (EBS) samples collected during the British Antarctic Survey cruise JR275 on the RRS James Clark Ross in the austral summer 2012. A total of 56 (1 at the South Orkneys and 55 in the Eastern Weddell Sea) Agassiz Trawl and 18 (2 at the South Orkneys and 16 in the Eastern Weddell Sea) epibenthic sledge deployments were performed at depths ranging from ~280 to ~2060 m. This presents a unique collection for the Antarctic benthic biodiversity assessment of an important group of benthic invertebrates. In total 487 specimens belonging to six families, 15 genera, and 22 morphospecies were collected. The species richness per station varied between one and six. Total species richness represents 27% of the 82 echinoid species ever recorded in the Southern Ocean (David et al. 2005b, Pierrat et al. 2012, Saucède et al. 2014). The Cidaridae (sub-family Ctenocidarinae) and Schizasteridae are the two most speciose families in the dataset. They comprise seven and nine species respectively. This is illustrative of the overall pattern of echinoid diversity in the Southern Ocean where 65% of Antarctic species belong to the families Schizasteridae and Cidaridae (Pierrat et al. 2012).
- Published
- 2015
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30. Simulation of Power Line Communication using ATP-EMTP and MATLAB.
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Stephen Robson, Abderrahmane Haddad, and Huw Griffiths
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- 2010
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31. A parallel implementation of a Magnetic Induction Tomography: Image reconstruction algorithm on the ClearSpeed Advance accelerator board.
- Author
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Yasheng Maimaitijiang, Mohammed Ali Roula, Khaled Sobeihi, Stuart Watson, Robert J. Williams, and Huw Griffiths
- Published
- 2009
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32. Degradation Assessment of Ester Liquids
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Huw Griffiths, Noureddine Harid, A. J. Amalanathan, and Ramanujam Sarathi
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Chemical engineering ,Chemistry ,Degradation (geology) - Published
- 2021
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33. Reviews and syntheses: A framework to observe, understand and project ecosystem response to environmental change in the East Antarctic Southern Ocean
- Author
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Julian Gutt, Stefanie Arndt, David Keith Alan Barnes, Horst Bornemann, Thomas Brey, Olaf Eisen, Hauke Flores, Huw Griffiths, Christian Haas, Stefan Hain, Tore Hattermann, Christoph Held, Mario Hoppema, Enrique Isla, Markus Janout, Céline Le Bohec, Heike Link, Felix Christopher Mark, Sebastien Moreau, Scarlett Trimborn, Ilse van Opzeeland, Hans-Otto Pörtner, Fokje Schaafsma, Katharina Teschke, Sandra Tippenhauer, Anton Van de Putte, Mia Wege, Daniel Zitterbart, Dieter Piepenburg, German Research Foundation, Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (Germany), and Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
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Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts ,Science & Technology ,CLIMATE-CHANGE ,Ecology ,Environmental Sciences & Ecology ,Geology ,WEDDELL SEA ,ECOSYSTEM SERVICES ,ICE-SHELF CAVITY ,LANDFAST SEA-ICE ,CONTINENTAL-SHELF ,Onderz. Form. D ,Physical Sciences ,Ecosystemen ,Life Science ,DEEP-WATER ,OCEAN PHYTOPLANKTON ,Geosciences, Multidisciplinary ,INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,PARTICLE FLUXES ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Special issue The Weddell Sea and the ocean off Dronning Maud Land: unique oceanographic conditions shape circumpolar and global processes – a multi-disciplinary study (OS/BG/TC inter-journal SI).-- 30 pages, 5 figures.-- Data availability: The data (sets) used for the illustrations in some figures are referenced in the figure captions: bathymetry (water depth) in Fig. 1 (Dorschel et al., 2022); bathymetry in Figs. 2a and 3 (Arndt et al., 2013); and sea ice, chlorophyll, and temperature in Fig. 4 (Lavergne et al., 2019, and http://oceandata.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/, last access: 23 August 2022). No addition data sets were used in this publication, Systematic long-term studies on ecosystem dynamics are largely lacking from the East Antarctic Southern Ocean, although it is well recognized that they are indispensable to identify the ecological impacts and risks of environmental change. Here, we present a framework for establishing a long-term cross-disciplinary study on decadal timescales. We argue that the eastern Weddell Sea and the adjacent sea to the east, off Dronning Maud Land, is a particularly well suited area for such a study, since it is based on findings from previous expeditions to this region. Moreover, since climate and environmental change have so far been comparatively muted in this area, as in the eastern Antarctic in general, a systematic long-term study of its environmental and ecological state can provide a baseline of the current situation, which will be important for an assessment of future changes from their very onset, with consistent and comparable time series data underpinning and testing models and their projections. By establishing an Integrated East Antarctic Marine Research (IEAMaR) observatory, long-term changes in ocean dynamics, geochemistry, biodiversity, and ecosystem functions and services will be systematically explored and mapped through regular autonomous and ship-based synoptic surveys. An associated long-term ecological research (LTER) programme, including experimental and modelling work, will allow for studying climate-driven ecosystem changes and interactions with impacts arising from other anthropogenic activities. This integrative approach will provide a level of long-term data availability and ecosystem understanding that are imperative to determine, understand, and project the consequences of climate change and support a sound science-informed management of future conservation efforts in the Southern Ocean, Stefanie Arndt, Heike Link and Christoph Held have received financial support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) in the framework of the priority programme 1158 “Antarctic Research with Comparative Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas”. The article processing charges for this open-access publication were covered by the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI), With the institutional support of the ‘Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence’ accreditation (CEX2019-000928-S)
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- 2022
34. Lightning Current Performance of Conventional and Enhanced Rod Ground Electrodes
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S. Mousa, Huw Griffiths, Noureddine Harid, David Clark, and Abderahmane Haddad
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Materials science ,Ground ,Surge arrester ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,Impulse (physics) ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Lightning ,people.cause_of_death ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electrocution ,Electrode ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Transient (oscillation) ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,people ,Current density - Abstract
The correct operation of surge arresters under lightning and switching transient conditions requires that grounding be effective at high frequencies as well as at power system frequency. Effective high frequency grounding also limits the electrocution risk to substation personnel due to transient ground potential rise. This article assesses the performance of high frequency electrodes at typical lightning impulse current magnitudes. The enhancement of such electrodes by addition of bonded horizontal arms in cross and star arrangement is also investigated. The effective impulse resistances for electrodes having lengths up to 4.8 m are calculated over a range of impulse current magnitudes at the same location. The results obtained indicate that, for low impulse current magnitudes, the preionization electrode's resistance ( R 1) falls with increasing rod length, a behavior reflected in the measured dc resistance. The presence of horizontal enhancement was found to reduce R 1 in all cases. The occurrence of soil ionization in the immediate vicinity of the electrode resulted in a reduced postionization resistance ( R 2) at higher currents, tending toward a common asymptotic value independent of both the length of the rod and the presence of electrode enhancements. The observed behavior is supported by numerical simulation of electric field and current density distributions, indicating that the high current performance of a grounding rod is heavily influenced by soil ionization and breakdown in high-field regions at the electrode extremities.
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- 2021
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35. Classification of thermal ageing impact of ester fluid‐impregnated pressboard material adopting LIBS
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Huw Griffiths, Nilesh J. Vasa, Ramanujam Sarathi, Noureddine Harid, and A. J. Amalanathan
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QC501-721 ,Pressboard ,Materials science ,Electricity ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Thermal ageing ,Composite material ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
This article reports the thermal ageing of ester fluid‐impregnated pressboard material along with its performance evaluation using optical emission spectroscopy (OES) and classification using machine‐learning algorithms adopting laser‐induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS). The surface discharge analysis on ester‐impregnated pressboard (EIP) is studied using OES and the plasma temperature was evaluated based on the Cu I emission lines which were higher under the negative DC compared with the positive DC and AC voltages. The LIBS analysis was performed on the EIP material operated at different energy levels in order to acquire the optimal energy required to be used for its classification algorithm. The intensity ratio and electron density evaluated from LIBS studies correlated well with the plasma temperature. The lower limit of detection (LOD) calculated based on linear regression analysis for copper peak was around 3.5 times higher than the identification of carbon peak. The machine‐learning techniques like principal component analysis and neural network algorithm have been performed on the LIBS spectral dataset in order to classify the ageing of EIP material. Artificial neural network adopting LIBS provided a better classification accuracy on all the aged samples compared with principal component analysis which classified only for the samples aged at higher temperatures.
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- 2021
36. Impact of adding activated bentonite to thermally aged ester‐based TiO2 nanofluids on insulation performance
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Huw Griffiths, A. J. Amalanathan, Ramanujam Sarathi, and Noureddine Harid
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Nanofluid ,Materials science ,Chemical engineering ,Bentonite ,Materials Chemistry ,TA401-492 ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
The authors report the key findings from an experimental study that explored the use of activated bentonite for the reclamation of thermally aged ester‐based transformer nanofluids to improve their insulation performance. Bentonite activated with acid treatment caused an increase in the specific surface area and pore volume of bentonite compared to the bentonite sample before treatment, thus imparting an improved adsorption capability. Physico‐chemical diagnostic studies were carried out to characterise the activated bentonite. The insulation performance of the reclaimed natural ester and nano‐filled ester fluid samples was assessed by measuring the corona inception voltage and breakdown voltage of each fluid sample, apart form measuring the flow electrification current using the spinning disk method. The results revealed that the reclamation process improved the corona inception voltage, dissipation factor and the breakdown voltage of the base ester fluid sample due to attraction of carbon particles to activated bentonite, but no significant variation was observed with nanofluids due to the depletion of the electrical double layer. The flow electrification current of ester and ester nanofluids reduced after treatment with activated bentonite, may be attributed to the interaction between copper and bentonite that alters the double layer formation responsible for the separation of charges.
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- 2021
37. Influence of Water, Acid Rain and Bentonite on Ionization Characteristics of Sand under Lightning Impulse Voltage
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Noureddine Harid, Huw Griffiths, R. G. Robinson, Prem Ranjan, G. Parvathi, and Ramanujam Sarathi
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010302 applied physics ,Permittivity ,Materials science ,Analytical chemistry ,Plasma ,Impulse (physics) ,01 natural sciences ,Grain size ,Ion ,Ionization ,0103 physical sciences ,Bentonite ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Water content - Abstract
Change in soil ionization surrounding a ground rod electrode after impulse voltage application with addition of water, acid rain and bentonite to different sized sand is examined. Impulse voltage and current responses in a rod-plane configuration show a characteristic change in sand ionization and breakdown with addition of water and gap length but no effect from voltage polarity. Soil ionization voltage (V 50 ) and time to ionization (t bd ) of sand are found to be increasing with increase in its grain size. Increase in water content in sand decreases the V 50 and t bd indicating increased ionization activity. Acid rain-sand mixture shows approximately the same V 50 as water mixed with sand, but a lower t bd due to increased ion concentration and new functional groups formation, as observed through FTIR patterns. Bentonite-sand mixture shows lower V 50 than sand, especially with large grain size due to filled voids. This is attributed to a decrease in permittivity and an increase in plasma temperature after addition of bentonite to sand, as verified by measurements. Modifications of the physico-chemical properties of sand and bentonite are also observed when the samples are subjected to successive impulse voltages; these changes are verified by XRD, FTIR, VSM, LIBS and DRS analyses.
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- 2021
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38. Simulation of Partial Discharge Induced EM Waves Using FDTD Method—A Parametric Study
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Alaa Loubani, Noureddine Harid, Huw Griffiths, and Braham Barkat
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partial discharge ,surface discharge ,UHF sensor ,FDTD simulation ,cavity discharge ,Technology - Abstract
This paper reports the results of a parametric study on the characteristics of electromagnetic (EM) waves propagated due to surface- and cavity-type partial discharges (PD) in materials using the finite-difference time domain (FDTD) method. First, the EM waves emitted by such discharges in material samples were measured using a broadband aperture antenna. The measurements showed that the frequency range of the measured signals lay within the ultra-high frequency (UHF) range, suggesting that by carefully choosing the UHF antenna characteristics and its location it might be possible to apply this method to characterize the PD-emitted waves; and hence, to potentially use it to detect and monitor PD defects. In this context, the FDTD simulations were used here to simulate the experimental set-up and examine the propagation characteristics of EM waves emitted by such discharges under uniform and non-uniform test electrode configurations. Using an approximation of the exciting PD current pulses, the electromagnetic field components and the voltage signals captured on a simulated monopole sensor were computed in the time domain at various locations. To explore the limits of the application of the UHF method for detecting these PD types, a parametric study was carried out to clarify how the captured signals are influenced by the PD intensity, the frequency content of the exciting PD pulse, the type of insulation material, the dimensions and the position of the UHF antenna. One of the challenges that needs further investigation is the accurate simulation of the actual PD current pulse produced by such discharges, and hence its frequency content, as there is limited or no measured data available. The results showed that while the amplitude of the captured EM signals increase with the PD intensity, no appreciable signal is detected when the PD pulse width is higher than about 4ns, which may not occur often in unbounded air insulated systems. Equally important is the location and orientation of the UHF sensor—the results showed improved sensitivity when the sensor is vertically polarized and placed in close proximity in the lateral direction with reference to the discharge path.
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- 2019
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39. Enhancement of DUBAL Network Operational Performance Using Resistive High Temperature Superconducting Fault Current Limiter
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Hamood Naji, Noureddine Harid, and Huw Griffiths
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fault current limiter ,high temperature superconductors ,reactor ,industrial power plant ,symmetrical and asymmetrical faults ,Technology - Abstract
Power systems under expansion suffer from escalating fault levels that impact equipment integrity, operational flexibility, and the overall security of the system. The fault current limiter (FCL) is one of approaches used by utilities to limit fault current levels and in Dubai Aluminum (DUBAL) series current limiting reactors are currently used. However, more effective (FCL) topologies are sought and, in this paper, a case study is proposed using resistive high temperature superconducting fault current limiters (HT-SFCLs). The application of HT-SCFLs is aimed here at reducing short-circuit currents, while at the same time enhancing the stability and security of the network. The study involves analysis of three-phase and single-line-to-ground faults, evaluation of the voltage levels and total harmonic distortion (THD) levels at busbars considering different fault scenarios, and demonstrates how the use of HT-SFCLs at various locations improves the plant performance. The ideal HT-SFCL model is adopted for this analysis since the aim is to look at the steady-state performance rather than the transient performance. Comparison with series reactor FCLs which are currently installed in the plant show better performance with the proposed HT-SFCL. Voltage profile values and total harmonic content were also compared with measurement data available at the plant.
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- 2019
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40. Ross Sea Mollusca from the Latitudinal Gradient Program: R/V Italica 2004 Rauschert dredge samples
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Claudio Ghiglione, Maria Chiara Alvaro, Huw Griffiths, Katrin Linse, and Stefano Schiaparelli
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Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Information regarding the molluscs in this dataset is based on the Rauschert dredge samples collected during the Latitudinal Gradient Program (LGP) on board the R/V “Italica” in the Ross Sea (Antarctica) in the austral summer 2004. A total of 18 epibenthic dredge deployments/samplings have been performed at four different locations at depths ranging from 84 to 515m by using a Rauschert dredge with a mesh size of 500µm. In total 8,359 specimens have been collected belonging to a total of 161 species. Considering this dataset in terms of occurrences, it corresponds to 505 discrete distributional records (incidence data). Of these, in order of abundance, 5,965 specimens were Gastropoda (accounting for 113 species), 1,323 were Bivalvia (accounting for 36 species), 949 were Aplacophora (accounting for 7 species), 74 specimens were Scaphopoda (3 species), 38 were Monoplacophora (1 species) and, finally, 10 specimens were Polyplacophora (1 species). This data set represents the first large-scale survey of benthic micro-molluscs for the area and provides important information about the distribution of several species, which have been seldom or never recorded before in the Ross Sea. All vouchers are permanently stored at the Italian National Antarctic Museum (MNA), Section of Genoa, enabling future comparison and crosschecking. This material is also currently under study, from a molecular point of view, by the barcoding project “BAMBi” (PNRA 2010/A1.10).
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- 2013
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41. Amundsen Sea Mollusca from the BIOPEARL II expedition
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Camille Moreau, Katrin Linse, Huw Griffiths, David Barnes, Stefanie Kaiser, Adrian Glover, Chester Sands, Jan Strugnell, Peter Enderlein, and Paul Geissler
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Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Information regarding the molluscs in this dataset is based on the epibenthic sledge (EBS) samples collected during the cruise BIOPEARL II / JR179 RRS James Clark Ross in the austral summer 2008. A total of 35 epibenthic sledge deployments have been performed at five locations in the Amundsen Sea at Pine Island Bay (PIB) and the Amundsen Sea Embayment (ASE) at depths ranging from 476 to 3501m. This presents a unique and important collection for the Antarctic benthic biodiversity assessment as the Amundsen Sea remains one of the least known regions in Antarctica. Indeed the work presented in this dataset is based on the first benthic samples collected with an EBS in the Amundsen Sea. However we assume that the data represented are an underestimation of the real fauna present in the Amundsen Sea. In total 9261 specimens belonging to 6 classes 55 families and 97 morphospecies were collected. The pecies richness per station varied between 6 and 43. Gastropoda were most species rich 50 species followed by Bivalvia (37), Aplacophora (5), Scaphopoda (3) and one from each of Polyplacophora and Monoplacophora.
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- 2013
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42. Investigation on flow electrification of ester-based TiO2 nanofluids
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A. J. Amalanathan, Ramanujam Sarathi, Huw Griffiths, and Noureddine Harid
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010302 applied physics ,Permittivity ,Ammonium bromide ,Pressboard ,Materials science ,Laminar flow ,01 natural sciences ,Streaming current ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nanofluid ,Chemical engineering ,chemistry ,Pulmonary surfactant ,0103 physical sciences ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Corona discharge - Abstract
This study shows that TiO 2 nanofiller and cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) surfactant in ester oil demonstrates higher corona inception voltage under AC and DC voltages. Flow electrification studies with nano fluid adopting the spinning disk method confirms that the streaming current increases with increasing pressboard thickness, disc diameter, oil temperature and spinning disk velocity. The study also indicates that nanofluids with surfactant have higher streaming currents than its effect without surfactant. It is found that the streaming currents could be suppressed by the addition of aromatic additive 1, 2, 3-benzotriazole (BTA). In addition, the permittivity of the nanofluid is not affected by adding surfactant or BTA but a marginal reduction occurs with increasing temperature. However, the loss tangent of the nanofluid with surfactant and BTA shows an increase with increasing temperature. The rheological studies indicate transition from laminar to turbulent flow in the case of nanofluids.
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- 2020
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43. Investigation on the performance of thermally aged natural ester fluid impregnated pressboard material
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Huw Griffiths, Ramanujam Sarathi, Noureddine Harid, Ravikrishnan Vinu, A. J. Amalanathan, and Ribhu Gautam
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010302 applied physics ,Pressboard ,Total harmonic distortion ,Materials science ,Thermal decomposition ,Ripple ,Activation energy ,01 natural sciences ,0103 physical sciences ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Composite material ,Pyrolysis ,Electrical impedance ,Voltage - Abstract
This paper reports the key findings from an experimental study carried out on thermally aged natural ester fluid impregnated pressboard (EOIP) material. The results show that the surface discharge inception voltage (SDIV) with thermally aged EOIP material is higher under negative DC voltage compared with positive DC and AC voltage. The SDIV increases with AC voltage frequency and a minimal reduction in voltage was observed under harmonic AC voltages with different total harmonic distortion (THD). The rate of change in voltage due to ripple content in DC voltage affects the SDIV of EOIP material, initiating discharges at lower voltages. The UHF signals radiated during the surface discharge process have a bandwidth in the range 0.9 to 2 GHz. Surface potential variation studies indicated the formation of high trap sites and trap density due to thermal aging. A reduction in the oxidation onset temperature and the activation energy of thermal decomposition were observed with thermally aged EOIP material. A pyrolysis study showed high composition of levoglucosan and acidic residue with the thermally aged specimen, which reduces its degree of polymerization. Impedance spectroscopic analysis indicates a non-Debye type of relaxation with thermally aged EOIP material. The mobility and charge transfer characteristics were also inferred from the modulus spectroscopy which showed less change for thermally aged pressboard material.
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- 2020
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44. Protocol for direct reporting of awareness in maternity patients (DREAMY): a prospective, multicentre cohort study of accidental awareness during general anaesthesia
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P.M. Odor, S. Bampoe, D.N. Lucas, S.R. Moonesinghe, J. Andrade, J.J. Pandit, Alicja A'Court, Dina Abdel-Gadir, Ayman Abdu, Caroline Abisogun, Zainab Aboud, Judith Abrams, Andrea Ackerman, Christine Adamso, Rachel Addison, Adedayo Adeyeye, Rachel Adler, Maame Aduse-Poku, Siddharth Adyanthaya, Najmiah Ahmad, Dabeeruddeen Ahmed, Atif Ahmed, Bucky Akindele, Olubukola Akindele, Sonia Akrimi, Samar Al-Rawi, Yousif Ali, Jo Allam, Alisha Allana, Kellie Allen, Orlanda Allen, Natasha Amaradasa, Lareina Amarasekara, Freda Amoakwa-adu, Padmanabhan Anandageetha, Suresh Anandakrishnan, Rathai Anandanadesan, Michelle Anderson, Simon Apps, Audrey Aquilina, Gill Arbane, Alice Arch, Sarah Armstrong, Rita Arya, Gloria Ashiru, Keri Ashpole, Claire Atkinson, Francesca Atkinson, Elizabeth Auer, Ben Avery, Maite Babio-Galan, Hareth Bader, George Badham, Subha Bagchi, Sarah Bailey, Yolanda Baird, Cristina Balaka, Melissa Baldwin, Paul Balfour, Shreya Bali, Samantha Banks, Philip Barclay, Lucy Barnes, Thomas Barnes, Niraj Barot, Stephen Barrett, Venetia Barrett, Kate Barrett, Louise Bates, Katherine Batte, Beki Baytug, Mona Behravesh, Suzanne Bell, Raul Benloch, Richard Bentley, Jennifer Berg, Charlotte Berwick, Richard Berwick, Rashmi Bhadange, Sanjoy Bhattacharyya, Egidija Bielskute, Sian Birch, Scott Bird, Ruth Bird, William Birts, Becky Black, Tatyana Blagova, Holly Blake, Oliver Blightman, Susara Blunden, Richard Bolton, Caroline Borkett-Jones, John Boselli, Manuella Bowen, Ruth Bowen, James Bowye, Henry Boyle, Zameen Brar, Jo Bray, Samantha Brayshaw, Catherine Bressington, Alison Brewer, Naomi Brice, Laura Bridge, James Briscoe, Sonia Brocklesby, Harry Brown, Sarah Brown, Derek Brunnen, Keshavareddy Burijintichenna, Sara Burnard, Agnieszka Burtt, Victoria Buswell, Hannah Bykar, Matthew Cairney, Clare Calvert, Laura Camarasa, Natasha Campbell, Frederick Campbell-Jones, Jane Cantliffe, William Carrol, Joanna Carvalho, Catherine Cashell, Sarah Cassie, Kadu Cassim, Marika Chandler, Rachel Chapman, Robert Charles, Ping Chen, Deanne Cheyne, Kiran Chima, Floju Chin, Radu Chirvasuta, Martin Shao Chong, Sadia Choudhury, Priyakam Chowdhury, Tracey Christmas, Shilpa Chughwani, Sarah Ciechanowicz, Emma Clarey, Rob Coe, Jolyon Cohen, Nicholas Coker, Karen Collins, Lauren Collis, Jasna Comar, Marianne Conroy, Kathy Constantin, Jeremy Corfe, Elaine Coulborn, Vanessa Cowie, Rachel Crone, James Cronin, Jennifer Crooks, Nicola Crowther, Elizabeth Crowther, Carina Cruz, Alexa Curtis, Sarah Curtis, Sam Curtis, Adrian Dabrowicz, Nick Daines, Viral Dalal, Peter Dannatt, Dinesh Das, Jennifer Dash, Katherine Davidson, Sarah Davies, Yvette Davis, James Dawson, Jonathan Dean, Caroline Dean, Jane Denman, Neel Desai, Preeti Dewan, Sarah Dimont, Clare Donovan, Mano Doraiswami, Kate Doughty, Jamie Douglass, Michelle Dower, Samantha Downing, Wendy Duberry, Emily Duckham, Lucy Dudgeon, Stephanie Dukes, Leigh Dunn, Venkat Duraiswamy, Anthony O' Dwyer, Kristyn Dyer, Suresh Eapen, Mark Earl, Sally Eason, Kylie-Ellen Edwards, Zara Edwards, Osinachi Egole, John Ekpa, Olivia El-Amin, Kariem El-Boghdadly, Okba Elbasir, James Eldridge, Laura Elgie, Matt Ellington, Katharine Elliott, Justine Elliott, Mohamed Elmi, Ramy Elnoumeir, Eunice Emeakaraoha, Matt Evans, Mary Everett, Philippa Fabb, Hadia Farooq, Rohan Farrimond, Fiona Faulds, Erik Fawcett, Andrew Feneley, Dinushi Fernando, Janis Ferns, Claire Finlay, Simon Fitzgerald, Doireann O'Flaherty, Mark Fleet, Lydia Fletcher, Vanessa Fludder, Terri Follet, Jane Forbes, Mark Forth, Greg Foster, John Francis, Kate Fraser, Lauren Friedman, Luca Fruggeri, Laura Fulton, Sam Funnell, Amit Gadre, Ajay Gandhi, Harriet Gardiner, Zoe Garner, Gráinne Garvey, Tom Gately, Richard George, Siobhan Gillespie, Stephanie Glover, Jennifer Goddard, Ben Goodman, Tarikere Gopal, George Graham, David Green, Denise Griffin, Jessica Griffith, Stephanie Grigsby, Julie Grindey, Huw Griffiths, Jonathan Groome, Christine Grother, Gabrielle Grounds, Alice Groves, Abhik Guha, Amila Gunawardhana, Aman Gupta, Rekha Gupta, James Gutsell, Richard Haddon, Dina Hadi, Nicola Hadjipavlou, Henry Hammerbeck, Laura Hammon, Sarah Hammond, Hampesh Hampanna, Holly Hancock, Hemantha Handapangoda, Yumna Haroon-Mowahed, Dawn Harpham, Grant Harris, Abigail Harrison, Divya Harshan, Andrew Hartopp, Eoin Harty, Nick Haslam, Gemma Hawkins, Edith Hawkins, Sarah Hawksey, Carole Hays, Tracy Hazelton, Andrew Heavyside, Chibuzo Hemeson, Katrina Henderson, Oliver Henry, Lara Herbert, Nikki Higgins, James Hilton, Claire Hindmoor, Rachael Hitchcock, Laura Hobbs, Michele Homsy, Cassandra Honeywell, Nazima Hoque, Kirsty House, Ryan Howle, Amanda Tiller, Matthew Huniak, Jeremy Hunte, Tauqeer Husain, Coralie Huson, Catriona Hussain, Tawhida Hussain, Zainab Hussein, Jeremy Hyams, Eleanor Hyde, Marina Iaverdino, Alex Ignacka, Erin Innes, Stefanos Ioannidis, Rehana Iqbal, Fahja Ismail, Jenny Jackson, Michael Jackson, Guy Jackson, Robyn Jacobs, Poonam Jadhav, Aisha Jalaly, Lorraine James, Monica James, Surekha Jani, Chandran Jeganathan, Claire Joannides, Robert Johnson, Thosa Johnson, Carolyn Johnston, Reeanne Jones, Tom Jones, Miran Kadr, Rasmeet Kainth, Jenna Kane, Rafiq Kanji, Sunil Kannanparambil, Girish Kar, Theanalli Kasianandan, Husam Kaskos, Lisa Kavanagh, Richard Kaye, Leith Kelliher, Serena Kelliot, Jemma Kelly, Jenna Kelly, Carol Kenyon, Laura Kessack, Samuel Kestner, Mohammed Khaku, Sophia Khaleeq, Pervaz Khan, Sabeen Khan, Usamah Kidwai, Christopher King, Helen King, Elizabeth Kingston, Waisun Kok, Rebekka Konig, Zheyna Konstantinova, Priya Krishnan, Justin Kua, Kavitha Kuntumalla, Emira Kursumovic, Krzysztof Kurzatkowski, Hariprasad Kuttambakam, Katherine Lane, Sophie Lane, Andrew Langton, Hamad Latif, Norlan Lau, Shyam Laxman, Helen Laycock, Rachel Lee, Silvia Leonardi, Karen Light, Heidi Lightfoot, Shuang Liu, Sanduni Liyanage, Jessica Lowe, Nuala Lucas, Miyoba Lungu, Marianne Lunn, Heather Lynes, Kishore Machavarapu, Matthew Mackenzie, Jonathan Major, Victoria Male, Zain Malik, Katarina Manso, Myrna Maquinana, Katarzyna Marciniak, Lizzie Maronge, Chris Marsh, Carmela Martella, Nicki Martin, Nicole Martins, Jaspreet Marway, Louisa Mason, Lucy Mason, Nadia Masood, James Masters, Matthew Maton-Howarth, Francesca Mazzola, Tamsin McAllister, Rachel McCarthy, Claire McCormick, Sharon McCready, Steffan McDougall, Lorna Mcewan, Jon McGarry, Helen McKevitt, Stephanie Mckinley, Anna Mckskeane, Eloise McMaster, Martina McMonagle, Helen McNamara, Hannah McPhee, Laura McRae, Dee Mead, Emma Meadows, Madhur Mehta, Joanne Meikle, Yavor Metodiev, Chloe Michael, Victoria Millar, Sarah Miller, Gregg Miller, Sezanne Milne, Kostas Miltsios, Lucia Misquita, Simone Misquita, Manasi Mittal, Mohamed Mohamed, Katherine Powell Monaghan, Joanna Monk, Alexandra Monkhouse, David Monks, Laura Montague, Angela Moon, Jennifer Moran, Annette Moreton, Endaf Morgan, Oliver Morgan, Danny Morland, Monica Morosan, Kimberley Morris, Andrea Morris, Clare Moser, Manulella Mount, Carol Muir, McDonald Mupudzi, Mayur Murali, Iona Murdoch, Heather Murray, Theresa Murray, Karen Murrell, Girish Narasimha Murthy, Diana Neeley, Hannah Nei, Kerry Neil, Tara Nejim, Mark Nel, Anne Nicholson, Angela Nicklin, Catherine Nolan, Tracey Nolan, Eveliina Nurmi, Bridie O'Neill, Christie Oakes, Neil Oakes, Maria Ochoa-Ferraro, Nike Odeleye, Katy Oliver, Mark Oliver, Julie Onslow, Desire Onwochei, Thomas Oommen, Tim Orr, Osato Osagie, Hannah Osborn, Jennie Overend, Hazel Owston, Emma Pack, Pulak Padhi, Prabvathy Palani, Rajesh Pandey, Dhruti Pandya, Navjot Panesar, Con Papageorgiou, Georgios Papanastasiou, Costas Papoutsos, Suji Pararajasingham, James Parry, Hasita Patel, Jaishel Patel, Jiten Patel, Kaumudi Patel, Kiran Patel, Mitul Patel, Reshma Patel, Ruchira Patel, Nimisha Patel, Sangeeta Pathak, Fiona Pearson, Viktorija Peciulene, Beth Peers, Benjamin Peirce, Stacey Pepper, Jasmina Perinpanayagam, Hollie Perry, Nadya Petrova, Trudie Phillips, Sioned Phillips, Leonidas Phylactides, Felicity Pilkington, James Plumb, Evangelia Poimenidi, Anna Sau Kuk Poon, Thomas Potter, Una Poultney, Lucy Powell, Andrew Prenter, Katie Preston, Anna Price, Naomi Pritchard, Jenny Pullen, Manishi Purohit, Charlotte Quamina, Jibran Qureshi, Zahra Rajput, Stephen Ramage, Tamilselvi Ramanathan, Upeka Ranasinghe, Kalum Ranatunga, Abby Rand, Seema Randive, Desikan Rangarajan, Chandana Rao, Sambasiva Rao Pelluri, Antony Ratnasingham, Jamil Razzaque, Anuvidya Reddy, Katie Redington, Emma Reel, Peter Remeta, Francesca Ricco, Anna Riccoboni, Polly Rice, Mel Rich, Nicole Richards, Joanne Riches, Simon Ripoll, Fleur Roberts, Kitty Roberts, Kay Robins, Susie Robinson, Samantha Roche, Maria Rojo, Milena Carmela Romano, Hilary Rosser, Lindsay Roughley, Catriona Routley, Christine Rowley, Pallab Rudra, Robin Russell, Christine Ryan, Chloe Saad, Abtin Sadeghi, Armorel Salberg, Matt Samuel, Rebecca Samuels, Suresh Sanapala, Seliat Sanusi, Sarbpreet Sarao, Sathyabhama Sathyabhama, Zoe Saunders, Bernadetta Sawarzynska-ryszka, Panagiota Sceales, Penny Sceales, Natasha Schumacher, Nuala Schwartz, Claudia Sellers, Heather Sellers, Jessica Sellick, Soumen Sen, Dhaneesha Senaratne, Sarah Senbeto, Dineth Seneviratna, Thunga Setty, Raj Shah, Sonia Shah, James Shambly, Saju Sharafudeen. Imran Sharieff, Laurence Sharifi, Lisa Sharpe, Michael Shaw, Ian Sheldrake, Priya Shinde, Adam Shonfeld. Jonathon Short, Julian Siah, Sheena Sibug. Omar Siddique, Sara Siew, Matthew Simpson, Georgina Singleton, Kathryn Sinha, Aneeta Sinha, Matthew Sinnott, Harry Sivadhas, Sivanth Sivakumar, Boopathi Sivarajan, Sinduja Sivarajan, Chris Skeoch, Samuel Slade, Paul Slater, Camilla Smith, Carys Smith, Christopher Smith, James Smith, Lorraine Smith, Annika Smith, Edward Smith, Ruth Smith, Sue Smith, Tim Smith, Helen Smithers, Sue Smolen, Claire Smyth, Toni Snel, Carol Snipe, Sam Soltanifar, Nilesh Sonawane, Andal Soundararaja, Emily Spence, Mark Spiliopoulos, Chhavi Srivastava, Karen Stacey, Helena Stafford, Nikki Staines, Richard Stead, Emma Stevens, Alex Stilwell, Gary Stocks, Aaron Stokes, Christopher Stone, Ben Straughan, Vanitha Subbarathnam, Srinath Sudunagunta, Pervez Sultan, Puvan Suppiah, Priyanka Surve, Angus Sutherland, Rob Swanton, Claire Swarbrick, Amy Swinson, Eleni Syrrakou, Shahrzad Tadbiri, Preetam Tamhane, Perumal Tamilselvan, Andrew Tan, Shamil Tanna, Hayley Tarft, Laura Tarry, Ian Taylor, Suzanne Taylor, Julie Tebbot, Svetlana Theron, Megan Thomas, Sarah Todd, Hermione Tolliday, Charlotte Topham, Nicholas Tovell, Martyn Traves, Dawn Trodd, Aseem Tufchi, Katie Turley, Marc Turnbull, Chris Turnbull, Oliver Turner, William Turner, Sharon Turney, Eleanor Tyagi, David Uncles, Vanessa Unsworth, Pradnya Vadnere, Rama Varadan, Vik Vasishta, Andrew Veal, Lalitha Vedham, Jessica Venkaya, Miriam Verghese, Icel Veronica, Dinesh Vidanagamage, Rachel Vincent, Vinodhan Vyapury, Harris Wain, Fiona Walbridge, Elaine Walker, Pete Walsh, Eleanor Walshe, Michelle Walters, Yize Wan, Cherry Wang, Kavita Wankhade, Gareth Waters, Christopher Watts, Alex Webber, Tom Wedgwood, Michael Wee, Susan Wellstead, Alison White, Michael Whitear, Lucy Whitefield, Sarah Wilkinson, Lauren Williams, Rhys Williams, Dawn Wilson, Samantha Wilson, Katie Wimble, Elaine Winkley, Luke Winslow, Paul Winwright, Karolina Wloch, Gideon Wong, Hannah Wong, Jan Man Wong, Tim Wood, Sarah Wray, Ian Wrench, James Wu, Kynn Wynn, Yeng Yap, Chia Kuan Yeow, Emily Young, Alex Yusaf, Saeed Uz Zafar, Darius Zeinali, Sheldon Zhang, Sarvesh Zope, Liana Zucco, Sibtain Anwar, Nadia Blunt, John Cronin, Vimal Grover, Kate Grailey, Martin Grey, David Highton, Phil Hopkins, Harriet Kemp, Queenie Lo, Daniel Martin, Clare Morkane, James O'Carroll, Charles Oliver, Benjamin Post, Anil Visram, and Alex Wickham
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Adult ,One year follow up ,Trial protocol ,Guidelines as Topic ,Anesthesia, General ,Intraoperative Awareness ,Cohort Studies ,Interviews as Topic ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,Anesthesia, Obstetrical ,Humans ,Medicine ,General anaesthesia ,Prospective Studies ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Accidental ,Cohort ,Structured interview ,Female ,Medical emergency ,business ,Surgical patients ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background Accidental awareness during general anaesthesia (AAGA) is a complex and rare outcome to investigate in surgical patient populations, particularly obstetric patients. We report the protocol of the Direct Reporting of Awareness in Maternity patients (DREAMY) study, illustrating how the research was designed to address practical and methodological challenges for investigating AAGA in an obstetric cohort. Methods This is the trial protocol of a prospective, multicentre cohort study of patients undergoing obstetric surgery under general anaesthesia. Accidental awareness during general anaesthesia will be detected using three repetitions of standardised direct questioning over 30 days, with responses indicating memories during general anaesthesia verified using structured interviews. Reports will be adjudicated, then classified, in accordance with pre-defined and pre-validated structures, including the Michigan Awareness Classification tool. Quantitative data will be collected on general anaesthesia conduct for all participants. This descriptive study is being conducted in England and aims to recruit a minimum of 2015 patients. Results The DREAMY study was prospectively registered (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03100396) and ethical approval granted. Participant recruitment began in May 2017 and one year follow up concluded in August 2019. Publication of the results is anticipated in 2020. Conclusions The DREAMY study will provide data on incidence, experience and implications of AAGA for obstetric patients, using a robust methodology that will reliably detect and translate subjective AAGA reports into objective outcomes. In addition, the study is expected to improve vigilance for AAGA in participating hospitals and encourage adoption of recommendations for support of patients experiencing AAGA.
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- 2020
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45. Correlative and dynamic species distribution modelling for ecological predictions in the Antarctic: a cross-disciplinary concept
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Thomas Saucède, Lloyd S. Peck, Rémi Laffont, Guido di Prisco, Julian Gutt, Damaris Zurell, Thomas J. Bracegridle, William Cheung, Melody S. Clark, Peter Convey, Bruno Danis, Bruno David, Claude De Broyer, Martin J. Riddle, Volker Grimm, Zhaomin Wang, Cinzia Verde, John Turner, Benjamin Pierrat, and Huw Griffiths
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Environmental change ,integrative modelling framework ,spatially and temporally explicit modelling macroecology ,biodiversity ,habitat suitability models ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Oceanography ,GC1-1581 - Abstract
Developments of future scenarios of Antarctic ecosystems are still in their infancy, whilst predictions of the physical environment are recognized as being of global relevance and corresponding models are under continuous development. However, in the context of environmental change simulations of the future of the Antarctic biosphere are increasingly demanded by decision makers and the public, and are of fundamental scientific interest. This paper briefly reviews existing predictive models applied to Antarctic ecosystems before providing a conceptual framework for the further development of spatially and temporally explicit ecosystem models. The concept suggests how to improve approaches to relating species’ habitat description to the physical environment, for which a case study on sea urchins is presented. In addition, the concept integrates existing and new ideas to consider dynamic components, particularly information on the natural history of key species, from physiological experiments and biomolecular analyses. Thereby, we identify and critically discuss gaps in knowledge and methodological limitations. These refer to process understanding of biological complexity, the need for high spatial resolution oceanographic data from the entire water column, and the use of data from biomolecular analyses in support of such ecological approaches. Our goal is to motivate the research community to contribute data and knowledge to a holistic, Antarctic-specific, macroecological framework. Such a framework will facilitate the integration of theoretical and empirical work in Antarctica, improving our mechanistic understanding of this globally influential ecoregion, and supporting actions to secure this biodiversity hotspot and its ecosystem services.
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- 2012
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46. Parallelization methods for implementation of a magnetic induction tomography forward model in symmetric multiprocessor systems.
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Yasheng Maimaitijiang, Mohammed Ali Roula, Stuart Watson, Ralf Patz, Robert J. Williams, and Huw Griffiths
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- 2008
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47. Shakespeare - Hamlet
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Huw Griffiths
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- 2004
48. Traveling Wave Fault Location Using Layer Peeling
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Stephen Robson, Abderrahmane Haddad, and Huw Griffiths
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traveling wave ,fault location ,single-ended ,layer peeling ,schur algorithm ,Technology - Abstract
Many fault-location algorithms rely on a simulation model incorporating network parameters which closely represent the real network. Estimations of the line parameters are usually based on limited geometrical information which do not reflect the complexity of a real network. In practice, obtaining an accurate model of the network is difficult without comprehensive field measurements of each constituent part of the network in question. Layer-peeling algorithms offer a solution to this problem by providing a fast “mapping” of the network based only on the response of a probing impulse. Starting with the classical “Schur” layer-peeling algorithm, this paper develops a new approach to map the reflection coefficients of an electrical network, then use this information post-fault to determine accurately and robustly the location of either permanent or incipient faults on overhead networks. The robustness of the method is derived from the similarity between the post-fault energy reaching the observation point and the predicted energy, which is based on real network observations rather than a simulation model. The method is shown to perform well for different noise levels and fault inception angles on the IEEE 13-bus network, indicating that the method is well suited to radial distribution networks.
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- 2018
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49. Environmentally Friendly Compact Air-Insulated High-Voltage Substations
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Maurizio Albano, A. Manu Haddad, Huw Griffiths, and Paul Coventry
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surge arresters ,compaction ,EMTP ,insulation ,lightning ,switching ,substations ,surges ,Technology - Abstract
This paper investigates the possible options for achieving a substantial reduction in a substation footprint using air-insulated switchgear as a more environmentally-friendly alternative to gas-insulated substations that use SF6 gas. Adopting a new approach to surge arrester location and numbers, International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) minimum clearances can be successfully selected instead of the maximum clearances as currently adopted by many utilities, as is the case in the UK. In addition, innovative alternative compact busbar arrangements using vertical and delta configurations have been proposed by the authors. A further opportunity for compaction is offered by the application of compact and integrated technology offered from several manufacturers. The full overvoltage control within the entire substation under any surge condition is a key aspect of the feasibility of this type of substation. This work demonstrates that the new design option can be an attractive alternative for future substation configuration with minimum footprint.
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- 2018
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50. Impact of paramedic education on door-to-balloon times and appropriate use of the primary PCI pathway in ST-elevation myocardial infarction
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Kalaivani Mahadevan, Divyesh Sharma, Christopher Walker, Annette Maznyczka, Alex Hobson, Philip Strike, Huw Griffiths, and Ali Dana
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Electrocardiography ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Time Factors ,Allied Health Personnel ,Myocardial Infarction ,Humans ,ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction ,General Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
ObjectiveEvidence supports improved outcomes and reduced mortality with rapid reperfusion through primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI) for ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). UK national audit data (Myocardial Ischaemia National Audit Project [MINAP]) demonstrates minor improvements in door-to-balloon times (DTB) of MethodsThis was a prospective single-centre study of patients with STEMI brought directly to hospital via ambulance services. Data sources included ambulance charts, in-patient notes, British Cardiovascular Interventional Society (BCIS) database and local MINAP data. All DTB breaches were investigated. A local PEP was implemented with focus on ECG interpretation, STEMI diagnosis and appropriate use of the PPCI pathway. Non-parametric Wilcoxon rank test was used for comparisons of DTB and CTB times between direct versus ED-associated cath lab transfer.ResultsA total of 728 patients with STEMI were admitted directly to our centre via ambulance, 66% (n=484) directly to the Catheterisation Laboratory (Cath Lab) and 34% (n=244) via the Emergency Department (ED). There was a significant increase in median DTB, 83 vs 37 min (pConclusionsParamedic education increases direct transfer of STEMI patients to the Cath Lab, and reduces DTB times. This is an effective and reproducible intervention to facilitate timely reperfusion in STEMI.
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- 2022
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