An expansion of impervious surfaces in urban areas leads to increases of nutrient loads discharged with the surface runoff to receivers. A study of a different density of urban development impact on total nitrogen (TN) and phosphorus (TP) loads from the city of Lublin (eastern Poland) with the use of the SWAT (Soil & Water Assessment Tool) model was performed. To distinguish between areas with high and low density of urban development (UHD and ULD), a special analysis of hydrological parameters has been proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this work, we evaluated more than 10 antifouling layers presenting different modes of action for application in electrochemical sensors. These layers included porous materials, permselective membranes, hydrogels, silicate sol-gels, proteins, and sp hybridized carbon. To evaluate the protective effects of the antifouling modification as well as its impact on the catalyst, we adsorbed a redox mediator on the electrode surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGood electronic ( = ∼5 Ω sq) and optical properties (transmittance: >83%) make indium tin oxide (ITO) an attractive electrode substrate. Despite the commercial availability of high-quality ITO and some low-cost methods for direct deposition being in use by now, the definition of patterns is still a concern. Putting their popularity and extensive use aside, the manufacturing of ITO electrodes so far lacks a rapid, highly reproducible, flexible, cost-effective, easy patterning process that could surpass difficult, time-consuming techniques such as lithography.
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