Mathematical models of transesterification commonly assume that oil is a mixture of triacylglycerols, where each component has only one type of acid attached. This article aims to show how a different assumption on acid distribution affects the results of acylglycerols fraction composition. Experiments of fish oil ethanolysis have been performed at different enzyme loadings and ethanol concentrations, leading to enrichments from 35 % to 52 % of ω3 mass fraction in acylglycerols, by losing 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the pathway towards decarbonization, hydrogen can provide valid support in different sectors, such as transportation, iron and steel industries, and domestic heating, concurrently reducing air pollution. Thanks to its versatility, hydrogen can be produced in different ways, among which steam reforming of natural gas is still the most commonly used method. Today, less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Psychol Gen
July 2022
Why do people view economic success as zero-sum? In seven studies (including a large, nationally representative sample of more than 90,000 respondents from 60 countries), we explore how personal relative deprivation influences zero-sum thinking-the belief that one person's gains can only be obtained at other people's expense. We find that personal relative deprivation fosters a belief that economic success is zero-sum, and that this is true regardless of participants' household income, political ideology, or subjective social class. Moreover, in a large and preregistered study, we find that the effect of personal relative deprivation on zero-sum thinking is mediated by lay perceptions of society.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Psycholinguist Res
February 2021
Previous studies on projective techniques have investigated the effects of variation in stimulus features on individuals' response behavior. In particular, the influence of chromatic colors and form definition on the images elicited by the stimuli has been tested. Most studies have focused on the Rorschach and TAT and have examined effects in terms of variables such as reality testing and reactions to perceptual details.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been shown that decisions and moral judgments differ when made using native languages compared to foreign languages. Cross-linguistic differences appeared in foreign languages that monolinguals typically acquired in school and used neither routinely nor extensively. We replicated these differences with two populations of proficient, native bilinguals (Italian-Venetian; Italian-Bergamasque).
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