• Brines generated by seawater desalination plants can have salinities up to 120 g/kg. (wikipedia.org)
  • Seawater desalination plants also chlorinate and dechlorinate the water before processing. (thomasnet.com)
  • In water desalination plants, seawater is treated by reverse osmosis (RO) to remove the salt. (thomasnet.com)
  • However, the "seawater electrolyzer" that Logan and his team worked on takes care of that issue cheaply by using a special membrane and without requiring expensive desalination plants. (kpax.com)
  • That year, the Institute also released this white paper, which provides an overview on the proposed seawater desalination plants in the state. (pacinst.org)
  • At a recent state Coastal Commission hearing on a proposed seawater desalination plant in Huntington Beach, the debate was not about the merits of using the Pacific Ocean as a water source. (latimes.com)
  • Maps are provided, along with the locations and details about California's existing and proposed seawater desalination facilities. (pacinst.org)
  • Researchers have designed a novel prototype device that is able to float on the ocean surface to produce hydrogen from seawater. (edu.au)
  • Researchers at Swinburne University of Technology's Centre for Translational Atomaterials , in collaboration with Shaanxi Normal University, have developed a robust single-atom platinum catalyst that can produce high-performance solar light-triggered hydrogen from seawater. (edu.au)
  • Floating prototype equipped with the single-atom platinum catalysts for solar light-triggered hydrogen production directly from seawater. (edu.au)
  • Logan and university researchers recently created a device that removes salt from seawater in a cheaper way, allowing that water to then be used to create a renewable form of hydrogen fuel. (kpax.com)
  • And scientists already have the technical ability to both desalinate seawater and split it to produce hydrogen, which is in demand as a source of clean energy. (uh.edu)
  • A team of researchers led by Zhifeng Ren, director of the Texas Center for Superconductivity at UH, has reported an oxygen evolving catalyst that takes just minutes to grow at room temperature and is capable of efficiently producing both clean drinking water and hydrogen from seawater. (uh.edu)
  • Paired with a previously reported hydrogen evolution reaction catalyst, it can achieve industrially required current density for overall seawater splitting at low voltage. (uh.edu)
  • To boost the hydrogen economy, it is imperative to develop cost-effective and facile methodologies to synthesize NiFe-based (oxy)hydroxide catalysts for high-performance seawater electrolysis," they wrote. (uh.edu)
  • Of course, the seawater was converted into a liquid hydrocarbon "jet fuel" first, and the plane (pictured above) was a scale replica of a WWII-era fighter that even a Ken doll would find pretty cramped, but it was a pretty successful demonstration of a technology that researchers have been working on for decades now - turning the CO2 and hydrogen stored in the world's oceans into useful fuel. (vice.com)
  • Water molecules contain hydrogen - the H in H2O - and vast quantities of carbon dioxide are dissolved in seawater (an amount that's growing thanks to industrial CO2 emissions, and making the world's oceans increasingly acidic in the process). (vice.com)
  • The Navy experiments used electricity to split hydrogen from seawater as a gas, used an electrochemical system to recover CO2 gas from the same water, and reacted the two gases together to create hydrocarbon liquid. (vice.com)
  • The US navy has managed to combine hydrogen and carbon dioxide from seawater to create a renewable fuel that allows ships to stay at sea for. (blueandgreentomorrow.com)
  • A drop of seawater is like a spoonful of dilute soup: It's a complex broth of dissolved molecules from ocean-dwelling organisms. (eurekalert.org)
  • A single drop of seawater can teem with living creatures. (coolhunting.com)
  • Nuclear fuel made with uranium extracted from seawater makes nuclear power completely renewable. (forbes.com)
  • Managing renewable water resources in California's Pajaro Valley helps to minimize seawater intrusion and other adverse conditions. (usgs.gov)
  • This infrastructure could be redeployed to enable a seawater pumped storage (SPS) facility, which could help facilitate California's transition to 100% renewable energy. (powermag.com)
  • For example, the sodium hydroxide used to extract the magnesium salt can be generated on-site using seawater and marine renewable energy. (scitechdaily.com)
  • They know how to turn seawater into fuel. (impactlab.com)
  • Coupling the new process with existing technologies could make it easier and cheaper to turn seawater into freshwater. (scitechdaily.com)
  • On average, seawater in the world's oceans has a salinity of about 3.5% (35 g/L, 35 ppt, 600 mM). (wikipedia.org)
  • Seawater makes up about 96% of all water on earth, making it a tempting resource to meet the world's growing need for clean drinking water and carbon-free energy. (uh.edu)
  • Pure water evaporates from the seawater, leaving a salty sludge behind. (materialstoday.com)
  • To accomplish this, they are installing the piping in a pilot seawater-desalination plant to test its thermal conductivity, see how much of a microorganism-based coating forms on the pipes, and how heavily the material corrodes in its salty surroundings. (materialstoday.com)
  • Not only could China improve its resilience to climate change, seawater rice could help bring 300 million mu (200,000 square kilometres) of land with salty, alkaline soil into production, according to Chinese media site Xinhua . (chinadialogue.net)
  • But less is understood about the extent of melting that is due to warm, salty seawater that seeps underneath "grounded" portions of ice sheets along land, as well as what happens when that mix intrudes deep under glacier interiors. (phys.org)
  • Fresh meltwater stays close to the temperature of the ice it came from, but salty seawater that intrudes under glaciers may also bring heat from the ocean, which researchers say has the potential to cause much higher rates of melting at the glacier bottom. (phys.org)
  • At typical salinity, it freezes at about −2 °C (28 °F). The coldest seawater still in the liquid state ever recorded was found in 2010, in a stream under an Antarctic glacier: the measured temperature was −2.6 °C (27.3 °F). Seawater pH is typically limited to a range between 7.5 and 8.4. (wikipedia.org)
  • The density of surface seawater ranges from about 1020 to 1029 kg/m3, depending on the temperature and salinity. (wikipedia.org)
  • At a temperature of 25 °C, the salinity of 35 g/kg and 1 atm pressure, the density of seawater is 1023.6 kg/m3. (wikipedia.org)
  • Unit measures pH from 0-14, temperature from 0-100°C, and Total Residual Oxidant of seawater from ±1,500 mV, and converts them into equivalent ppm chlorine value. (thomasnet.com)
  • It measures the pH, temperature and Total Residual Oxidant (TRO) of seawater and converts them into an equivalent ppm chlorine value, which is displayed to conform with existing conventions. (thomasnet.com)
  • The pH sensor measures from 0-14 pH, the TRO sensor measures from ±1500 mV and the temperature sensor measures from 0-100°C. The DCA-23 with its tri-parameter monitoring, is the ideal seawater chlorine analyzer for a wide range of applications. (thomasnet.com)
  • Seawater gradually raises the temperature of cold liquid natural gas changing it from a compressed fluid into a gas for distribution through the service pipelines. (thomasnet.com)
  • We pump that seawater through cooling modules - which are direct water to water heat exchange modules - and then the water is gravity fed from the cooling modules back out to a temporary building, which serves the purpose of mixing incoming seawater with outgoing return water, so when we return the water to the Gulf it is at a temperature more similar to the incoming water. (datacenterdynamics.com)
  • IT had to trawl back through 30 years of seawater temperature records, and employ a large amount of thermal modelling to ensure it could cater for the effects of the wind, direction of the tide and ebb and flow as well as seawater temperatures and density of the seawater before it could devise a solution that would work for a data center. (datacenterdynamics.com)
  • Seawater of average salinity 35 ppt freezes at -1.94°C (28.5°F). The salinity of the water is measured with a CTD instrument (Conductivity, Temperature, Depth). (gsu.edu)
  • Seawater has an average density of 1.027 gm/cm 3 , but this varies with temperature and salinity over a range of about 1.020 to 1.029. (gsu.edu)
  • The corrosion can take the form of pitting, crevice and intergranular corrosion, and, in high temperature seawater, stress corrosion cracking (SCC). (worldpumps.com)
  • This means that every kilogram (roughly one liter by volume) of seawater has approximately 35 grams (1.2 oz) of dissolved salts (predominantly sodium (Na+ ) and chloride (Cl− ) ions). (wikipedia.org)
  • Seawater contains more dissolved ions than all types of freshwater. (wikipedia.org)
  • For instance, although seawater contains about 2.8 times more bicarbonate than river water, the percentage of bicarbonate in seawater as a ratio of all dissolved ions is far lower than in river water. (wikipedia.org)
  • Bicarbonate ions constitute 48% of river water solutes but only 0.14% for seawater. (wikipedia.org)
  • The most abundant dissolved ions in seawater are sodium, chloride, magnesium, sulfate and calcium. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Los Angeles Coastal Plain Groundwater-flow Model (LACPGM) is a tool to help water managers better understand groundwater flow and seawater intrusion in the Los Angeles coastal plain basins. (usgs.gov)
  • Seawater intrusion in coastal aquifers is investigated under transient conditions and the results are compared to steady-state results. (taylorfrancis.com)
  • Using predictions based on mathematical and computational models, the study shows that seawater intrusion over flat or reverse-sloping impermeable beds may feasibly occur up to tens of kilometers upstream of a glacier's end or grounding line. (phys.org)
  • Simulations show that even just a few hundred meters of basal melt caused by seawater intrusion upstream of marine ice sheet grounding lines can cause projections of marine ice sheet volume loss to be 10 to 50 percent higher," Robel explains. (phys.org)
  • Robel adds that these results suggest that further observational, experimental, and numerical investigations are needed to determine the conditions under which seawater intrusion occurs-and whether it will indeed drive rapid marine ice sheet retreat and sea level rise in the future. (phys.org)
  • Alexander A. Robel et al, Layered seawater intrusion and melt under grounded ice, The Cryosphere (2022). (phys.org)
  • Where mixing occurs with freshwater runoff from river mouths, near melting glaciers or vast amounts of precipitation (e.g. monsoon), seawater can be substantially less saline. (wikipedia.org)
  • In the new study, Riccardo Izzo and colleagues grew cherry tomatoes in both freshwater and in a dilute solution of 12 percent seawater. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Researchers from Stanford and the University of Calgary have transformed pulses of electrical current sent 1,000 feet underground into a picture of where seawater has infiltrated freshwater aquifers along the Monterey Bay coastline. (stanford.edu)
  • Seawater is electrically conductive due to its high salt content, while freshwater is electrically resistive. (stanford.edu)
  • Gary Gill, deputy director of PNNL's Coastal Sciences Division who coordinated the marine testing, noted, "Understanding how the adsorbents perform under natural seawater conditions is critical to reliably assessing how well the uranium adsorbent materials work. (forbes.com)
  • But three years ago the State Water Resources Control Board decided seawater cooling up and down the state was killing too much marine life and directed most coastal power plants to switch to other cooling technologies. (latimes.com)
  • But removing too much of that groundwater can change the fluid pressure of underground aquifers, drawing seawater into coastal aquifers and corrupting water supplies. (stanford.edu)
  • Seawater cooling is employed at both thermal and nuclear power plants in coastal regions. (thomasnet.com)
  • All three transient scenarios indicate an advancement of seawater wedge compared to the steady-state results, which should be taken into consideration in coastal aquifer management plans. (taylorfrancis.com)
  • As a Coastal Sciences staff member, I just called a member of our Sequim chemistry team and requested a seawater sample," said Subban. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Hydrothermal Circulation and Seawater Chemistry: What's the chicken and what's the egg? (agu.org)
  • We discovered we can actually dig out information from these mineral features that could help inform geologic studies, such as the seawater chemistry from ancient times," said Sandra Taylor , first author of the study and a scientist at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory . (scienceblog.com)
  • Seawater chemistry and climate. (bvsalud.org)
  • The researchers created a waterproof device that could be easily handled by an underwater diver and that could pump seawater through disks, which have a similar feel and thickness as make-up remover pads. (eurekalert.org)
  • The most obvious is that to do all of this you need a ton of energy in the first place, not just to run the process but to pump up all this seawater initially. (vice.com)
  • Stainless steels, which are the most widely used seawater pump material, are sensitive to crevice corrosion and require effective countermeasures against it. (worldpumps.com)
  • A new project to increase the oil produced at Khurais, Saudi Arabia, was the focus of a study to determine the optimal pipeline size and pump combination for a 90.4 mile (145.5 km) long, treated-seawater transfer line between Ain Dar and Khurais. (aft.com)
  • For example, aeroplysinin-1 was approximately 20 times more abundant in the extracts from seawater than within a yellow cave-sponge extract. (eurekalert.org)
  • It began by focusing on what was readily abundant: seawater, sun, and desert sand, and looking to what was needed: food, energy, and clean water. (impactlab.com)
  • The surprising discovery of seawater sealed in what is now North America for 390 million years opens up a new avenue for understanding how oceans change and adapt with the changing climate. (scienceblog.com)
  • The freezing point of seawater decreases as salt concentration increases. (wikipedia.org)
  • Salt deposits from trapped seawater [halite] are relatively rare in the rock record, so there are millions of years missing in the records and what we currently know is based on a few localities where there is halite found," Gregory said. (scienceblog.com)
  • Seawater has multiple process industry uses, including heat exchange systems at LNG terminals, oil/gas refineries, electric power plants and SWAC systems (salt water air conditioning) in commercial buildings. (thomasnet.com)
  • Seawater Desalination System Product usage & applicable Area - The system removes salt and other materials in seawater/groundwater so that it can provide drinking water to the cities having difficulties of getting water services. (ecplaza.net)
  • Seawater also has salt, which needs to be removed first and that's expensive to do. (kpax.com)
  • The seawater is to be obtained locally by drilling about 18 metres down into the underground where the salt-containing groundwater is located. (cphpost.dk)
  • The system has a patent on it method of removing salt and other harmful elements from seawater using the heat produced by a 1,000 kilowatt diesel generator. (chinadaily.com.cn)
  • In 2006, the Pacific Institute published "Desalination, With a Grain of Salt," a comprehensive overview of the advantages and disadvantages of seawater desalination to help meet California's water needs. (pacinst.org)
  • New method devised using a small electrical field that will remove the salt from seawater. (impactlab.com)
  • Chemists with the University of Texas and the University of Marburg have devised a method of using a small electrical field that will remove the salt from seawater. (impactlab.com)
  • Magnesium salt is extracted from Sequim seawater using a novel flow-based technique. (scitechdaily.com)
  • While table salt is the most easily obtained, seawater is a rich supply of other minerals, and researchers are investigating which ones may be extracted from the sea. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) and the University of Washington (UW) have discovered a simple method to separate a pure magnesium salt, a feedstock for magnesium metal, from seawater. (scitechdaily.com)
  • The California Water Science center studies how excessive groundwater pumping, sea level rise, and other factors contribute to the encroachment of seawater into the state's fresh groundwater supplies. (usgs.gov)
  • As you know, seawater is corrosive, so we used fiberglass-reinforced piping and titanium plates in our sea water exchanges. (datacenterdynamics.com)
  • It is expected that seawater in the Middle East is more corrosive than seawater of any other areas of the world, but the corrosion resistance of varied materials in seawater in the Middle East have not been quantitatively compared with each other. (worldpumps.com)
  • Watering tomatoes with diluted seawater can boost their content of disease-fighting antioxidants and may lead to healthier salads, appetizers, and other tomato-based foods, scientists report. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Researchers have known for years that seawater does not stimulate the growth of tomatoes, but scientists know little about its effects on the nutritional content of the vegetables. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Beneath a fast-flowing ice stream in West Antarctica, scientists have discovered a vast aquifer brimming with seawater that's likely been locked down there for thousands of years. (livescience.com)
  • The density of typical seawater brine of 120 g/kg salinity at 25 °C and atmospheric pressure is 1088 kg/m3. (wikipedia.org)
  • Corrosion is the greatest problem encountered in stainless steel structures widely used in seawater pumps - even specialised brine pumps such as those used in desalination, oil & gas, chemical, thermal and nuclear power plants. (worldpumps.com)
  • Ren's research group and others have previously reported a nickel-iron-(oxy)hydroxide compound as a catalyst to split seawater, but producing the material required a lengthy process conducted at temperatures between 300 Celsius and 600 Celsius, or as high as 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit. (uh.edu)
  • In the mid-20th century, chemical companies successfully created magnesium feedstock from seawater by mixing it with sodium hydroxide, commonly known as lye. (scitechdaily.com)
  • In the laminar coflow method, the researchers flow seawater alongside a solution with hydroxide. (scitechdaily.com)
  • The magnesium-containing seawater quickly reacts to form a layer of solid magnesium hydroxide. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Seawater, or sea water, is water from a sea or ocean. (wikipedia.org)
  • The average density at the surface is 1.025 kg/L. Seawater is denser than both fresh water and pure water (density 1.0 kg/L at 4 °C (39 °F)) because the dissolved salts increase the mass by a larger proportion than the volume. (wikipedia.org)
  • The next step, they add, is to adapt the device for autonomous long-term seawater filtration and remote operation in deeper water. (eurekalert.org)
  • Poseidon Water wants to build a large seawater desalination plant next to the AES power station in Huntington Beach, pictured in the background. (latimes.com)
  • The commission staff wants Poseidon to build offshore, subsurface intakes just below the seafloor to draw water for the desalter, a technique the staff says would have minimal impact on plankton, fish eggs and larvae that are lethally entrained en masse by open ocean pipes. (latimes.com)
  • Irvine, CA - The new Model DCA-23 Seawater Dechlorination Analyzer from Electro-Chemical Devices (ECD) is a low maintenance measurement solution that requires no chemicals to monitor seawater chlorine levels accurately in a wide range of industrial process and municipal water treatment applications. (thomasnet.com)
  • The chlorination of seawater inhibits the growth of marine life on the various filters, screens and heat exchanger surfaces, but the seawater must be dechlorinated for environmental reasons before it is discharged back into the original water supply. (thomasnet.com)
  • Seawater has 35 grams of chlorides per liter, compared to fresh water which has chlorides in the parts per billion. (godlikeproductions.com)
  • In the desalination process seawater is sprayed onto pipes which are heated by pumping hot gas or hot water through them. (materialstoday.com)
  • The material the pipes are made of must conduct heat and resist corrosion, and for the water to evaporate properly the piping must also be easily coated with seawater. (materialstoday.com)
  • In the past, the idea of processing seawater for industries had been mooted when the city faced shortage of drinking water but the proposal is stuck in files. (daijiworld.com)
  • The pension fund PKA has teamed up with the capital region's water supplier HOFOR on a pilot project that will test the implementation of seawater in toilets in new housing in Copenhagen's Nordhavn district. (cphpost.dk)
  • The project aims to replace drinking water in toilets with the nearby seawater in 91 apartments that are currently being established at the Sandkaj waterfront development, which is scheduled to be completed in 2016. (cphpost.dk)
  • If we can replace clean drinking water with seawater, then it would be foolish not to do so, from a climate and resource perspective. (cphpost.dk)
  • Replacing toilet water with seawater would reduce the consumption of clean drinking water by 17 percent per person. (cphpost.dk)
  • The Sahara Forest Project in Qatar is putting together a number of different systems in a complex project intended to "produce food, fresh water and clean energy in deserts using seawater. (impactlab.com)
  • Past measurement from field expeditions and satellites have hinted that seawater may intrude subglacial meltwater channels," Wilson notes, "much like how the ocean may flow upstream and mix with river water in a typical estuary. (phys.org)
  • Ancient seawater pockets trapped in an iron pyrite framboid, shown here, offer a new source of clues to climate change in vanished oceans and our own. (scienceblog.com)
  • But the long-term strategic significance of seawater rice may not be its total yield but its adaptability to climate change. (chinadialogue.net)
  • Special ships that create clouds by spraying seawater into the air could be the most cost effective way of tackling climate change, new research has found. (impactlab.com)
  • The hurdle is making it economic to extract uranium from seawater, because the amount of uranium in seawater is truly inexhaustible. (forbes.com)
  • Researchers at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory exposed this special uranium-sorbing fiber developed at ORNL to Pseudomonas fluorescens and used the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory to create a 3-D X-ray microtomograph to determine microstructure and the effects of interactions with organisms and seawater. (forbes.com)
  • Specifically, this latest technology builds on work by researchers in Japan and uses polyethylene fibers coated with amidoxime to pull in and bind uranium dioxide from seawater (see figure above). (forbes.com)
  • Now, researchers in ACS Central Science report a proof-of-concept device that "sniffs" seawater, trapping dissolved compounds for analyses. (eurekalert.org)
  • Several metabolites, including brominated alkaloids and furanoterpenoids, captured from seawater were present in three sponge species that the researchers had examined in detail. (eurekalert.org)
  • Together with his team of researchers at the Qingdao Seawater Rice Research Centre, they have developed a new variety of "seawater" rice that is being trialled with promising results. (chinadialogue.net)
  • Subban and the team tested their new method using seawater from the PNNL-Sequim campus, allowing the researchers to take advantage of PNNL facilities across Washington State. (scitechdaily.com)
  • This marine testing shows that these new fibers had the capacity to hold 6 grams of uranium per kilogram of adsorbent in only about 50 days in natural seawater. (forbes.com)
  • fibers able to economically extract uranium from seawater. (forbes.com)
  • The paper shows warm seawater can intrude underneath glaciers, and if it causes melting at the glacier bottom, can cause predictions of future sea level rise to be up to two times higher than current estimates," Robel says. (phys.org)
  • New technological breakthroughs from DOE's Pacific Northwest (PNNL) and Oak Ridge (ORNL) national laboratories have made removing uranium from seawater within economic reach and the only question is - when will the source of uranium for our nuclear power plants change from mined ore to seawater extraction? (forbes.com)
  • It's not just that the 4 billion tons of uranium in seawater now would fuel a thousand 1,000-MW nuclear power plants for a 100,000 years. (forbes.com)
  • Nuclear power is one of the cleanest and most practical alternative energy sources available at the moment, and even if fuel spun from seawater costs more to produce, you're saving on the cost of getting that fuel to where it's needed and ensuring that your fleet can operate even in the event that its supply chain is disrupted. (vice.com)
  • Faced with global warming and potential oil shortages, the US navy is experimenting with making jet fuel from seawater. (impactlab.com)
  • Navy chemists have processed seawater into unsaturated short-chain hydrocarbons that with further refining could be made into kerosene-based jet fuel. (impactlab.com)
  • Results of search for 'su:{Seawater. (who.int)
  • The U.S. Navy hopes to power all non-nuclear powered ships through seawater. (impactlab.com)
  • Finally, we performed a study on the yield of persulfate oxidation for organic and inorganic nitrogen compounds typically present in seawater . (bvsalud.org)
  • However, there is no universally accepted reference pH-scale for seawater and the difference between measurements based on different reference scales may be up to 0.14 units. (wikipedia.org)
  • Removing magnesium is a necessary pre-treatment for seawater desalination. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Although the vast majority of seawater has a salinity of between 31 and 38 g/kg, that is 3.1-3.8%, seawater is not uniformly saline throughout the world. (wikipedia.org)
  • I would hope to convince them that it might be cheaper and better to use seawater directly, you know, in a system like this. (kpax.com)
  • Dissolved chlorides and other salts contained in a great quantity in seawater cause localized corrosion of stainless steels and other passive metals. (worldpumps.com)
  • Dechlorination Analyzer requires no chemicals to monitor seawater. (thomasnet.com)
  • The pH value of seawater is naturally as low as 7.8 in deep ocean waters as a result of degradation of organic matter in these waters. (wikipedia.org)
  • Bromine is found naturally in the earth's crust and in seawater in various chemical forms. (cdc.gov)
  • It's true that the concentration of CO2 in seawater is a lot higher than it is in the air, but that's still a really tiny amount. (vice.com)
  • During the re-gasification process at LNG terminals, large quantities of chlorine-treated seawater are used to heat the LNG heat exchangers. (thomasnet.com)
  • The intake seawater is treated with chlorine to kill algae and other organisms prior to the reverse osmosis process. (thomasnet.com)
  • To get a significant amount of gas, you're going to have to process a pretty huge volume of seawater, and then when you compress that gas into a liquid, it's going to shrink considerably. (vice.com)
  • This product has been supplied in seawater pump's casings, shafts, sleeves, and pipes for more than 20 years. (worldpumps.com)
  • The entire system was optimally designed to provide the required seawater flow of 2.14 million barrels per day (62,400 gpm) for initial operations prior to 2009 with the ability to be scaled up to the planned increased flow of 3.0 million barrels per day (87,500 gpm) 10 years later. (aft.com)
  • ANOTHER TEPCO FAIL*** Stainless steel piping cracking from boiling seawater! (godlikeproductions.com)
  • If you fail to protect your seawater pumps from corrosion, they will corrode and become damaged in a short time, resulting in shutdown or critical safety problems. (worldpumps.com)
  • Last week, some people at the US Naval Research Laboratory's Materials Science and Technology Division were able to successfully fly an aircraft fueled by nothing but seawater . (vice.com)
  • Determination of total dissolved nitrogen in seawater by isotope dilution gas chromatography mass spectrometry following digestion with persulfate and derivatization with aqueous triethyloxonium. (bvsalud.org)
  • Inside, we found cold packs and a bottle of chilled Sequim seawater. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Mercury, from natural sources or industrial pollution, can be found in small amounts in seawater. (cdc.gov)
  • Deep in the ocean, under high pressure, seawater can reach a density of 1050 kg/m3 or higher. (wikipedia.org)
  • The high electrical conductivity of seawater promotes macro-cell corrosion such as galvanic corrosion and differential- aeration-cell-corrosion, including differential-flow-rate-cell-corrosion. (worldpumps.com)
  • Interest in seawater desalination remains high in California. (pacinst.org)
  • This paper describes the optimization of a high-pressure seawater pipeline being constructed to increase oil production from an oil field in Khurais, Saudi Arabia. (aft.com)
  • A nice video of U extraction from seawater can be seen on the University of Tennessee Knoxville website . (forbes.com)
  • Google has offered a look inside the cooling system of one of its newest data centers, in Hamina, Finland, which uses seawater for cooling which runs through existing infrastructure built for an old paper mill. (datacenterdynamics.com)
  • Google made use of a quarter-mile long seawater tunnel that could fit a tractor through it that had already been constructed to deliver seawater to the old paper mill. (datacenterdynamics.com)