115 research outputs found
Documents relating to the Masonian patent, 1630-1846, including the charter of the Council of Plymouth, of date Nov. 3, 1620, the various grants and patents to John Mason, the records and miscellaneous papers of the Masonian proprietary, with numerous other papers constituting a part of the documentary history of the patent and the titles claimed under it, arranged in chronological order, with citations to other documents and authorities relative to the same subject, and complete indexes. Volume XXIX. Town charters, volume VI. Masonian papers, volume III
Provincial and state papers, Volume 29; Town charters, v. 6. Masonian papers, v. 3
Early state papers of New Hampshire, including the Constitution of 1784, journals of the Senate and House of Representatives, and records of the President and council from June 1784 to June 1787 with an appendix. Volume XX
Provincial and state papers, Volume 20; Vols. [2-3] have imprint: Concord, I. C. Evans, public printer, 1892-93
Miscellaneous provincial and state papers, 1725-1800. Volume XVIII
Provincial and state papers, Volume 18; At head of title: The state of New Hampshire
Early state papers of New Hampshire, journals of the Senate and House of Representatives and records of the President and council from June, 1787 to June, 1790
Provincial and state papers, Volume 21; Vols. [2-3] have imprint: Concord, I. C. Evans, public printer, 1892-93
RACE project R1010-coherent multicarrier transmission and switching for an optical frequency multiplexed broadband network
STRUCTURE-ACTIVITY RELATIONSHIPS IN NI-FE (OXY)HYDROXIDE OXYGEN EVOLUTION ELECTROCATALYSTS
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is kinetically slow and hence a significant efficiency loss in electricity-driven water electrolysis. Understanding the relationships between architecture, composition, and activity in high-performing catalyst systems are critical for the development of better catalysts.
This dissertation discusses areas both fundamental and applied that seek to better understand how to accurately measure catalyst activity as well as ways to design higher performing catalysts. Chapter I introduces the work that has been done in the field to date. Chapter II compares various methods of determining the electrochemically active surface area of a film. It further discusses how pulsed and continuous electrodepostition techniques effect film morphology and behavior, and shows that using a simple electrodeposition can create high loading films with architectures that outperform those deposited onto inert substrates. The reversibility of the films, a measure of the films transport efficiency, is introduced and shown to correlate strongly with performance. Chapter III uses high energy x-ray scattering to probe the nanocrystalline domains of the largely amorphous NiFe oxyhydroxide catalysts, and shows that significant similarities in the local structure are not responsible for the change in performance for the films synthesized under different conditions. Bond lengths for oxidized and reduced catalysts are determined, and show no significant phase segregation occurs. Chapter IV seeks to optimize the deposition conditions introduced in Chapter II and to provide a physical representation of how tuning each of the parameters affects film morphology. The deposition current density is shown to be the most important factor affecting film performance at a given loading. Chapter V highlights the different design considerations for films being used in a photoelectrochemical cell, and how in situ techniques can provide information that may otherwise be unobtainable. Chapter VI serves as a summary and provides future directions.
This dissertation contains previously published coauthored material
Investigation of parameters affecting voice recognition systems in C3 systems.
This research investigates the use of a voice recognition
system by military operators -- officer, enlisted, male and
female. The application intended is the use of a discrete
utterance voice recognition system in a command center environ
ment . The system would be used by members of a watch team to
execute ad hoc queries against an automated data base in
support of their command center duties.http://archive.org/details/investigationofp00batcLieutenant Commander, United States NavyApproved for public release; distribution is unlimited
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Tenure of office of the judges of the Supreme Court of the state under the constitution ::an address prepared for delivery before the New Hampshire Bar Association at Concord, March 4, 1902 /
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