This decommissioned ERA site remains active temporarily to support our final migration steps to https://ualberta.scholaris.ca, ERA's new home. All new collections and items, including Spring 2025 theses, are at that site. For assistance, please contact erahelp@ualberta.ca.
Search
Skip to Search Results- 1Dominic Sauvageau (Chemical and Material Engineering)
- 1James R. Bolton (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering)
- 1Lisa Stein (Biological Sciences)
- 1Mohammed Gamal El-Din (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering)
- 1Sauvageau, Dominic (Chemical and Materials Engineering)
- 1Stein, Lisa Y (Biological Sciences)
-
Spring 2023
Modern civilization has become dependent on fossil fuels as a source of energy and chemicals. As a result, the rapid industrial development and growing energy demand are pushing toward two imminent problems, the depletion of fossil fuel reserves and the negative impact on global climate....
-
Growth Characterization and Transcriptomics of Methanotrophic Bacteria as Effected by Carbon and Nitrogen Sources
DownloadFall 2019
While industrial activities have shaped our modern world and lifestyles, one of their many important environmental effects is the significant increase in methane emissions and the resultant atmospheric methane concentrations. A common byproduct of many industries, methane is often burned off as...
-
Production and detection of polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) in the alphaproteobacterial methanotroph Methylocystis sp. Rockwell
DownloadSpring 2023
Anthropogenic agricultural and industrial activities have intensified in the past few decades to satisfy the food and energy demands of a rapidly growing human population. The increase in these activities is causing extremely high emission of greenhouse gases which results in global warming and...
-
Fall 2010
This thesis aims mainly at investigating the potential oxidizing abilities and possible applications of the UV/Chlorine process as an Advanced Oxidation Process (AOP). Several organic compounds were used and added into the samples as challenging radical scavengers to investigate the possibilities...