La fonctionnalité Article cité par… liste les citations d'un article. Ces citations proviennent de la base de données des articles de EDP Sciences, ainsi que des bases de données d'autres éditeurs participant au programme CrossRef Cited-by Linking Program. Vous pouvez définir une alerte courriel pour être prévenu de la parution d'un nouvel article citant " cet article (voir sur la page du résumé de l'article le menu à droite).
Chemical looping of synthetic ilmenite, Part I: Addressing challenges of kinetic TGA measurements with H2
Thomas Steiner, Kai Schulze, Norbert Kienzl, Magdalena Pauritsch, Viktor Hacker, Sebastian Bock, Alberto Abad, Robert Scharler and Andrés Anca-Couce Fuel 368 131528 (2024) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2024.131528
Thermodynamic Modeling and Experimental Investigation of the System Fe–Ti–O-K for Ilmenite Used as Fluidized Bed Oxygen Carrier
Robin Faust, Ivana Staničić, Jonatan Gastaldi, Elham Ansari, Joakim Brorsson, Tobias Mattisson, Magnus Rydén and Pavleta Knutsson Energy & Fuels 38(15) 14569 (2024) https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.4c02016
Interaction Between Alkali Chlorides and Ilmenite in Chemical Looping Combustion
Reduction Kinetics of Oxidized New Zealand Ironsand Pellets in H2 at Temperatures up to 1443 K
Ao Zhang, Brian J. Monaghan, Raymond J. Longbottom, Mohammad Nusheh and Chris W. Bumby Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B 51(2) 492 (2020) https://doi.org/10.1007/s11663-020-01790-3
Improved Gas–Solids Mass Transfer in Fluidized Beds: Confined Fluidization in Chemical-Looping Combustion
Studies on the redox reaction kinetics of selected, naturally occurring oxygen carrier
Ewelina Ksepko, Piotr Babinski, Antigoni Evdou and Lori Nalbandian Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry 124(1) 137 (2016) https://doi.org/10.1007/s10973-015-5107-x
Quasicubic α-Fe2O3 nanoparticles embedded in TiO2 thin films grown by atomic layer deposition
Testing of minerals and industrial by-products as oxygen carriers for chemical-looping combustion in a circulating fluidized-bed 300W laboratory reactor