Home Physical Sciences Characterization of metallic and ceramic high-temperature materials for energy systems by means of atomic spectroscopy
Article Publicly Available

Characterization of metallic and ceramic high-temperature materials for energy systems by means of atomic spectroscopy

  • H. Nickel
Published/Copyright: January 1, 2009

Published Online: 2009-01-01
Published in Print: 1993-01-01

© 2013 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Preface
  2. Precious metals
  3. Sampling and chemical characterization of aerosols in workplace air
  4. A review of the use and application of mantle mineral geochemistry in diamond exploration
  5. Spectrochemical analysis in the metallurgical industry
  6. Rare earths from supernova to superconductor
  7. Flow injection: The ultimate approach to automation in analytical atomic spectroscopy
  8. Coal and environment: Analytical aspects
  9. Characterization of metallic and ceramic high-temperature materials for energy systems by means of atomic spectroscopy
  10. Application of solvation equations to chemical and biochemical processes
  11. Molecular dynamics of water transport through membranes: Water from solvent to solute
  12. Water perturbation close to non-polar groups in aqueous solutions
  13. Solid aqueous solutions
  14. Structuring at solid interfaces in binary solvent mixtures
  15. Environmental isomers and continuum models in liquids with emphasis on water and benzene
  16. The interplay between solute solvation and solute-solute interactions in solutions containing amino acids, peptides and related species
  17. The calculation of activity coefficients of binary mixed electrolytes
  18. The generalized pseudophase model: Treatment of multiple equilibria in micellar solutions
  19. Interatomic structure of aqueous ionic solutions
  20. A rapid direct analysis of the structure of reaction intermediates by the EXAFS method combined with a stopped-flow technique
  21. Solute/solvent interactions and their empirical determination by means of solvatochromic dyes
  22. Pressure as a kinetic parameter in mechanistic studies of chemical reactions induced by flash photolysis and pulse radiolysis
  23. Mutual diffusion coefficients in aqueous electrolyte solutions (Technical Report)
  24. Kinetics of composite reactions in closed and open flow systems (IUPAC Recommendations 1993)
Downloaded on 14.1.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1351/pac199365122481/html
Scroll to top button