戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 xicology Program: a case study on hexavalent chromium.
2 elium due to the antiferromagnetic nature of chromium.
3 , undergoing oxidation/reduction rather than chromium.
4  tri- or tetramerization in combination with chromium.
5 Cr (III), which is a much less toxic form of chromium.
6 ntain metal ions including silver, iron, and chromium.
7 in (18.66-20.23%), and rare minerals such as chromium (0.67-2.54 mg/100 g) and manganese (1.07-2.34 m
8 ricarbonyl(1-chloro-2-deuteriomethylbenzene) chromium(0) was computed, showing that reasonable predic
9  days of refrigerated storage, autologous 51-chromium 24-hour posttransfusion RBC recovery (PTR) stud
10 ine concentrations, and results for GFR from chromium-51 ((51)Cr) EDTA excretion measurements ((51)Cr
11 ency of the sludge inertization was 100% for chromium, 99% for zinc, and 100% for iron.
12 r structures composed of iron, titanium, and chromium accounting for the magnetic properties of these
13                                          The chromium adsorption nicely fits the Langmuir isotherm mo
14                                     The iron-chromium-aluminum alloy (FeCrAl) is an exceptional suppo
15                                  Modeling of chromium-aluminum interdiffusion in spinel crystals prov
16             Incident and prevalent patients' chromium and antimony levels exceeded established accept
17 ut-performed aluminum electrodes in removing chromium and arsenic.
18                               Arsenic, Lead, Chromium and Cadmium, content in several food matrix det
19 nic ligands in the biogeochemical cycling of chromium and has significant implications for chromium r
20 ysis has revealed homogeneous segregation of chromium and iron along GBs.
21                                              Chromium and manganese, both essential in steel making,
22                                     We found chromium and nickel concentrations ranged from 0.24 to 8
23            Overall, this study suggests that chromium and nickel could contribute to the pathophysiol
24                    Genotoxic metals, such as chromium and nickel, damage DNA and bioaccumulate in org
25 ains elevated pseudo-total concentrations of chromium and nickel, this soil is not a significant sour
26 ications; and steel alloying elements (e.g., chromium and niobium) as well as elements used in high-t
27 ieties while the levels of cadmium, arsenic, chromium and thallium were within permissible range.
28                In this article, we fabricate chromium and tungsten nano-antennas and demonstrate that
29 r aerobic conditions, the levels of arsenic, chromium, and boron in leachate decreased up to 96%, 49%
30 ching of metals/metalloids (arsenic, copper, chromium, and boron) from treated wood in aged mature co
31 > 20% of ADIs derived for aluminum, cadmium, chromium, and manganese.
32 ee different magnetic impurities, manganese, chromium, and vanadium.
33 bserved mantle abundances of nickel, cobalt, chromium, and vanadium.
34 iors and certain parts of weapons is rich in chromium, and we demonstrate that chromium on the metals
35 gestion, we found that potassium, magnesium, chromium, and zinc in were bioaccessible in sugarcane sa
36             PM(2.5) levels of lead, arsenic, chromium, and zinc were significantly enriched at some l
37 tu formed tricarbonyl(eta(6)-2-methylindenyl)chromium anion with a series of Pd and Pt metallacycles
38                                          The chromium anti-rust treatment theory should therefore be
39  established hyperaccumulator thresholds for chromium, arsenic, and cadmium.
40 uilibrium of a macroscopic ensemble of S = 3 chromium atoms pinned in a three dimensional optical lat
41                        This study presents a chromium-based high-temperature conversion (Cr/HTC) appr
42 c oxidations, this oxidation is catalytic in chromium because oxygen, not the chromium reagent, is th
43 e genome assembly by integrating PacBio, 10x Chromium, BioNano DLS optical mapping, and Hi-C mapping
44 on center (CGC(Et)Ti) covalently linked to a chromium bis(thioether)amine ethylene trimerization cent
45 se, iron, copper and zinc) and heavy metals (chromium, cadmium, lead and nickel) were determined in v
46 on between non-heteroatom-stabilized alkynyl chromium carbene complexes prepared in situ and furfural
47 n the metal matrix with in-situ formation of chromium carbide (Cr7C3) at the CNT/copper (Cu) interfac
48 discovery of an easily accessible bimetallic chromium catalyst is reported for this transformation.
49                                          The chromium catalyst sequentially transfers a hydrogen atom
50 -ester'-b-ether-b-ester), using a commercial chromium catalyst system is described.
51                                          The chromium-catalyzed allylic oxidation of triterpene 1 wit
52             A simple protocol for performing chromium-catalyzed highly diastereoselective alkylations
53 ng titanocene-catalyzed epoxide opening with chromium-catalyzed hydrogen activation and radical reduc
54              5,10,15,20-Tetraphenylporphyrin chromium chloride (TPPCrCl) with added [Ph3P horizontal
55 major open source browsers (e.g. Firefox and Chromium/Chrome).
56 e established several systems based on zinc, chromium, cobalt, and aluminum catalysts for the ring-op
57 terpene-based cyclic anhydrides catalyzed by chromium, cobalt, and aluminum salen complexes is report
58 y occurring trace metals, including arsenic, chromium, cobalt, nickel, and lead, likely due to the mi
59                          Lead and hexavalent chromium collectively accounted for 99.2% of the total D
60   As one of the world's leading producers of chromium compounds, the U.S. is facing growing challenge
61 t weight with a mean of 15.9 +/- 3.5 ppm and chromium concentrations ranged from 2.0 to 73.6 ppm wet
62 g process resulted in clad layers with lower chromium content (12-25 wt.
63  washing to remove traces of e-liquid, lead, chromium, copper and nickel were all detected in the cig
64 al potentially toxic metals, including lead, chromium, copper, and nickel were detected in the e-liqu
65 luminum, antimony, arsenic, cadmium, cobalt, chromium, copper, iron, lead, manganese, nickel, seleniu
66                           Elements: calcium, chromium, copper, iron, lithium, magnesium, selenium and
67 strogen, and 9 other metals-arsenic, cobalt, chromium, copper, mercury, molybdenum, lead, tin, and va
68 ntly produced via the oxidation of trivalent chromium Cr(III) solids.
69 me potential geogenic sources for hexavalent chromium Cr(VI) release.
70 al chromate (Cr2O7(2-)) anions consisting of chromium Cr(VI) was used as a model environmental stress
71                                   Hexavalent chromium Cr(VI), typically existing as the oxyanion form
72 ort for the first time the use of hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) as an electrocatalyst in electrochemic
73                                   Hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) is associated with an increase in oxid
74                                   Hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) is generated in serpentine soils and e
75  after exposure to welding fumes, hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)), and nickel, we analyzed 3,418 lung ca
76  damage response (DDR) induced by hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)), but the molecular mechanism remains u
77  for highly specific detection of hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)).
78 uding Lead (Pb), Mercury (Hg), Arsenic (As), Chromium (Cr) and Cadmium (Cd) are considered to be high
79 o be more sensitive to cell death induced by chromium (Cr) and nickel (Ni) exposure than an isogenic
80 yer ultrathin film composed of subwavelength chromium (Cr) and oxide film coatings.
81 g materials with high melting points such as chromium (Cr) and tungsten (W).
82                            Elevated lead and chromium (Cr) concentrations in turmeric and a yellow pi
83  manganese (Mn), lead (Pb), copper (Cu), and chromium (Cr) in hair, blood, urine, nails, and saliva f
84  spectrometric analysis of aluminum (Al) and chromium (Cr) in vegetables.
85                                              Chromium (Cr) is one of common environmental contaminant
86                              On the basis of chromium (Cr) isotope data from a suite of Proterozoic s
87                                          The chromium (Cr) isotope system has emerged as a potential
88 t due to the lack of universal design of the chromium (Cr) reactors.
89 icrobial activities on the transformation of chromium (Cr) remediation products has generally been ov
90 ese (Mn), iron (Fe), copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), chromium (Cr)) and heavy metals (cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb)
91 tion of naturally occurring As, cobalt (Co), chromium (Cr), and nickel (Ni) from wetland sediments ca
92               We investigated the changes to chromium (Cr), arsenic (As), selenium (Se), antimony (Sb
93 inly lead (Pb), aluminium (Al), nickel (Ni), chromium (Cr), cadmium (Cd), iron (Fe) and zinc (Zn) wer
94 , arsenic (As), lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and chromium (Cr), from primary anthropogenic sources in Chi
95 was studied with heavy metals (cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), lead (Pb), arsenic (As)) which was found
96             Soil contamination by hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI) or chromate] due to anthropogenic activ
97                      Carcinogenic hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] requires cellular reduction to generat
98                                   Hexavalent chromium, Cr(VI), is a widespread and toxic groundwater
99 d characterized in terms of Cr(VI) and total chromium (Crtotal).
100                                   Hexavalent chromium (CrVI), one of the more toxic heavy metals, is
101 rospectively to NTP's research on hexavalent chromium (CrVI).
102 butadiene, perchloroethylene, and hexavalent chromium declined 88-94%.
103                         Studies suggest that chromium deficiency is associated with elevated levels o
104 asis on electrochemical based biosensors for chromium detection in potable water.
105 m, kinetics of an enzyme-based biosensor for chromium detection.
106 was applied to chromium speciation and total chromium determination in real samples and gave recoveri
107           The quintuply bonded alpha-diimine chromium dimer [(H)L(iPr)Cr]2 reductively couples cycloh
108                     The tris-hydroxo-bridged chromium dimer, known as Kremer's dimer, contains two an
109                                    In honey, chromium displayed the highest mean concentration, follo
110             Our system utilizes water cooled chromium doped zinc selenide (Cr(2+):ZnSe) as the gain m
111 iant SOT induced by an in-plane current in a chromium-doped TI bilayer heterostructure.
112 s) comparing the surgical use of the erbium, chromium-doped: yttrium, scandium, gallium, and garnet (
113  with all DES compared with BMS, with cobalt-chromium EES, platinum chromium-EES, SES, and BES also h
114 with BMS, with cobalt-chromium EES, platinum chromium-EES, SES, and BES also having lower target-vess
115                  At 1-year follow-up, cobalt-chromium everolimus eluting stents (CoCr-EES) were assoc
116 monstrated that the second-generation cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent (CoCr-EES) is superior
117 ing Absorb BVS (n=2164) or the Xience cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent (CoCr-EES; n=1225).
118                     However, PCI with cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent (RR=1.11 [0.67-1.84])
119                 However, for PCI with cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent (RR=1.31 [0.74-2.29]),
120  discontinuation before 30 days after cobalt chromium everolimus-eluting stent implantation was stron
121 es with 2-year follow-up period after cobalt chromium everolimus-eluting stent implantation.
122 umerically excess stroke and PCI with cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent with numerically incre
123  mortality between CABG and PCI using cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent.
124 al studies have in fact reported that cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stents (CoCr-EES) coated wit
125 ES but higher rates of 1-year ST than cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stents (CoCr-EES).
126   At a median follow-up of 3.8 years, cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stents (EES) were associated
127 tery disease randomized to BVS versus cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stents (EES).
128 ention (PCI) with fluoropolymer-based cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stents (PCI group, 948 patie
129 o either PCI with fluoropolymer-based cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stents (PCI group, 948 patie
130 ruption is safe in patients receiving cobalt chromium everolimus-eluting stents remains controversial
131 ation and stent thrombosis (ST) after cobalt chromium everolimus-eluting stents.
132 ion) at 1 year with BVS compared with cobalt chromium everolimus-eluting stents.
133                  We show that a single-oven, chromium-filled elemental analyzer coupled to an IRMS su
134 olution-growth of ZnO nanowires using a thin chromium film as a nucleation inhibitor and Au size-sele
135 lses optically generated from a 200 nm thick Chromium film is demonstrated.
136                                              Chromium hydride is a prototype stoichiometric transitio
137 II) solids of environmental relevance, i.e., chromium hydroxide Cr(OH)3(s), chromium oxide Cr2O3(s),
138 MFCs were examined at three types of shocks (chromium, hypochlorite and acetate) in a batch-mode cham
139 ) method for the determination of hexavalent chromium i.e. Cr(VI) in food samples is established with
140                                            A chromium(I) dinitrogen complex reacts rapidly with O2 to
141 uggest that the in situ generated low-valent chromium(I) species might be the active catalyst for the
142  molecular analog of SnO) and binary dimeric chromium(II) bis(mu2,kappa(2),kappa(2)) derivative [Cr2(
143                         O(2) activation at a chromium(II) siloxide complex in propionitrile leads to
144                                            A chromium(II)-based metal-organic framework Cr3 [(Cr4 Cl)
145 ern half based on nerol and acetoacetate and chromium(II)-mediated Reformatsky reactions as a powerfu
146 f CIR resistance in fungi were resistance to chromium (III) and to elevated temperature.
147         In this study, poly(dopamine-quinone chromium (III))-microspheres (PDQCM) were used for the m
148  electronically conductive solid solution of chromium(iii) and aluminium oxides in the corundum struc
149 d emissive oxygen- and temperature-sensitive chromium(III) complex ([Cr(ddpd)(2)][BPh(4)](3), CrBPh(4
150     The optimized constant for the monomeric chromium(III) complex was in between those of the iron(I
151 siloxide complex in propionitrile leads to a chromium(III) complex with an end-on bound superoxide li
152                                              Chromium(III) complexation was slow at pH < 4: three mon
153 roughput methodology was employed to produce chromium(III) complexes suitable for the surface modific
154  the coordination chemistry and stability of chromium(III) complexes with natural organic matter (NOM
155                                              Chromium(III) concentration was determined after convers
156 , contains two antiferromagnetically coupled chromium(III) metal ions and provides a classic example
157                                              Chromium(III) nutritional supplements are widely consume
158 didate, [Cr(OH)6](3-), which was formed from chromium(III) perchlorate and pH adjusted with ethylened
159           CrW(12), as the first example of a chromium(III) SIM, exhibits slow relaxation of magnetiza
160                    Here, the complexation of chromium(III) to mor layer material and to Suwannee Rive
161                          The complexation of chromium(III) to NOM was intermediate between that of ir
162                      Our study suggests that chromium(III)-NOM complexes are important for chromium s
163 S results showed a predominance of monomeric chromium(III)-NOM complexes at low pH (<5), in which onl
164             At pH > 5 there were polynuclear chromium(III)-NOM complexes with Cr...Cr interactions at
165 mon soil contaminant, and it often exists as chromium(III).
166                   In this study of reductive chromium immobilization, we found that flow-through colu
167 lour change has been correctly attributed to chromium impurities and their absorption band in the yel
168 old of the central BC(5) ring coordinates to chromium in an eta(6) fashion while only the B=C unit bi
169  cadmium, mercury, arsenic, copper, zinc and chromium in corn flour samples were determined.
170 and (CN(tBu)Ar3NC) that is able to stabilize chromium in its zerovalent oxidation state.
171 lized enzyme biosensors for the detection of chromium in potable water are proposed.
172 aining alcohol groups can remove and convert chromium in water.
173           Carcinogenic effects of hexavalent chromium in waters are of concern in many countries worl
174 ic sludge and render metals (iron, zinc, and chromium) inert.
175 ction, separation and speciation analysis of chromium ions.
176              Four types of shocks, including chromium, iron, nitrate, and sodium acetate, were select
177                                              Chromium-iron (CrFe) binary alloys have recently been pr
178                                       Copper-chromium-iron oxide-based catalysts have been widely use
179                                              Chromium is a common soil contaminant, and it often exis
180                                   Hexavalent chromium is a water-soluble pollutant, the mobility of w
181                                              Chromium is abundantly and primarily present as Cr(III)
182                                              Chromium isotope analysis is rapidly becoming a valuable
183 eorite, which is confirmed by our oxygen and chromium isotopic data.
184 in tetrahydrofuran leads to a side-on peroxo chromium(IV) compound.
185 y in a series of synthesized organometallic, chromium(IV) molecules.
186                                              Chromium lanthanide heterometallic wheel complexes {Cr8
187 pproach involves deposition of an additional chromium layer (superlayer) onto a bonded system, where
188 iciencies for five metals (arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead and nickel) were compared under varying c
189  1996, and 1999: arsenic, antimony, cadmium, chromium, lead, manganese, mercury, and nickel.
190 oncentrations of Arsenic, Antimony, Cadmium, Chromium, Lead, Selenium and Vanadium were evaluated in
191              However, data directly relating chromium levels to metabolic syndrome (MetS) risk are la
192 e highest to the lowest quartiles of toenail chromium levels was 0.80 (0.66-0.98; Plinear trend = 0.0
193                                      Toenail chromium levels were inversely and longitudinally associ
194                             Baseline toenail chromium levels were measured with instrumental neutron-
195 ronmental implications, followed by niobium, chromium, manganese, and iron.
196  its main alloying elements (i.e., vanadium, chromium, manganese, and niobium).
197 tals, termed M-Pt3Ni/C, where M is vanadium, chromium, manganese, iron, cobalt, molybdenum (Mo), tung
198                                          Hot chromium maximizes the yield of molecular hydrogen in a
199 Gy/h) ionizing radiation (IR), heavy metals (chromium, mercury), elevated temperature (up to 50 degre
200 lements (aluminium, cadmium, cobalt, copper, chromium, mercury, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, lead a
201 mbled coordination networks that incorporate chromium metal ions and pyrazine building blocks.
202 ehavior to the metallic density wave seen in chromium metal than the insulating stripes typically fou
203  lost from the taper junction between Cobalt-Chromium-Molybdenum (CoCrMo) and Titanium (Ti) component
204      The demonstration is given for a nickel-chromium-molybdenum alloy film of 150 nm thickness that
205                                              Chromium nanoparticles are formed using superfluid heliu
206 sm is attributed to atomic-scale disorder in chromium nanoparticles, leading to abundant unbalanced s
207  of some heavy metals such as cadmium, lead, chromium, nickel and cobalt in domestic cultivated and i
208 e evidence of normal physiological function (chromium, nickel, tungsten, and vanadium), and 12 with k
209           The results were used to constrain chromium-NOM complexation in the Stockholm Humic Model (
210 is rich in chromium, and we demonstrate that chromium on the metals is contamination from nearby lacq
211 stored and control platelets with either (51)chromium or (111)indium.
212 ition-metal complexes of ruthenium, iridium, chromium or copper(5,6).
213 eagents (based around toxic elements such as chromium or selenium) or expensive catalysts (such as pa
214 060A does not adequately extract Cr(VI) from chromium ore processing residue (COPR).
215 rive fundamental insights into mechanisms of chromium oxidation during combustion of solid fuels.
216 conductive CrOx bridges across a thin native chromium oxide barrier between the nanodots and an under
217 evance, i.e., chromium hydroxide Cr(OH)3(s), chromium oxide Cr2O3(s), and copper chromite Cu2Cr2O5(s)
218 e previously reported that the micronutrient chromium picolinate (CrP), with long-standing cardiovasc
219 -seq) using sNuc-DropSeq, DroNc-seq, and 10X Chromium platforms on adult mouse kidney.
220                                           51-Chromium posttransfusion red cell recovery studies were
221 pends on the long-term potential for reduced chromium precipitates to remain immobilized under oxidiz
222                Our results show that surface chromium presence is correlated with artefact typology a
223 n performance, highlighting the influence of chromium promoter on the enhancement in both activity an
224                                     Platinum chromium (PtCr) and polyvinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluor
225                                          The chromium reactor has been incorporated into a purge and
226 atalytic in chromium because oxygen, not the chromium reagent, is the oxidant.
227      Under oxidizing conditions, immobilized chromium reduced under predominantly denitrifying condit
228                   Standard degranulation and chromium release cytotoxicity assays confirm the ability
229 hromium and has significant implications for chromium remediation in contaminated environments.
230               Alternative methods of aqueous chromium removal have been of great research interest in
231 nd chemical sequestration of N, Cl, and S by chromium result in quantitative conversion of compound-s
232 f platinum, gold, high-temperature iron- and chromium-rich spherules, and native iron particles rarel
233                                 In addition, chromium salen catalysts have been discovered as uniquel
234 w that ~13-21% of cell barcodes from the 10x Chromium scATAC-seq assay may have been derived from a d
235 nding metal complexes, as exemplified by the chromium series, and the effect of the metal appears to
236  metal halides, metal thio/selenophosphates, chromium silicon/germanium tellurides, and more, are int
237 ing gas is achieved using a high temperature chromium-silver reactor that retains carbon, oxygen and
238 -cell RNA-sequencing (using the 10x Genomics Chromium Single Cell 5' Gene Expression workflow).
239 ng on a MDA-like amplification step, such as Chromium Single Cell profiling solution.
240 r drug-eluting stents: the thin-strut cobalt-chromium sirolimus-eluting Orsiro stent and the stainles
241 ultrathin strut biodegradable polymer cobalt-chromium sirolimus-eluting Orsiro stent in an all-comers
242 h is explained in terms of the occurrence of chromium/sodium vacancy antisite during desodiation and
243                                         This chromium solution was employed in a clinically relevant
244                    The method was applied to chromium speciation and total chromium determination in
245 hromium(III)-NOM complexes are important for chromium speciation in many environments.
246  novel method was developed by SAE-DLLME for chromium speciation in water and rice samples using 2-th
247  results challenge the old vision of "naked" chromium species (i.e., low coordinated) as the active s
248 n, derived from experiments on a high-valent chromium species, is now available.
249 s compared with an everolimus-eluting cobalt-chromium stent, was within the prespecified margin for n
250  or everolimus-eluting (EES, n = 694) cobalt-chromium stents.
251  It was discovered that the sulfur in sodium chromium sulfide is electrochemically active, undergoing
252 d structural stabilization of layered sodium chromium sulfide.
253 thus providing a facile synthesis method for chromium-sulfide-based ultrathin layers.
254 ogy, largely represented by the 10x Genomics Chromium system, is able to measure the gene expression
255    Linked-Read technologies, such as the 10x Chromium system, use a microfluidic system and a special
256                                              Chromium telluride compounds are promising ferromagnets
257                                          The chromium terephthalate MIL-101 is a mesoporous metal-org
258 ess in NaCrS2 where it is sulfur rather than chromium that works as the electrochemical active specie
259                              For example, in chromium the electrons order to form a spin-density-wave
260                     EWI for cadmium, nickel, chromium through imported and domestic cultivated rice c
261 al ranged from 0.78 (95% CI: 0.59, 1.04) for chromium to 1.33 (95% CI: 0.98, 1.79) for mercury.
262 ase features are analyzed for catalysts from chromium to gold for ionic hydrogenations, bifunctional
263 ed the ability to reduce the amount of toxic chromium to levels within the range of the EPA contamina
264 n of 3 pKa units for complexes of the metals chromium to nickel, molybdenum, ruthenium to palladium,
265                          For the groups from chromium to nickel, tables are provided that order the a
266 e differing redox behavior of molybdenum and chromium to provide constraints on seafloor redox evolut
267 is review paper has outlined the overview of chromium toxicity, conventional analytical techniques al
268    This belief was based on the detection of chromium traces on the surface of bronze weapons buried
269  two-dimensional (2D) magnetic semiconductor chromium tribromide (CrBr(3)), which was enabled by the
270  sensing using a novel Raman reporter, arene chromium tricarbonyl linked aminothiophenol (Cr(CO)3-ATP
271 Carlo simulations, we propose that monolayer chromium trichloride (CrCl(3)) can be a promising candid
272                          Copper, permethrin, chromium, triclosan, and lead were also important.
273                     The van der Waals magnet chromium triiodide (CrI(3)) has been shown to be a layer
274  through symmetry control in atomically thin chromium triiodide (CrI(3)).
275 ect microscopy to demonstrate that monolayer chromium triiodide (CrI3) is an Ising ferromagnet with o
276 nd-alignment between tungsten diselenide and chromium triiodide can be exploited to excite localized
277 hich NO is oxidized quantitatively to NO2 by chromium trioxide (CrO3), before conversion to NO2(-) an
278 ternative in areas polluted with wastes from chromium-using industries.
279                       Here we show that in a chromium versus oxygen-isotope plot Ost 65 falls outside
280             The hybrid exhibited outstanding chromium (VI) and MB removal capacity, much superior to
281            The hybrid was evaluated for both chromium (VI) and organic pollutants (using methyl blue
282 uction for practical applications where both chromium (VI) cations and organic dyes are the main poll
283 id, which is able to effectively remove both chromium (VI) cations and organic pollutants simultaneou
284 bents for the removal of lead (cationic) and chromium(VI) (anionic) metal ions.
285 olution pH, and is capable of decreasing the chromium(VI) concentration in water from 1 ppm to 10 ppb
286                                              Chromium(VI) content in breakfast cereals ranged between
287       Different ATM signaling in response to chromium(VI) metabolism via ascorbate and nonascorbate r
288 ed effectiveness in the removal of the toxic chromium(VI) pollutant from aqueous solutions.
289                                              Chromium(VI) produced from the oxidation of indigenous C
290                                              Chromium(VI) production is highly dependent on Cr-minera
291                                              Chromium(VI) was determined in these products by high re
292 framework can take up from 90 to 200 mg/g of chromium(VI), depending on the solution pH, and is capab
293 r, lead and copper, disinfection byproducts, chromium(VI), strontium, and PFOA/PFOS.
294                             Baseline toenail chromium was inversely associated with incidence of MetS
295                       In contrast, almost no chromium was mobilized from columns reduced under predom
296   In the glass substrate, lead, cadmium, and chromium were present at concentrations up to about 1100
297 22 patients) or an everolimus-eluting cobalt-chromium (Xience) stent (686 patients).
298 ude use of lasers, most recently the erbium, chromium:yttrium-scandium-gallium-garnet (Er,Cr:YSGG) la
299                                  The erbium, chromium:yttrium-scandium-gallium-garnet (Er,Cr:YSGG) la
300 bon (EC) and nine trace elements: potassium, chromium, zinc, iron, titanium, arsenic, calcium, mangan

 
Page Top