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1 polyurethane foam in residential upholstered furniture.
2 cts over the life cycle of a piece of office furniture.
3 t significant overall preference for angular furniture.
4 t of wood and types of tree species used for furniture.
5 they deposit onto surfaces such as walls and furniture.
6 as exposed lower sections of walls and under furniture.
7 or the construction of sustainable afterglow furniture.
8 ng PBDE usage were polyurethane foam used in furniture (65% of pentaBDE), casings of electrical and e
9 arbon storage in homegarden trees and wooden furniture across households of different income levels i
10 ipants included 672 children with falls from furniture and 2648 control participants matched on age,
11 plied to polyurethane foam commonly found in furniture and automobile foam.
12 mpounds applied to polyurethane foam used in furniture and baby products.
13 l exposure due to household articles such as furniture and building materials.
14 esyl phosphate (TMTP) was observed after the furniture and carpet was introduced to the computer room
15 nd classrooms, half of which had "healthier" furniture and carpet.
16 s, commonly found in household items such as furniture and electronics, prematurely arrested oligoden
17 mon rooms, likely a result of the density of furniture and electronics.
18 lity standard as well as presence and age of furniture and electronics.
19 as primarily focused on chemicals applied to furniture and electronics; however, camping tents sold i
20 rus) are insects that live on mattresses and furniture and feed on blood nocturnally, causing linear
21 trated through the fabrication of functional furniture and pavilion-scale architectural prototypes, s
22 ntified the substitution potential of wooden furniture and use of renewable energy sources.
23 upon every day, for example, homes, heating, furniture, and aircraft.
24 ed as a foundational material for buildings, furniture, and architectural structures for millennia, t
25 ing construction and building, household and furniture, and automotive for the period from 2000 to 20
26 me retardants historically used in textiles, furniture, and electronic products.
27 face selection (floor covering, countertops, furniture, and equipment) and cleaning, antimicrobial-tr
28 Here we show through analysis of the coffin, furniture, and wooden tomb structure that the principal
29  age of potential sources such as carpeting, furniture, and/or paint.
30 faces; allowing children to play or climb on furniture; and teaching children safety rules about clim
31 domes, water-tight roof tiling, sun shields, furniture, antennas, solar arrays, space telescopes, etc
32 s likely to have played or climbed on garden furniture (AOR, 0.74; 95% CI, 0.56-0.97).
33 tly more likely to have played or climbed on furniture (AOR, 9.25; 95% CI, 1.22-70.07).
34 n with potential to be used in packaging and furniture applications.
35                                   Falls from furniture are common in young children but there is litt
36 have been widely used as flame retardants in furniture, carpet padding, car seats, and other consumer
37                              Votive objects, furniture, clothing, jewelry, and importantly, food incl
38  design of robotic limbs, retractable roofs, furniture, consumer products, vehicle systems, and more.
39 rom three SCs: for example, fruits, cars and furniture (e.g. pear, Mercedes, table.); and from three
40 ring the installation of building equipment, furniture, electronics, and first year of building use.
41        In addition, California's residential furniture flammability standard (TB-117) has undergone s
42                                 California's furniture flammability standard Technical Bulletin 117 (
43 other parts of the world, due to the state's furniture flammability standard.
44                                              Furniture flammability standards are typically met with
45 . college campuses adhering to two different furniture flammability standards: Technical Bulletin 117
46          Home hazards (peeling paint, broken furniture, flooring damage, and tripping hazards) were d
47 lidation of the PHAIA with extracts of house furniture foam as well as human and calf sera spiked wit
48 test with six random extracts of local house furniture foams showed that the results of the PHAIA and
49 at can be miniaturized or hidden in walls or furniture for an ergonomic use.
50 thout three-dimensional spatial context (the furniture from these rooms on a blank background).
51 les and changes in some of the PPIU sanitary furniture have been suggested as a means of reducing env
52 cats preferring to spend time on upholstered furniture in comparison to no preference (p < 0.05).
53 ical flame retardant (FR) use in residential furniture in the United States.
54 sonal preferences, using a controlled set of furniture items that varied systematically in form (angu
55                                              Furniture manufacturers were also surveyed to determine
56 ted associations are causal, some falls from furniture may be prevented by incorporating advice into
57 r discomfort, high costs, complicated setup, furniture occlusion, and intensive computation.
58                                   Falls from furniture occurring at the child's home resulting in att
59  introduced to the computer room, suggesting furniture or carpet as a source.
60 emarkable flexibility, whether we are making furniture or synthesizing complex molecular structures.
61  significant decreases in FR applications in furniture products and child car seats, suggesting the u
62  activities with potential solvent exposure, furniture refinishing (OR = 9.73, 95 percent CI 1.48-63.
63 eece (houses), and Sweden (apartments, cars, furniture stores, electronics stores) and analyzed for R
64 more like a crowded party in a house full of furniture than a game of tag in an empty field.
65 550 (FM550) is commonly added to residential furniture to reduce its flammability.
66                       Because TB133 requires furniture to withstand a much-more-demanding test flame
67  storage and substitution benefits of wooden furniture were significantly (p[Formula: see text]0.05)
68 B117, we hypothesized that spaces with TB133 furniture would have higher levels of FRs in dust.