Thirty Holstein cows were fed diets of 50% grain and 50% corn silage (dry matter basis) through the first 18 wk of lactation. Grain mixes were supplemented with inorganic calcium sources (aragonite, calcite flour, or albacar) to provide .6 or .9% dietary calcium (dry matter basis). Phytate phosphorus intake averaged 38.3 and 42.6 g/d in digestion trials conducted during wk 4 and 10 of lactation, respectively. Even though large quantities of feed and significant amounts of grain were consumed, 98% of dietary phytate phosphorus was hydrolyzed to inorganic phosphorus. Neither calcium source nor calcium quantity affected the hydrolysis of phytate phosphorus.
The high efficiencies obtained in a combined gas-turbine/steam-turbine power cycle burning low Btu gas (LBG) make it a potentially attractive alternative to the high sulfur emitting direct coal-fired steam cycle. In the gasification process, much of the bound nitrogen in coal is converted to ammonia in the LBG. This ammonia is largely converted to nitrogen oxides (NOx) in conventional combustors. This paper examines the pressurized bench scale performance of reactors previously demonstrated to produce low NOx emissions in atmospheric laboratory scale experiments. LBG was synthesized in a catalytic reformer and fired in three reactors: a catalytic reactor, a diffusion flame, and a stirred reactor. Effects of scale, pressure, stoichiometry, residence time, and preheat were examined. Lowest NOx emissions were produced in a rich/lean series staged catalytic reactor.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.