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As the global climate changes, scientists anticipate that the
distribution of animal populations and disease vectors will expand.
In the case of arthropods, such efforts hold immense significance
as they have the potential to increase human mortality and
suffering from arboviruses above current levels. The 238th American
Chemical Society National Meeting and Exposition in Washington,
D.C. on August 16-20, 2009, offered an opportunity for researchers
to present and discuss new findings in invertebrate repellents
research, regulations, and technology development. Recently efforts
have been made to understand the role of chemicals in arthropod
behavior, and screening programs are starting to incorporate
repellency testing into their battery of bioassays. The lack of
standardized protocols for measuring and comparison of repellents
has remained a significant obstacle in arthropod research.
Oftentimes studies report variable measures of success, and
comparison of results across studies is not always consistent.
Progress in the standardization of arthropod test methods for
repellents would be valuable to many groups including academic
researchers working in the field, contract labs supplying test
results, government research laboratories, regulatory bodies in the
process of developing guidelines for product registration, as well
as companies looking to invest in new technologies. Perhaps one
complicating factor in this process has been that research and
technology haven't moved fast enough to meet the demand for
effective arthropod repellents. Issues such as pest arthropod
resurgence and insecticide/repellent resistance to chemical can
create new challenges and add pressure for researchers. The
collection of chapters in this book covers a range of applied and
basic research on arthropod repellents. An overview of the state of
arthropod repellents research is provided at the start. In the
chapters that follow, there is a selection of papers demonstrating
research on new repellent technologies at different stages of
development. The scope of basic and applied research methods
described in these chapters on new repellent technologies presents
the range of testing that is often necessary to move a repellent
technology forward in development. The transition from newly
developed technologies to registered products is achieved in
perspective of a growing market for natural arthropod repellents.
New technologies that are completely developed and have gone
through registration need to be accompanied by successful
commercialization. The growing market for natural arthropod
repellents presents such an example and highlights new
opportunities in this area. The concluding chapter discusses the
public entomology landscape, past and future opportunities for the
development of chemical protectants.
Increased energy prices and the growing attention on global warming
are motivating the creation of economically viable alternatives to
fossil fuels. Nanotechnologies have been recognized as one
effective approach to solve energy problems. Therefore, to promote
the improvement of research and to foster professional
collaboration among researchers in energy-related nanotechnologies,
we organized a symposium on "Nanotechnology for a Sustainable
Energy Economy" as a part of the 243rd American Chemical Society
National Meeting, which took place March 25-29, 2012 in San Diego,
California, USA. Forty-four contributors from 12 countries
presented their research works from industrial, university, and
national laboratories in nanotechnology areas related to energy and
fuel technologies. This ACS Symposium Series book was developed
from this symposium. This book presents a very useful and readable
collection of reviews and research papers in nanotechnologies for
energy conversion, storage, and utilization, offering new results
which are sure to be of interest to researchers, students, and
engineers in the field of nanotechnologies and energy. The book
focuses on the following topics: Li batteries (Chapters 1-4),
supercapacitors (Chapter 5), dye-sensitized solar cells (Chapter
6), photocatalysis (Chapters 7-9), fuel cells (Chapter 10),
electrocatalysis (Chapter 11), and electron beam lithography
(Chapter 12). All 12 chapters were recruited from oral
presentations at the symposium.
* The earliest theoretical and practical research monograph on
deeper learning in China * Constructs a new method system of
educational research which integrates brain science, psychology,
pedagogy and information technology * The result is expected to
guide school and classroom reform of basic education, preschool
education and vocational education
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