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The support for polygeneration lies in the possibility of
integrating different technologies into a single energy system, to
maximize the utilization of both fossil and renewable fuels. A
system that delivers multiple forms of energy to users, maximizing
the overall efficiency makes polygeneration an emerging and viable
option for energy consuming industries. Polygeneration Systems:
Design, Processes and Technologies provides simple and advanced
calculation techniques to evaluate energy, environmental and
economic performance of polygeneration systems under analysis. With
specific design guidelines for each type of polygeneration system
and experimental performance data, referred both to single
components and overall systems, this title covers all aspects of
polygeneration from design to operation, optimization and practical
implementation. Giving different aspects of both fossil and
non-fossil fuel based polygeneration and the wider area of
polygeneration processes, this book helps readers learn general
principles to specific system design and development through
analysis of case studies, examples, simulation characteristics and
thermodynamic and economic data.
Parietti addresses one of the most important topic scrutinized by
the scholars of International Business. Distance between two
countries is a multidimensional concept, including not only a
geographical dimension but also other dimensions related to the
culture, the administrative, political and economic aspects as
shown by Ghemawat (2001) and its "CAGE" framework, as well as by
Berry et al. (2010) and their nine dimensions of cross-national
distance. In the last decade, van Tulder (2010) notes that the
research tends to be oriented towards the institutional and
governance distance between countries. Many scholars have
emphasized the role of institutions in the internationalization
process of firms (Cantwell et al., 2010; Dunning and Lundan, 2008;
Van Hoorn and Maseland, 2016). Institutional distance has been used
primarily to explain the location and entry mode choices based on
the concept of "liability of foreignness" introduced by Zaheer
(1995). Nevertheless, previous studies show contradictory results
due to differences in terms of conceptualization and measurement of
institutional distance.
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