Search for dissertations about: "Peter Mol"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 8 swedish dissertations containing the words Peter Mol.
-
1. Getting a Say : Bringing patients’ views on benefit-risk into medical approvals
Abstract : The focus of this thesis is a new quantitative approach to consider patient preferences on benefits and risks in medical approvals. The overall aim of this thesis was to explore how patient preference information may be relevant to regulatory marketing authorisation decisions. READ MORE
-
2. Branched aliphatic polycarbonates : synthesis and coating applications
Abstract : The overall aim of this thesis is to describe the synthesisof branched aliphatic polycarbonates and show the potentialapplication of these polymers in the field of powder coatings.The characterization of the polycarbonates was facilitated bythe study of a series of bis-MPAdendrimers, which served asreference of perfectly branched polymers. READ MORE
-
3. Organic Azides : Functional Molecules and Materials
Abstract : The work presented in this thesis stems from the chemistry of the azido group, and more specifically from the unique reactivity of perfluorinated aromatic azides and how to use this reactivity to access new types of molecules to enable new applications in asymmetric synthesis and materials.In the first section of this thesis, a photoactivatable fluorescence probe is presented, where the non-luminescent azide was activated via a UV-light-promoted intramolecular N–H insertion reaction forming a fluorescence emitter. READ MORE
-
4. Chlorite: Geochemical properties, Dissolution kinetcis and Ni(II) sorption
Abstract : In Sweden, among other countries, a deep multi-barrier geological repository, KBS-3, is planned for the burial of nuclear waste. One of the barriers is identified as the grantic bedrock itself and in this environment chlorite is present at surfaces in fracture zones. READ MORE
-
5. The role of sediments in nitrogen cycling in the larger Baltic Sea
Abstract : The eutrophication of coastal areas has become a widespread problem over the last decades. In the Baltic Sea, the input of nitrogen and phosphorus has increased by four and eight times, respectively, since the turn of the century, and this is considered the direct cause of the eutrophication of this ecosystem. READ MORE