Sentences with phrase «produced as a byproduct»

Unfortunately, some companies actually bottle the water produced as a byproduct of the syrup - making process.
Edible oil is a safe alternative from mineral oil / baby oil which is produced as a byproduct of the distillation of gasoline from crude oil and is a foreign substance to the human body.
Finally, the researchers looked at the impact of adding succinate — a salt that oxygen - loving bacteria in the gut produce as a byproduct — into the drinking water of germ - free mice with 4 - day microbes that had received extra Clostridia.
The CO2 it's using comes from a nearby explosives plant where it's produced as a byproduct of the manufacturing process.
In addition, they produce as a byproduct the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (known to dental patients everywhere as laughing gas).
Your gut eliminates toxins produced as byproducts of your metabolism, which your liver then passes into bile.
Unfortunately, when PEGs are manufactured, the compound 1,4 - dioxane is also produced as a byproduct, and PEGs may also be used as a solvent in the manufacture of other chemicals.1
Methane (CH4 +) and nitrous oxide (N2O) are produced as byproducts of anaerobic metabolism in the low - redox zones characteristic of flooded soils, where oxygen is lacking.
It is viewed by many environmental and health organizations to be both carcinogenic and hazardous to the natural environment because of the harmful dioxins that are produced as a byproduct of the vinyl chloride manufacturing process and from the incineration of waste PVC in domestic garbage.
This warmer temperature makes cogeneration, using the steam produced as a byproduct, a somewhat more appealing option for those employing this type of fuel cell.

Not exact matches

Other activities include: producing products that may be recycled at the end of their lifespan for material reuse; reducing energy consumption in operations; or even re-engineering distribution methods as a means of reducing long - distance travel during product delivery, ultimately reducing fossil fuel consumption (and the disease - causing air pollution that is its byproduct).
The Philippines is now the largest coconut producing country and was first to produce flour as a byproduct from its production of coconut milk (1, 7).
As byproducts of manufacturing simple sugars, lactobacilli produce flavorful organic acids: lactic acid, which adds a rich, mellow flavor to bread; and to a lesser degree over a longer period of time, acetic acid, which gives sourdough bread its sour tang.
had bruises at birth (the red blood cells that are part of the bruises are broken down and produce bilirubin as a byproduct)
It also is one of several U.S. proposals that demonstrate a viable financial model for capture technology, as the plant will produce byproducts ranging from CO2 to sulfuric acid worth as much as $ 50 to $ 100 million annually, analysts say.
The microbe takes sugar from the seaweed and thus far can produce ethanol as a byproduct.
In the «first stage» light is absorbed and used to produce energy molecules, with oxygen as a byproduct.
About two - thirds of us have Ureaplasma bacteria living in our urinary tract, where they feast on urea, breaking it down to produce energy and releasing ammonia as a byproduct.
The approach, called tunable infrared laser direct absorption spectroscopy, detects the ratio of methane isotopes, which can provide a «fingerprint» to differentiate between two common origins: microbial, in which microorganisms, typically living in wetlands or the guts of animals, produce methane as a metabolic byproduct; or thermogenic, in which organic matter, buried deep within the Earth, decays to methane at high temperatures.
This chemical reaction, known as «methanogenesis» because it produces methane as a byproduct, is at the root of the tree of life on Earth, and could even have been critical to the origin of life on our planet.
The reaction combines the hydroxyl molecule (OH, produced by reaction of oxygen and water) and carbon monoxide (CO, a byproduct of incomplete fossil fuel combustion) to form hydrogen (H) and carbon dioxide (CO2, a «greenhouse gas» contributing to global warming), as well as heat.
Many bacteria produce methane as a byproduct of their metabolism, but most of these bacteria live in oxygen - poor environments such as the deep ocean or the digestive tract of animals — not near the ocean's surface.
This method can be expensive as precious metals like palladium or silver are needed to speed up the synthesis process, and can produce waste byproducts harmful to the environment.
Many bacteria also produce methane as a byproduct of their metabolism.
The efficiency of the process can be increased by adding distilled water to the sludge and substrate as this will reduce VFA concentration, which usually destroys the methanogens (microorganisms that produce methane as a metabolic byproduct in anaerobic conditions).
The functional groups cross-linked the graphene sheets to each other, and even though no liquids were involved, they produced a tiny amount of water as a byproduct of the reaction, Kabbani said.
The formation of this mineral is known to commonly produce methane gas as a byproduct.
Protein powders (as supplements) are produced from soy, eggs, or milk byproducts, whey and casein proteins.
As we noted in the book, excess protein is available to gut bacteria for fermentation and that produces a number of toxic byproducts.
Internally our bodies produce waste byproducts as a result of normal metabolic functions.
If the muscles are not functioning properly or are hypertonic / spastic they are actually producing a host of negative byproducts directly from the muscles themselves as well as through crosstalk to other endocrine tissues via mechanisms related to cytokine / myokine function.
Healthy microbes such as lactobacillus strains produce GABA naturally as a byproduct of metabolizing the amino acids L - glutamine and glutamic acid.
This substance is produced from soybeans as a byproduct of the huge soybean oil industry.
Acrylamide12, 13 is another highly toxic byproduct produced when starchy or carbohydrate - rich foods such as potatoes and grains are fried or cooked at high temperatures.
Most of the flatulence your body produces is due to intestinal bacteria, which create methane, and other gases, as a byproduct of digestion.
The byproduct of the urease and stomach acid is toxic to epithelial cells as are the other chemicals produced by this bacterium, leading to damage to cells, a disruption of tight junctions and inflammation.
Methanol is known as wood alcohol, methyl alcohol, wood naphtha, or wood spirits and is a chemical produced mostly as a byproduct of the destructive distillation of wood.
When muscles work hard, they produce lactate as a byproduct.
In the large intestine and colon, your gut bacteria ferment the RS and produce short chain fatty acids (SCFA) as byproducts.
Antioxidants help take care of free radicals which we are exposed to in our environment and produce in our bodies as a natural byproduct of metabolism.
Sulfanilamide was produced as an unwanted byproduct of the German dye industry for years before an accidental discovery showed it to be a very effective antibiotic.
Ammonia is normally produced by the bacteria in your pet's intestines and as a normal byproduct of everyday metabolism within your pet's body.
Corn milling produces byproducts as well, such as corn oil, which isn't as healthy as wholegrain corn.
Grizzly Pet Products was founded in 2002, when company president Harald Fisker — whose background was in engineering, design and marketing for industrial fish - and meat - processing plants — realized that the salmon oil he saw being produced as a human - food byproduct could have excellent nutritional value for pets.
Games in this genre can generally only conceive of nations or countries, those giant systems of governance that dominate our lives, as structures that produce bad byproducts at best.
This was an IGCC power plant that was also supposed to produce commercially salable byproducts, such as fertilizer.
Ethanol plants produce byproducts that can be used as feed for animals, in turn, factory farms can sell animal manure as fuel for ethanol plants.
That is, Cold War Plutonium factories, also producing some energy as a byproduct and mockingly called nuclear power plants should no longer be favoured by a regulatory framework.
«Most of what we produce — for fertilizer and as a byproduct of industry — does not end up on our plates or in our gas tanks.
Solar and wind in particular, along with several other clean energy generation systems do not «burn» any fuel to produce electricity, they do not «emit» anything into the air as a byproduct of electricity generation, and hence they help solve the problem and smooth the transition to a lower carbon economy.
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