Technology Reports of Kansai University (ISSN: 04532198) is a monthly peer-reviewed and open-access international Journal. It was first built in 1959 and officially in 1975 till now by kansai university, japan. The journal covers all sort of engineering topic, mathematics and physics. Technology Reports of Kansai University (TRKU) was closed access journal until 2017. After that TRKU became open access journal. TRKU is a scopus indexed journal and directly run by faculty of engineering, kansai university.
Technology Reports of Kansai University (ISSN: 04532198) is a peer-reviewed journal. The journal covers all sort of engineering topic as well as mathematics and physics. the journal's scopes are
in the following fields but not limited to:
This article presents an experimental study of the characterization of local materials used in building construction. These materials are Adobe bricks and stabilized with lime. The objective of this experimental investigation is to study the effect of chemical stabilization of lime on the mechanical and thermal properties of adobe bricks. The added lime content is 0%, 4%, 7%, and 10% of the soil mass. The results of this study showed that the thermal conductivity decreases and depends considerably on the lime content. The results also show that the compressive resistors are increased as a function of the increase in the lime content up to 7% (optimum) and above this threshold a decrease of up to 10% is observed
The aim of this work is to thermally characterize waste coffee grounds produced each year in the world in significant quantities in the soluble coffee industry and in the preparation of domestic and commercial drinks. This article presents an experimental study to determine the thermal behavior of coffee grounds powder in Morocco by: thermogravimetric analysis, differential thermal analysis and differential scanning calorimetry, in an oxidizing atmosphere and with a heating rate at 20 ° C / min. The apparent activation energy of the combustion of the main volatiles was determined using the Coats-Redfern method. The apparent activation energy was 20.997 kJ • mol-1, 26.114 kJ • mol-1 and 30.478 kJ • mol-1, respectively