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Featured researches published by Ömer Gül.


Aquaculture | 1999

Comparison of the fatty acid composition of the freshwater fish larvae Tilapia zillii, the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus, and the microalgae Scenedesmus abundans, Monoraphidium minitum and Chlorella vulgaris in the algae-rotifer-fish larvae food chains

Oya Işık; Ercan Sarıhan; Erdal Kusvuran; Ömer Gül; Oktay Erbatur

Abstract The proximate and the fatty acid analysis of the warm freshwater fish, Tilapia zillii larvae, the freshwater rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus and the microalgae Scenedesmus abundans , Monoraphidium minitum and Chlorella vulgaris each constituting a different food chain with B. calyciflorus and T. zillii larvae have been carried out. C. vulgaris had significantly higher lipid content than the other two microalgae and this was also reflected in the lipid content of B. calyciflorus fed each of the microalgae separately. Five fatty acids dominated in all the microalgae, namely 18:3 n −3, 18:2 n −6, 18:0, 18:1 and 16:0 though there were significant differences both in quantitative distribution of these acids and the total fatty acid content. The content of 18:3 n −3, 18:2 n −6 and 16:0 and the total fatty acid content of C. vulgaris were considerably higher than the corresponding values in the other two microalgae. But interestingly, these strong differences were not reflected in B. calyciflorus samples fed these microalgae separately though the one fed C. vulgaris had slightly higher total fatty acid content than the other two rotifer samples. One can consider that the freshwater rotifer B. calyciflorus is capable of creating its own characteristic fatty acid content up to a sufficient level even when cultured with a fatty acid deficient algae probably by consuming excessive amounts of this algae compared to other algae of relatively high fatty acid content. The proximate and fatty acid analysis results of the three T. zillii larvae fed the three B. calyciflorus samples obtained by culturing with three different microalgae were very similar. This was an expected result because the three B. calyciflorus samples did not differ much from each other. The low 18:2 n −6 (1.66–3.53 mg g −1 DM) and 18:3 n −3 (1.14–1.22 mg g −1 DM) content and the relatively high 22:6 n −3 (10.72–14.38 mg g −1 DM) content of the T. zillii larvae samples indicated that they were capable of elongating and desaturating both linoleic and linolenic acids of the B. calyciflorus samples.


Energy & Fuels | 2009

Insight into the Mechanisms of Middle Distillate Fuel Oxidative Degradation. Part 2: On the Relationship between Jet Fuel Thermal Oxidative Deposit, Soluble Macromolecular Oxidatively Reactive Species, and Smoke Point

Parvana Aksoy; Ömer Gül; Ruveyda Cetiner; Dania A. Fonseca; Maria Sobkowiak; Sharon Falcone-Miller; Bruce G. Miller; Bruce Beaver


Energy & Fuels | 2009

Insight into the Mechanisms of Middle Distillate Fuel Oxidative Degradation. Part 3: Hydrocarbon Stabilizers to Improve Jet Fuel Thermal Oxidative Stability

Ömer Gül; Ruveyda Cetiner; Josefa M. Griffith; Bei Wang; Maria Sobkowiak; Dania A. Fonseca; Parvana Aksoy; Bruce G. Miller; Bruce Beaver


Energy & Fuels | 2012

Co-processing of Turkish High-Sulfur Coals and Their Blends with a Petroleum Asphalt. Part 1: In the Absence of a Catalyst

Arif Hasanoğlu; Ömer Gül; Parvana Aksoy; Oktay Erbatur


Energy & Fuels | 2009

Characterization of liquids derived from laboratory coking of decant oil and co-coking of Pittsburgh seam bituminous coal with decant oil

Ömer Gül; Caroline E. Burgess Clifford; Leslie R. Rudnick; Harold H. Schobert


Fuel Processing Technology | 2008

The effect of additives on hydrodesulfurization of dibenzothiophene over bulk molybdenum sulfide: Increased catalytic activity in the presence of phenol

Ömer Gül; Osman Malik Atanur; Levent Artok; Oktay Erbatur


Energy & Fuels | 2008

Effect of the Reaction Temperature and Fuel Treatment on the Deposit Formation of Jet Fuels

Ömer Gül; Leslie R. Rudnick; Harold H. Schobert


Archive | 2011

Vaporization and Carbonization Tendency of Vegetable Oils as a Function of Chemical Composition: Morphology of Carbon Deposits on Steel Surfaces at Elevated Temperature

Leslie R. Rudnick; Mohamed Abdellatif; Ömer Gül; Girma Biresaw


Energy & Fuels | 2007

Catalytic direct liquefaction of high-sulfur coals and their blends with asphaltite in the absence of a solvent

Ömer Gül; Parvana Gafarova; Arif Hesenov; Harold H. Schobert; Oktay Erbatur


Energy & Fuels | 2013

Co-coking of Hydrotreated Decant Oil/Coal Blends: Effect of Hydrotreatment Severity on the Yield Distribution and Quality of Distillate Fuels

Ömer Gül; Leslie R. Rudnick; Harold H. Schobert

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Harold H. Schobert

Pennsylvania State University

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Leslie R. Rudnick

Pennsylvania State University

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Bruce G. Miller

Pennsylvania State University

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Maria Sobkowiak

Pennsylvania State University

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Levent Artok

İzmir Institute of Technology

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