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Utah
Conference on
Undergraduate Research (UCUR)
SAMPLE
ABSTRACTS
Sample Science abstract:
THERMAL
DECOMPOSITION KINETICS OF AN ENERGETIC NICKEL COMPOUND
Bradley Q. Warlick, (Dr. Charles Wight), Department of Chemistry,
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112
The decomposition
kinetics of Nickel (II)-hydrazine-2,3-pyrazinedicarboxylate
"3H2O were characterized through the use of thermogravimetric
analysis (TGA), as well as differential scanning calorimetry
(DSC). These techniques were used to determine the compound's
thermal stability and total energy release as a function of
both time and temperature. By conducting several series of
experiments at different heating rates, we were able to extract
robust values of the decomposition kinetic parameters with
the use of an advanced isoconversional method. The analysis
reveals that the initial steps in the compound's decomposition
are due to a reversible dehydration. Based on an analysis
of TGA values, the activation energy for the main exothermic
step in the decomposition was found to be ~135 kJ/mol. DSC
values confirmed this finding to within 7 percent.
Sample Humanities abstract:
A NEW
VIEW OF WHY PROMISES OBLIGATE
Paul P. Arnold (Dr. Leslie Francis), Department of Philosophy,
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112
My research
with Dr. Francis has focused on two related concepts: promises
and expectations. Promises are a core concept in any complete
moral theory. Almost all the great moral philosophers have
offered an account of how promises obligate, as have most
modern philosophers. Some have argued that promises obligate
because of social convention. Others have argued that promises
obligate for reasons of utility. Yet others have argued from
Kantian perspectives. The varied answers to this problem are
logical extensions of the moral framework the various authors
work within.
My research offers a new view of promises. It does this by
redefining the source of the obligations that promises generate.
Unlike the traditional views, which identify the source of
obligations with either the promisor or the larger social
relationship, my view begins with the expectations of the
promisee. My research defends this perspective as a better
one than that offered by the traditional accounts. It also
shows how this new view solves several of the problems the
traditional accounts encounter.
This project is part of a larger philosophical inquiry into
why expectations matter. Such an inquiry is of great theoretical
and practical interest for both moral philosophers and legal
contract theorists
Other excellent examples of abstracts can be found in our
University of Utah Undergraduate Research Abstracts Journal
located at:
http://www.lib.utah.edu/epubs/undergrad/
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