[Book] 500 questions pour évaluer votre niveauSelma Guedira
This document discusses hidden pages and does not provide any essential information in the text. It consists of repeated phrases of "Hidden page" with no other context or substance.
This document contains examples and exercises related to cost accounting. It includes schedules showing standard and actual production outputs, labor costs, and unit costs for various time periods. It also includes examples calculating learning curves to estimate total costs for increasing batch or cumulative quantities based on a learning curve coefficient of 0.8.
The document discusses several aspects of architecture, craftsmanship, and cultural interests in Saudi Arabia. It describes the Holy Mosque in Mecca, which has undergone expansions to accommodate millions of pilgrims annually. It also outlines the old city of Jeddah, built during Ottoman rule, and the region of Asir's numerous historical villages featuring fortresses and semi-pyramid shaped homes. Additional sections cover boat building, rose water production, Arabic horse and camel raising, and notable Saudi authors.
This document contains sample ledger entries and calculations for different cost accounting methods including average costing, FIFO, and LIFO. It provides inventory balances, receipts, issues, unit costs, and calculations for multiple store ledger cards and costing exercises. The examples demonstrate how to apply different inventory costing methods to value ending inventory and calculate per unit product costs.
Nanogels are nanosized hydrogels that can be synthesized through various polymerization techniques. They have potential applications in drug delivery, tissue engineering, and bionanotechnology due to their 3D structure, mechanical properties, and biocompatibility. Hybrid nanogels are smart materials that can swell or collapse in response to physical or chemical stimuli like pH, temperature, or electric fields. This makes them useful for applications like cancer treatment by releasing drugs only in acidic tumor environments, water purification by absorbing contaminants, and glucose biosensing through a volume change signal.
Gold nanorods have potential for photothermal cancer therapy. When exposed to laser light near their surface plasmon resonance wavelengths, gold nanorods efficiently absorb light and generate heat through electron oscillations. Smaller nanorods absorb shorter wavelengths. Nanorods have transverse and longitudinal surface plasmon resonances depending on their aspect ratio. Their strong light absorption and efficient conversion to heat makes them suitable for using mild hyperthermia to selectively destroy tumors through plasmonic photothermal therapy.
This document contains examples and problems related to manufacturing costs and cost of goods sold calculations. It includes journal entries, income statements, and calculations for direct material costs, direct labor costs, factory overhead costs, work in process, finished goods, and cost of goods sold. Manufacturing costs are calculated and allocated to inventory and cost of goods sold using absorption costing. Variances between applied and actual overhead are also accounted for.
This document summarizes a paper on nanogels: synthesis, behavior, and applications. It discusses how nanogels are nanosized hydrogels composed of cross-linked polymeric chains that can absorb water. There are two main methods for synthesizing nanogels - solution polymerization and emulsion polymerization. Nanogels have various applications including cancer drug delivery, water purification, antipyretics, and glucose biosensing due to their ability to respond to stimuli like pH, temperature, and glucose levels. Hybrid nanogels that incorporate stimuli-responsive polymers are particularly promising for biomedical uses.
[Book] 500 questions pour évaluer votre niveauSelma Guedira
This document discusses hidden pages and does not provide any essential information in the text. It consists of repeated phrases of "Hidden page" with no other context or substance.
This document contains examples and exercises related to cost accounting. It includes schedules showing standard and actual production outputs, labor costs, and unit costs for various time periods. It also includes examples calculating learning curves to estimate total costs for increasing batch or cumulative quantities based on a learning curve coefficient of 0.8.
The document discusses several aspects of architecture, craftsmanship, and cultural interests in Saudi Arabia. It describes the Holy Mosque in Mecca, which has undergone expansions to accommodate millions of pilgrims annually. It also outlines the old city of Jeddah, built during Ottoman rule, and the region of Asir's numerous historical villages featuring fortresses and semi-pyramid shaped homes. Additional sections cover boat building, rose water production, Arabic horse and camel raising, and notable Saudi authors.
This document contains sample ledger entries and calculations for different cost accounting methods including average costing, FIFO, and LIFO. It provides inventory balances, receipts, issues, unit costs, and calculations for multiple store ledger cards and costing exercises. The examples demonstrate how to apply different inventory costing methods to value ending inventory and calculate per unit product costs.
Nanogels are nanosized hydrogels that can be synthesized through various polymerization techniques. They have potential applications in drug delivery, tissue engineering, and bionanotechnology due to their 3D structure, mechanical properties, and biocompatibility. Hybrid nanogels are smart materials that can swell or collapse in response to physical or chemical stimuli like pH, temperature, or electric fields. This makes them useful for applications like cancer treatment by releasing drugs only in acidic tumor environments, water purification by absorbing contaminants, and glucose biosensing through a volume change signal.
Gold nanorods have potential for photothermal cancer therapy. When exposed to laser light near their surface plasmon resonance wavelengths, gold nanorods efficiently absorb light and generate heat through electron oscillations. Smaller nanorods absorb shorter wavelengths. Nanorods have transverse and longitudinal surface plasmon resonances depending on their aspect ratio. Their strong light absorption and efficient conversion to heat makes them suitable for using mild hyperthermia to selectively destroy tumors through plasmonic photothermal therapy.
This document contains examples and problems related to manufacturing costs and cost of goods sold calculations. It includes journal entries, income statements, and calculations for direct material costs, direct labor costs, factory overhead costs, work in process, finished goods, and cost of goods sold. Manufacturing costs are calculated and allocated to inventory and cost of goods sold using absorption costing. Variances between applied and actual overhead are also accounted for.
This document summarizes a paper on nanogels: synthesis, behavior, and applications. It discusses how nanogels are nanosized hydrogels composed of cross-linked polymeric chains that can absorb water. There are two main methods for synthesizing nanogels - solution polymerization and emulsion polymerization. Nanogels have various applications including cancer drug delivery, water purification, antipyretics, and glucose biosensing due to their ability to respond to stimuli like pH, temperature, and glucose levels. Hybrid nanogels that incorporate stimuli-responsive polymers are particularly promising for biomedical uses.
1. The document contains 11 examples of cost of production reports from various departments. Each example provides information on quantities, costs added, and how costs are accounted for units completed, work in process, and any abnormal losses or spoilage.
2. Key details in the reports include quantity schedules showing units received, completed, in process, and lost; costs charged by the department broken down by material, labor, overhead; and equivalent production calculations.
3. The examples demonstrate how to prepare cost of production reports and account for costs in different scenarios involving normal and abnormal losses, spoilage, and addition of materials.
This document summarizes exercises from Chapter 12 of Cost Accounting, 9th Edition. It includes 11 exercises covering topics like work-in-process, overhead application rates, fixed and variable overhead rates, normal and actual capacity, budgeted and actual overhead, and overhead variances including spending and idle capacity variances. Calculations are shown for overhead application, budgeting, and analyzing variances at different production capacity levels.
This document contains exercises and problems related to cost accounting concepts like economic order quantity, reorder point, safety stock, and ABC analysis. Exercise 8.1 provides production scheduling details. Exercise 8.2 calculates order quantities based on forecast demand. Other exercises calculate EOQ, carrying costs, order costs under different scenarios. Problems calculate optimal order size, number of production runs, economic order quantity, and reorder point considering usage patterns and costs.
This document provides a brief contents list for 12 chapters across a cost accounting textbook. It outlines the chapter numbers, titles, and page numbers for sections on cost concepts and the cost accounting information system, job order costing, process costing and the cost of production report, controlling and costing materials, quantitative models for materials planning and control, controlling and accounting for labor costs, and factory overhead variance analysis.
Water is essential for life but limited on Earth. It is important to recycle and purify water to ensure a sustainable supply for human use. Various physical, chemical, and biological processes can be used to purify water through processes like filtration, sedimentation, chlorination, and the use of lagoons and reactors to break down organic pollutants using microorganisms. Proper treatment is needed to remove contaminants and pathogens to provide safe drinking water.
The document provides information and examples related to cost accounting, including:
1) Exercises calculating cost of goods manufactured, cost of goods sold, prime cost, conversion cost, and total variable cost.
2) Journal entries for the manufacturing cost accounting cycle.
3) Cost of goods manufactured and cost of goods sold statements for multiple companies.
1. The document contains 11 examples of cost of production reports from various departments. Each example provides information on quantities, costs added, and how costs are accounted for units completed, work in process, and any abnormal losses or spoilage.
2. Key details in the reports include quantity schedules showing units received, completed, in process, and lost; costs charged by the department broken down by material, labor, overhead; and equivalent production calculations.
3. The examples demonstrate how to prepare cost of production reports and account for costs in different scenarios involving normal and abnormal losses, spoilage, and addition of materials.
This document summarizes exercises from Chapter 12 of Cost Accounting, 9th Edition. It includes 11 exercises covering topics like work-in-process, overhead application rates, fixed and variable overhead rates, normal and actual capacity, budgeted and actual overhead, and overhead variances including spending and idle capacity variances. Calculations are shown for overhead application, budgeting, and analyzing variances at different production capacity levels.
This document contains exercises and problems related to cost accounting concepts like economic order quantity, reorder point, safety stock, and ABC analysis. Exercise 8.1 provides production scheduling details. Exercise 8.2 calculates order quantities based on forecast demand. Other exercises calculate EOQ, carrying costs, order costs under different scenarios. Problems calculate optimal order size, number of production runs, economic order quantity, and reorder point considering usage patterns and costs.
This document provides a brief contents list for 12 chapters across a cost accounting textbook. It outlines the chapter numbers, titles, and page numbers for sections on cost concepts and the cost accounting information system, job order costing, process costing and the cost of production report, controlling and costing materials, quantitative models for materials planning and control, controlling and accounting for labor costs, and factory overhead variance analysis.
Water is essential for life but limited on Earth. It is important to recycle and purify water to ensure a sustainable supply for human use. Various physical, chemical, and biological processes can be used to purify water through processes like filtration, sedimentation, chlorination, and the use of lagoons and reactors to break down organic pollutants using microorganisms. Proper treatment is needed to remove contaminants and pathogens to provide safe drinking water.
The document provides information and examples related to cost accounting, including:
1) Exercises calculating cost of goods manufactured, cost of goods sold, prime cost, conversion cost, and total variable cost.
2) Journal entries for the manufacturing cost accounting cycle.
3) Cost of goods manufactured and cost of goods sold statements for multiple companies.