Main Page
SaltWiki will be released in September 2011. Until then, please use the German SalzWiki. If you have any question or want to register as an author[1], please contact us. |
SaltWiki, an Internet-based, editorially-managed information structure along the lines of the Internet encyclopaedia Wikipedia, provides information on the following subjects:
- Salts
- Damage caused by salts
- Dealing with salt damage
The Wiki consists of two areas:
- The actual Wiki on the subject of "damage caused by salts", which is available to all; debates on the subject of "salts and salt damage" take place through its discussion pages. The information forum helps you to understand reports, for example, and plan any measures to be taken.
- A repository as data storage for the purposes of research and instruction. Here authors can find, for example, analysis data, physical and chemical constants, and also graphics, photos, short videos and published and unpublished literature. So far, only about 20% of existing data material is available to other scientists. This will be significantly improved through the repository.
Since February 2009, support from the German Research Foundation has made it possible for this to be carried out at the Hornemann Institut[2] of the HAWK[3] (University of Applied Sciences and Arts) in Hildesheim, Germany. Interested parties from research and practice are invited to take part in SaltWiki . If you have comments to make on particular pages, please log in and write your comments directly on the discussion page that is located on each SaltWiki page. If you have any general questions about SaltWiki or comments, please get in touch with us.
SaltWiki and the German SalzWiki are independently developed. The aim is to keep the content of both on the same level. Because of that you may finde in the other Wiki sometimes more likely what you are looking for.
Weblinks[edit]
- ↑ http://193.175.110.9/hornemann/english/whats_new.php(accessed January 1, 2011)
- ↑ http://www.hawk-hhg.de/preservation/default.php (accessed January 1, 2011)