% File src/library/datasets/man/stackloss.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2007 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \newcommand{\sspace}{\ifelse{latex}{\out{~}}{ }} \name{stackloss} \docType{data} \alias{stackloss} \alias{stack.loss} \alias{stack.x} \title{Brownlee's Stack Loss Plant Data} \description{ Operational data of a plant for the oxidation of ammonia to nitric acid. } \usage{ stackloss stack.x stack.loss } \format{ \code{stackloss} is a data frame with 21 observations on 4 variables. \tabular{rll}{ [,1] \tab \code{Air Flow} \tab Flow of cooling air\cr [,2] \tab \code{Water Temp} \tab Cooling Water Inlet Temperature\cr [,3] \tab \code{Acid Conc.} \tab Concentration of acid [per 1000, minus 500]\cr [,4] \tab \code{stack.loss} \tab Stack loss\cr } For compatibility with S-PLUS, the data sets \code{stack.x}, a matrix with the first three (independent) variables of the data frame, and \code{stack.loss}, the numeric vector giving the fourth (dependent) variable, are provided as well. } \source{ Brownlee, K. A. (1960, 2nd ed.\sspace{}1965) \emph{Statistical Theory and Methodology in Science and Engineering}. New York: Wiley. pp.\sspace{}491--500. } \details{ \dQuote{Obtained from 21 days of operation of a plant for the oxidation of ammonia (NH\eqn{_3}{3}) to nitric acid (HNO\eqn{_3}{3}). The nitric oxides produced are absorbed in a countercurrent absorption tower}. (Brownlee, cited by Dodge, slightly reformatted by MM.) \code{Air Flow} represents the rate of operation of the plant. \code{Water Temp} is the temperature of cooling water circulated through coils in the absorption tower. \code{Acid Conc.} is the concentration of the acid circulating, minus 50, times 10: that is, 89 corresponds to 58.9 per cent acid. \code{stack.loss} (the dependent variable) is 10 times the percentage of the ingoing ammonia to the plant that escapes from the absorption column unabsorbed; that is, an (inverse) measure of the over-all efficiency of the plant. } \references{ Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) \emph{The New S Language}. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole. Dodge, Y. (1996) The guinea pig of multiple regression. In: \emph{Robust Statistics, Data Analysis, and Computer Intensive Methods; In Honor of Peter Huber's 60th Birthday}, 1996, \emph{Lecture Notes in Statistics} \bold{109}, Springer-Verlag, New York. } \examples{ require(stats) summary(lm.stack <- lm(stack.loss ~ stack.x)) } \keyword{datasets}