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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

Development of Al-Mg-Si aluminium alloys for automobile applications

Xie, Yun January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
42

Metal powder production by pyrolysis of metal oxalates and carbonyl clusters.

Smith, Joanne Hayley. January 2001 (has links)
Chapter One serves as an introduction to, and background information, on the thermal decomposition of metal oxalates and homonucleus carbonyl clusters. Emphasis is placed on the compounds under investigation, namely the oxalates of iron(II), cobalt(lI) and nickel(ll) oxalate dihydrate and their corresponding binary and ternary compounds, as well as triiron dodecacarbonyl and tetracobalt dodecacarbonyl. Topics specifically addressed are their structures as well as the thermodynamics of the dehydration and decomposition of compounds of this type. Given this background, the overall aims of the work are presented. These include finding the reaction conditions to form metal powders from metal oxalates, and a preliminary study of carbonyl clusters to see if they too may be used in the production of metal powders. Chapter Two gives the results of the dehydration and decomposition of the metal oxalates, characterised by way of infrared, scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction and thermogravimetric analysis. The compounds under investigation are those of the single oxalates of iron, cobalt and nickel; the binary systems of Fe-Co, Fe-Ni and Co-Ni, in the molar ratios of 3:1, 1:1 and 1:3 for each system; and the ternary oxalate system in the molar ratios of Fe1 :Co1 :Ni1, Fe8:Co1 :Ni1, Fe1 :Co8:Ni1 and Fe1 :Co1 :Ni8. It was found that under certain reaction conditions all these compounds, excluding the ferrous oxalate dihydrate, decompose to the metal. It was found through experiments to modify the morphology of the crystals under investigation that the decomposition product is controlled by the crystal lattice system the starting material is synthesised in. When in the cobalt/nickel oxalate a-crystal system, decomposition is to the metal, or in the case of the binary and ternary systems, to the alloy. If the oxalate is synthesised in the crystal system of the iron oxalate, the resultant decomposition product is the respective oxide. Experiments were carried out on the iron/cobalt binary system to prove this hypothesis. Depending on the conditions of synthesis, the iron/cobalt binary system can form in either the crystal system analogous to iron (1), or analogous to cobalt (2). The products of pyrolysis for each case differs, with (1) decomposing to the oxide and (2) decomposing to the alloy. iii Chapter Three is a brief, preliminary study describing the thermal decomposition of triiron dodecacarbonyl and tetracobalt dodecacarbonyl. Characterisation of the pyrolysis products is given by infrared, scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction and thermogravimetric analysis. A tentative theory for their decomposition route under an atmosphere of nitrogen is given. It was found that neither compound decomposed fully to the central metal, but that a mixture of oxide and metal were left. The conclusion reached from this study was that neither carbonyl under investigation was particularly successful. Although in both instances metal was produced, both contained large amounts of the respective oxide. This makes them unsuitable for an industrial application to form metal powders. Chapter Four describes in detail the all the experimental, materials, methods, techniques and equipment used in this study. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2001.
43

Experimental Testing of a Computer Aided Heat Treatment Planning System

Vaidya, Rohit Subhash 27 August 2003 (has links)
"Heat treatment is an important manufacturing process, which controls the mechanical property of metal parts, therefore contributes to the product quality. A Computerized Heat Treatment (CHT) system has been developed to model and simulate the heat transfer in furnace. When the part load and thermal schedule information is given with part and furnace specifications, the temperature profiles of parts in furnace can be calculated based on heat transfer principle. Therefore the part load and thermal schedule can be optimized to remove unnecessary delay time while the quality of heat treatment is ensured. In the thesis, the functions of CHT are enhanced with the capability of modeling and simulating the heat treatment processes with random part load and continuous furnaces. Methods to model random load and continuous furnace have been developed. Case studies with industry real data have been conducted to validate the system and to show effectiveness of the system. The system development is also introduced in the thesis."
44

The Heat Treatment of Nickel Titanium - An investigation Using Taguchi's Method of Optimisation

Gibson, Myles January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
45

Inverse design and control of thermal systems

Ertürk, Hakan 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
46

Factors affecting the precision and accuracy of surface temperature measurement using light-pipe radiation thermometers (LPRTs)

Puttitwong, Ekachai 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available
47

EVALUATION OF RNA QUALITY FROM FORMALIN FIXED AND PARAFFIN EMBEDDED SAMPLES:APPLICATIONS AND LIMITATIONS

Zhang, XIAO 14 April 2009 (has links)
RNA molecules isolated from FFPE samples are highly fragmented and modified, and generally deemed unsuitable for downstream gene expression profiling. With the development of molecular biology, there has been growing interest in profiling archival FFPE samples. Successful profiling of transcripts from FFPE samples would greatly expand tissue sources for large scale gene expression studies; also it would pave the way for future applications on the type of tissue readily available in the clinical setting. So far, there is a lack of systemic studies evaluating the quality of RNA isolated from routinely processed FFPE samples, and it has remained difficult to assess how well FFPE-derived RNA mirrors the status of RNA isolated before fixation. In this project, the similarity of miRNA and mRNA profiles between matched frozen and FFPE lymphoid hyperplasia tissues (N=7 for miRNA comparison, N=4 for mRNA comparison) were evaluated. We found consistently good correlation (mean of Pearson coefficient=0.939, mean of Spearman coefficient=0.905, mean of Kendall tau=0.744) between matched frozen and FFPE-derived miRNA profiles, suggesting FFPE samples may retain miRNA expression information quite well. This has major positive implications for research using FFPE samples, as miRNA profiling becomes more prominent in bioprofiling studies. On the contrary, mRNA isolated from FFPE samples showed less correlation (Spearman coefficient less than 0.75) with its frozen counterpart on the Agilent microarray platform. With a post extraction heat treatment aimed at reversing base modifications and cross linking structures, obvious global mRNA quality improvement was observed in cases where samples appeared to be heavily cross linked, but was less effective and even detrimental in cases where cross linking was less prominent. This research suggests that the extent of cross linking may be critical in terms of determining whether a particular FFPE tissue will become a useful source of mRNA for global profiling studies / Thesis (Master, Pathology & Molecular Medicine) -- Queen's University, 2008-09-26 10:49:50.044
48

Vacuum removal of sulphur and tin from liquid steel

Persson, Hans Arne. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
49

Effect of aluminum on recrystallization and precipitation of Nb HSLA steels

Wang, Ganlin. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
50

The effect of intermediate thermomechanical treatments on the fatigue properties of two 7XXX aluminum alloys

Sanders, Robert Edward 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.

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