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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.
181

Recrystallisation in two-phase aluminium alloys

Al-Khayat, Firyal A. R. H. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
182

Lubrication efficiency and die design in wire drawing

Huo, Bingshu January 1997 (has links)
With the competitive challenge facing business today, the need to keep cost down and quality up is a matter of survival. One way in which wire manufacturers can meet this challenge is to possess a thorough understanding of deformation, friction and lubrication during the wire drawing process, and therefore to make good decisions regarding the selection and application of lubricants as well as the die design. Friction, lubrication and die design during wire drawing thus become the subject of this study. Although theoretical and experimental investigations have been being carried out ever since the establishment of wire drawing technology, many problems remain unsolved. It is therefore necessary to conduct further research on traditional and fundamental subjects such as the mechanics of deformation, friction, lubrication and die design in wire drawing. Drawing experiments were carried out on an existing bull-block under different cross-sectional area reductions, different speeds and different lubricants. The instrumentation to measure drawing load and drawing speed was set up and connected to the wire drawing machine, together with a data acquisition system. A die box connected to the existing die holder for using dry soap lubricant was designed and tested. The experimental results in terms of drawing stress vs percentage area reduction curves under different drawing conditions were analysed and compared. The effects on drawing stress of friction, lubrication, drawing speed and pressure die nozzle are discussed. In order to determine the flow stress of the material during deformation, tensile tests were performed on an Instron universal test machine, using the wires drawn under different area reductions. A polynomial function is used to correlate the flow stress of the material with the plastic strain, on which a general computer program has been written to find out the coefficients of the stress-strain function. The residual lubricant film on the steel wire after drawing was examined both radially and longitudinally using an SEM and optical microscope. The lubricant film on the drawn wire was clearly observed. Therefore, the micro-analysis by SEM provides a way of friction and lubrication assessment in wire drawing.
183

The mechanics of drawing polygonal tube from round on a cylindrical plug

Muruiki, Maranga January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
184

Induction heating of sintered low alloy steel powder compacts : an experimental and theoretical study of through-heating shaped parts for forging

Colvin, R. A. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
185

A failure criterion for fillet welds

Higgs, J. D. January 1981 (has links)
The work constitutes a study of the strength of mild steel fillet welds subject to static loading, and the behaviour of flange welded beam-column conne ct ions under comb ined bending an d shear. Tests are conducted on short \...;elds in the as-\...;elded and stress relieved conditions, and also on full-size beam-column connections. It is shown that welds under compression have a lower strength than when under tension. Failure of the fillet weld is initiated at the ,veld root, the important factor controlling the initiation being weld ductility. The greater the residual stress, the lower the weld ducti li ty and ul tilllate strength. The rmal st ress re lievi n g increases st rength by as much as 30%. Weld failure plane is rarely at the throat and varies from 0° to 45° depending upon loading condition. Failure plane average stresses are related by a circular function which is expressed in terms of externally applied forces at limit state. The tension weld of a flange-welded beaJll-column cOIlnection always fails before the compression \veld. The shear load sharing betlveen the welds is a complex function of elastic compression of the web, elastic/plastic deformation of the flanges, load/defonnation characteristics, and the type of load application. Bearing forces between the compression flange and column face produce low level bearing stresses and fri ctional forces which make a negligible contribution to shear- load resistance. Three modes of connection failure are possible; 'end mode', 'bending mode' and 'shear mode', with a sudden change taking place between the two latter.
186

The mechanics of ultrasonic tube bending

Ibrahim, Ibrahim N. January 1983 (has links)
The technology of precision bending of tubes has recently increased in importance and is widely demanded for many industrial applications. However, whilst attention has been concentrated on automation and increasing the production rate of the bending machines, it seems that with one exception very little work has been done in order to understand and therefore fundamentally improve the bending process. A new development for the process of draw-bending of tubes, in which the supporting mandrel is axially vibrated at an ultrasonic frequency, has been perfected. A research programme was undertaken to study the mechanics of tube• bending under both vibratory and non-vibratory conditions. For this purpose, a conventional tube-bending machine was modified and equipped with an oscillatory system. Thin-walled mild steel tubes of different diameter to thickness ratios were bent to mean bend radii having various values from 1.5 to 2.0 times the tube diameter. It was found that the application of ultrasonic vibration reduces the process forces and that the force reduction increases with increasing the vibration amplitude. A reduction in the bending torque of up to 30 per cent was recorded and a reduction in the maximum tube-wall thinning of about 15 per cent was observed. The friction vector reversal mechanism as well as a reduction in friction account for the changes of the forces and the strains. Monitoring the mandrel friction during bending showed, in some cases, that the axial vibration reverses the mandrel .mean force from tension to compression and, thus, the mandrel is assisting the tube motion instead of resisting it. A theory has been proposed to describe the mechanics of deformation during draw-bending of tubes, which embodies the conditions of both "with" and "without" mandrel axial vibration. A theoretical analysis, based on the equilibrium of forces approach, has been developed in which the basic process parameters were taken into consideration. The stresses, the strains and the bending torque were calculated utilising this new solution, and a specially written computer programme was used to perform the computations. It was shown that the theory is in good agreement with the measured values of the strains under vibratory and non-vibratory conditions. Also, the predicted bending 'torque showed a similar trend to that recorded experimentally.
187

Some strategies for improving the present state of quality control methods in Venezuelan metalworking industries

Morillo, Gerardo Z. January 1981 (has links)
The title of this thesis seeks to indicate its objective. In fact, it is basically intended to explore the problems that arise from designing, developing and introducing Quality Control (QC) systems in the Venezuelan metalworking industry and to examine the method by which managers deal with such problems. Particular attention is given to the analysis of the quality problems in the smaller industries. Due mainly to the interdisciplinary and complex nature of the research project undertaken - in which a comprehensive study was made of the interrelations and constraints of the technical, human and economic factors in the design of a national strategy on quality - it was found appropriate to adopt the "systems approach" in this study. Firstly, it was applied to define QC as an integral part of Production Management and secondly, to formulate some strategies on quality in the Venezuelan metalworking sector. Apart from the lack of quality consciousness, adequate educational and training programmes, skilled manpower, shortage of energy and other natural and financial resources, among others, the choice of technology is the most critical problem facing any developing country. After analysing the appropriateness of the concept of Intermediate Technology (which in essence is that the increasing, complex, highly sophisticated, capital-intensive, large-scale and labour eliminating technologies of the highly industrialized countries are generally inappropriate for many developing countries) as a means to pursue industrialization in developing nations, it is argued that a new approach is needed in order to meet the new demands and to establish an effective and economic control of quality of manufactured products, which are obtained by using such technologies. The practical implications of the term 'Intermediate Quality Control' are discussed, and later it is shown that in most of the cases this quality technology stands between inspection-orientated QC and total QC. On the basis of such analytical study, and also taking into consideration the results of a field work study carried out by the author in Venezuela, some recommendations are made on the appropriate aims and content of management QCimprovements and development strategies for raising the level of quality in Venezuelais manufacture and production.
188

Computer-aided analysis of engineering tolerances

Ingham, Peter C. January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
189

Powder painting of aluminium

Sliwinski, Peter R. January 1985 (has links)
The mechanisms involved in the production of chromate-phosphate conversion coatings on aluminium have been investigated. A sequence of coating nucleation and growth has been outlined and the principle roles of the constituent ingredients of the chromate-phosphate solution have been shown. The effect of dissolved aluminium has been studied and its role in producing sound conversion coatings has been shown. Metallic contamination has been found to have a dramatic influence on chromate-phosphate coatings when particular levels have been exceeded. Coating formation was seen to be affected in proportion to the level of contaminaton; no evidence of sudden failure was noted. The influence of substrate and the effect of an acidic cleaner prior to conversion coating have been studied and explained. It was found that the cleaner ages rapidly and that this must .be allowed for when attempting to reproduce industrial conditions in the laboratory. A study was carried out on the flowing characteristics of polyester powders of various size distributions as they melt using the hot-stage microscopy techniques developed at Aston. It was found that the condition of the substrate (ie extent of pretreatment), had a significant effect on particle flow. This was explained by considering the topography of the substrate surface. A number of 'low-bake' polyester powders were developed and tested for mechanical, physical and chemical resistance. The best formulation had overall properties which were as good as the standard polyester in many respects. However chemical resistance was found to be slightly lower. The charging characteristics of powder paints during application by means of electrostatic spraying was studied by measuring the charge per unit mass and relating this to the surface area. A high degree of correlation was found between charge carried and surface area, and the charge retained was related to the powder's formulation.
190

Process modelling to establish control algorithms for automated GMAW

Scotti, A. January 1991 (has links)
The feasibility of fully automatic GMAW processes may rely on the development of sophisticated equipment to emulate the manual welding torch oscillation pattern or on the development of high level methods of control to prevent the appearance of defects, especially the lack of sidewall fusion. An intermediate solution is to optimise the weaving parameters of a conventional pattern oscillator in such a way as to minimise the level of rejection. A prototype of a computerised system to work with Pulsed-GMAW equipment, in the vertical-up position, was proposed to produce a minimal level of rejection for welds in plates up to 25 mm thick. The system basically consists of optimised mode control algorithms, based on theoretical and experimental models of weld pool behaviour. Three tasks are performed by the system; the selection of parameters for an optimum working point, an off-line simulation of the operation and real-time error monitoring of the process. Statistical experimental modelling was applied in order to build most of the optimised models, because of the large number of variables to be treated and their complex inter-correlation. The welding variables were correlated with single responses. Partial and Correlation Analysis techniques were used to discover the relationship between the variables and the responses. Regression Analysis was then applied as a means of obtaining the 'weight' of the most significant variables. Finally, since some variables were found to be collinear, a corrective technique for biased variables was employed. Acceptance criteria for bead shapes were proposed and assessed. The effect of the oscillation parameters and other welding variables on the bead formation was analyzed and an operational 'envelope' for the parameters determined. A theoretical approach to predict the occurrence of poorly shaped beads, due to the lack of metal bridge between the joint walls, was successfully developed and applied in parallel with the statistical experimental methods. Equations for optimising the bead shape and for determining the operational envelope contours were subsequently generated and evaluated. An extension of the system to an actual adaptive control scheme was discussed and sensors and signals to be used were evaluated. Finally, a process instability phenomenon in long test plates was identified and investigated. This instability may prevent the use of GMA W in some conditions in the vertical-up position.

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