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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.
571

Accelerated Aging Of Elastomers In Aqueous Media

Inaler, Ekrem 01 January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
EPDM (Ethylene-Propylene-Diene Monomer)/PP (Polypropylene) based TPV (Thermoplastic Vulcanizate) was aged in a closed system at stabilized temperature and pressure at 80, 100 and 120oC in distilled water, detergent solution and shiner solution. The variation in properties of TPV upon aging were followed by using DSC (Differential Scanning Calorimetry), TGA (Thermogravimetric Analysis), tensile testing, Shore A rubber hardness testing. DSC analysis indicated that percent crystallinity of PP component in TPV increased at 100oC whereas crystal structure was deformed at 120oC. In addition to this, hardness test showed that the hardness of TPV remained almost constant in distilled water aging except 120oC water aging but TPV became softer in detergent and shiner solution upon all aging temperatures used in this study. Tensile testing confirmed the hardness analysis that the loss in mechanical properties of TPV was observed except 100oC water aging. TGA analysis showed that percent crystallinity increase causes enhancement in degradation temperature of EPDM/PP blend in air. It is detected that TPV is quite resistant to 80oC aging, but TPV loses its resistance to preserve its characteristics at 120oC aging. It is also determined that aging media is as important as temperature to evaluate the performance of TPV. Moreover, it is decided that the rate of aging directly proportional to detrimental rate is arranged in an order from the slowest to the fastest as distilled water, detergent and shiner solution media.
572

Experimental Analysis of Water Based Drilling Fluid Aging Processes at High Temperature and High Pressure Conditions

Zigmond, Brandon 2012 August 1900 (has links)
In efforts to render the safest, fastest, and most cost efficient drilling program for a high temperature and high pressure (HT/HP) well the maximization of drilling operational efficiencies is key. Designing an adequate, HT/HP well specific, drilling fluid is of most importance and a technological challenge that can greatly affect the outcome of the overall operational efficiency. It is necessary to have a sound fundamental understanding of the behavior that water-based muds (WBM) exhibit when exposed to HT/HP conditions. Therefore, in order to adequately design and treat a WBM for a HT/HP well specific drilling program, it is essential that the mud be evaluated at HT/HP conditions. Currently, industry standard techniques used to evaluate WBM characteristics involve aging the fluid sample to a predetermined temperature, based on the anticipated bottom hole temperature (BHT), either statically or dynamically, for a predetermined length, then cooling and mixing the fluid and measuring its rheological properties at a significantly lower temperature. This, along with the fact that the fluid is not subjected to the anticipated bottom hole pressure (BHP) during or after the aging process, brings to question if the properties recorded are those that are truly experienced down-hole. Furthermore, these testing methods do not allow the user to effectively monitor the changes during the aging process. The research in this thesis is focused on evaluating a high performance WBM and the current test procedures used to evaluate their validity. Experimental static and dynamic aging tests were developed for comparative analysis as well to offer a more accurate and precise method to evaluate the effects experienced by WBM when subjected to HT/HP conditions. The experimental tests developed enable the user to monitor and evaluate, in real-time, the rheological changes that occur during the aging of a WBM while being subjected to true BHT and BHP. Detailed standard and experimental aging tests were conducted and suggest that the standard industry tests offer false rheological results with respect to true BHT and BHP. Furthermore, the experimental aging tests show that high pressure has a significant effect on the rheological properties of the WBM at elevated temperatures.
573

Creative Aging: Building Capacity for Arts and Aging Policy Making

Rhee, Nakyung January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
574

Exploring Staff Perspectives About Interpersonal Relationships Among Persons in Assisted Living Facilities in Franklin County, Ohio: A Pilot Study

Carter, James R. 19 May 2015 (has links)
No description available.
575

New toolsets to understand environmental sensation and variability in the aging process

Zhan, Mei 07 January 2016 (has links)
Aging is a complex process by which a combination of environmental, genetic and stochastic factors generate whole-system changes that modify organ and tissue function and alter physiological processes. Over the last few decades, many genetic and environmental modulators of aging have been found to be highly conserved between humans and a diverse group of model organisms. Yet, an integrative understanding of how these environmental and genetic variables interact over time in a whole organism to modulate the systemic changes involved in aging is lacking. The goal of this thesis project is to advance a systems perspective of aging by providing the experimental tools and conceptual framework for dissecting the regulatory connection between environmental inputs, molecular outputs and long term aging phenotypes in Caenorhabditis elegans, an experimentally tractable multi-cellular model for aging. Specifically, this work advances the quantitative imaging toolsets available to biologists by developing and refining microfluidic, hardware, computer vision, and software integration tools for high-throughput, high-content imaging of C. elegans. As a result of these technological advances, new roles for the TGF-beta and serotonin signaling pathways in encoding environmental food signals to influence longevity were uncovered and quantitatively characterized. Moreover, this work develops and integrates new microfluidic technologies with off-chip support systems to establish a platform for long-term tracking of the health and longevity trajectories of large numbers of individual C. elegans. The capabilities of this platform have the potential to address many important questions in aging including addressing environmental determinants of aging, the sources of inter-individual variability, the time course of aging-related declines and the effects of interventional strategies to improve health outcomes. Together, the toolsets for quantitative imaging and the long-term culture platform permit the large-scale investigation of both the internal state and long-term behavioral and health outputs of an important multicellular model organism for aging.
576

Senescence deferral in big bluestem with exogenous cytokinin applications

Towne, Earl Eugene January 2011 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
577

Age-related changes in the cat testis and epididymis

Elcock, Laura Elise Hart January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
578

Differences in physical aging measured by walking speed: evidence from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing

Weber, Daniela January 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Background: Physical functioning and mobility of older populations are of increasing interest when populations are aging. Lower body functioning such as walking is a fundamental part of many actions in daily life. Limitations in mobility threaten independent living as well as quality of life in old age. In this study we examine differences in physical aging and convert those differences into the everyday measure of single years of age. Methods: We use the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, which was collected biennially between 2002 and 2012. Data on physical performance, health as well as information on economics and demographics of participants were collected. Lower body performance was assessed with two timed walks at normal pace each of 8 ft (2.4 m) of survey participants aged at least 60 years. We employed growth curve models to study differences in physical aging and followed the characteristic-based age approach to illustrate those differences in single years of age. Results: First, we examined walking speed of about 11,700 English individuals, and identified differences in aging trajectories by sex and other characteristics (e.g. education, occupation, regional wealth). Interestingly, higher educated and non-manual workers outperformed their counterparts for both men and women. Moreover, we transformed the differences between subpopulations into single years of age to demonstrate the magnitude of those gaps, which appear particularly high at early older ages. Conclusions: This paper expands research on aging and physical performance. In conclusion, higher education provides an advantage in walking of up to 15 years for men and 10 years for women. Thus, enhancements in higher education have the potential to ensure better mobility and independent living in old age for a longer period. (author's Abstract)
579

Les prédicteurs de la reprise des activités des personnes âgées après un séjour en unité de réadaptation fonctionnelle intensive

Bourdeau, Isabelle January 2007 (has links)
The objective of this study was to explore which personal and environmental variables are the best predictors of reintegration to normal living in older adults discharged from an in-patient rehabilitation unit. More than fifteen biopsychosocial characteristics of 94 people over 60 years old were evaluated with reliable and valid tests a few days before discharge from rehabilitation. The participants' reintegration to normal living was evaluated three months later (n=86) with the Reintegration to Normal Living Index. From multivariate regression analyses, functional independence, balance, grip strength and general well-being are the best predictors and explain 26% and 27% of the variance in reintegration to normal living. This study suggests that by increasing efforts to maximize functional independence, balance, grip strength and well-being, rehabilitation professionals can expect older adults to achieve a greater degree of participation in their activities and social roles and maybe contribute to their quality of live.
580

Multisensory integration of social information in adult aging

Hunter, Edyta Monika January 2011 (has links)
Efficient navigation of our social world depends on the generation, interpretation and combination of social signals within different sensory systems. However, the influence of adult aging on cross-modal integration of emotional stimuli remains poorly understood. Therefore, the aim of this PhD thesis is to understand the integration of visual and auditory cues in social situations and how this is associated with other factors important for successful social interaction such as recognising emotions or understanding the mental states of others. A series of eight experiments were designed to compare the performance of younger and older adults on tasks related to multisensory integration and social cognition. Results suggest that older adults are significantly less accurate at correctly identifying emotions from one modality (faces or voices alone) but perform as well as younger adults on tasks where congruent auditory and visual emotional information are presented concurrently. Therefore, older adults appear to benefit from congruent multisensory information. In contrast, older adults are poorer than younger adults at detecting incongruency from different sensory modalities involved in decoding cues to deception, sarcasm or masking of emotions. It was also found that age differences in the processing of relevant and irrelevant visual and auditory social information might be related to changes in gaze behaviour. A further study demonstrated that the changes in behaviour and social interaction often reported in patients post-stroke might relate to problems in integrating the cross-modal social information. The pattern of findings is discussed in relation to social, emotional, neuropsychological and cognitive theories.

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