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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.
71

Structural Design of Machining Centers

Yeh, Wen-Chi 14 July 2000 (has links)
The purpose of this research is to present a systematic methodology for the creative design and evaluation of machining centers. First, the graph representation is to present machining centers by using the method of topological structure. A methodology of structure synthesise is developed for the 3, 4, and 5-axis machining centers by requirements and characteristics of machining centers. A cod of machining centers is presented and configuration enumerations of the 3, 4, and 5-axis machining centers are established, and then the configuration is drew. Second, characteristics of machining centers are established to evaluate the machining centers. Finally, appropriate configuration of machining centers is selected by the cutting characteristics to compare the patents and the industrial machining centers.
72

A Study on Tool Wear of Hydrodynamic Polishing Process

Hung, Tu-Chich 02 July 2001 (has links)
Abstract The tool wear characteristics of the hydrodynamic polishing process under various lubricating conditions are examined in this study. Both the experimental and theoretical studies will be done in this paper. In the experimental study, the relationships between tool wear and its possible influential factors will be examined. In the theoretical study, the mathematical model will be established to interpret the qualitative and quantitative relationships between tool wear characteristics and various operating parameters. For the experimental study, a series of experiments will be done to investigate the effect of various factors on the tool wear and machining rate, under non-contact or semi-contact lubricating condition. The factors may include the tool¡¦s angular speed, the applied load, the tool¡¦s surface irregularities, the slurry viscosity, and the properties of tool, workpiece and abrasive particle (such as surface energy). To establish the mathematical model, the principle of dynamics, law of minimum potential energy and elasto-hydrodynamic lubricating theorem of hydrodynamic polishing process are adopted to derive the removal rate model of a particle under differential contact conditions or under various material parameters (such as surface energies or speed constants) from the energy point of view. In addition, the wear rate of tool is to be analyzed. To deal with the random nature of tool¡¦s surface irregularities, the probability theory is applied to calculate the average wear rate of tool, under semi-contact or non-contact condition or under various material parameters. It is shown that both the tool waviness and radius of tool curvature changed and had specific trends in the wear process. Especially, the wear rate of tool under semi-contact lubricating condition was not necessarily large than that under the non-contact one. The experimental data indicated that the effects of tool wear on machining rate highly depended on the lubricating condition of tool. The trend of machining rate versus accumulated machining time under non-contact lubricating condition was very different from that under the semi-contact one. A mathematical model relating the removal capability of an abrasive particle at the tool¡¦s or workpiece¡¦s surface and various operating parameters are proposed. The qualitative properties of removal capability the under different material parameters and various contact conditions are obtained by the computer simulations. The analysis indicates that the relationships between the removal capability and various material parameters (such as surface energies of adhesion or operating conditions) are not monotonic. Under the contact condition, it is shown that the tool¡¦s surface energy of adhesion and the speed constant has a negative effect on the removal capability at tool¡¦s surface. On the other hand, the surface energy of adhesion on work and the speed constants have a positive effect on the removal capability at tool¡¦s surface. For the workpiece, the converse implications are also true. Three types of patterns for removal capability at tool¡¦s surface due to the degree of embedding of a particle were obtained. There are increase or first increase then decrease or decrease directly, respectively. Under non-contact condition, it is shown that the removal capability has a negative relationship with local film thickness. In addition, a mathematical model relating the tool or work piece wear rate and various operating parameters are also proposed. The qualitative properties of tool wear rate under various lubricating conditions are obtained by the simple statistic analysis. The analysis indicates that the relationships between tool and workpiece wear rate and various parameters are also not monotonic. Under non-contact condition, the tool or workpiece wear rate will first increase then decrease due to the tool periphery speed increase. The magnitude of wear rate will decrease or increase due to the material parameters. Under the semi-contact condition, the up-and-down trend is also occurred in the relationship between tool or workpiece wear rate and the tool periphery speed. Accordingly, the relationships between wear rate and tool periphery speed, in a lubricating range covering the non-contact and semi-contact conditions, will reveal a twin-peak pattern. Generally, the workpiece wear rate under the semi-contact condition is not less than the non-contact one. However, the tool wear rate under the semi-contact condition is not necessarily large than the non-contact one. For a specific condition, under the semi-contact condition, the magnitude of the tool wear rate under different speed will increase or decrease by choosing different tool¡¦s surface adhesive energy and speed constant and the relationship between tool wear rate and tool speed will become complex. The wear rate could increase or decrease significantly. In other word, the tool wear rate under the semi-contact condition may be smaller or large than the non-contact one. Hence, a tool with large surface adhesive energy and speed constant should have a lower tool wear rate or higher work wear rate under certain lubricating regime. Finally, the experimental study tests that the proposed model is closely related with the experimental data. The study showed that the qualitative trends of experimental data are consistent with the analytical predictions. Some of the qualitative relationships between tool wear and machining rate could be properly explained from the elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication theorem and the proposed wear theorem for hydrodynamic polishing process.
73

Distribution channel strategies of Japanese machine tool builders /

Fung, Wai-hing, Anthony. January 1989 (has links)
Thesis (M.B.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 1989.
74

The development of an automated system for on-line tool wear monitoring

Ismail, E. January 1989 (has links)
An investigation has been completed to determine the feasibility of using vibration measurement to develop an online tool wear monitoring system.Conventionaltransducers and FFT signal analysers have been used as the starting point for data collection and analysis. Additional software has been developed in order to obtain additional and enhanced analysis using statistical data such as percentile analysis and 4th statistical moments. The signal analysers have been interfaced with an IBM compatible PC to allow efficient data collection and analysis. • The measurement of surface finish via the use of centre line average has been selected as the primary indicator of tool wear. An experimental programme has been completed which examines the relationship between vibration measurement and surface finish during turning operations. This has provided sufficient general rules and guidelines to enable the method to be extended to other processes. It also provides information from which commonly occurring faults such as looseness of the tool holder, changes in material properties and swarf presence in the toolholder can be identified. Tests have been completed using cast iron, ENS and EN3 steels. An expert system has been developed. It has been demonstrated that sufficient data can be collected during the setting-up stage or commissioning part of a machining process from which, using the expert system, reliable tool wear monitoring can be achieved for all subsequent tests. In addition to predicting'the surface for all stages of tool life, the system can identify common faults such as looseness of the toolholder, the presence of swarf in the toolholder and changes in material properties. This system has been evaluated in relation to the available data, the present expectation of quality assesment required from the machine operation and relative to available commercial monitors. The system offers significant improvements.
75

An investigation of the impact of an individual teaching guide on the inpatient education of myocardial infarction patients

Mohaupt, Jennifer Ann 25 July 2008 (has links)
Myocardial infarction patients (MI, or heart attack) are vulnerable patients that require special care. The purpose of this study was to develop a teaching guide to be used by nursing staff with MI patients in the hospital setting, and to investigate the impact of this Individualized Patient Teaching Guide (IPTG). This research met its specific purposes through a three phase structure: development of the teaching guide, implementation, and assessment of participant impact. In phase one, development of the teaching guide, two focus groups were conducted: one with previous MI patients and the other with nursing staff. The IPTG was developed using topics identified as important by these two groups. Twenty patients participated in the implementation phase. The intention was for these patients to have patient teaching guided by the options they chose on their IPTGs. Seventy per cent of the patients provided feedback concerning the impact of the guide. All of these patients (n=14) indicated that Risk Factors was very important or important for them to learn about while in the hospital, and 13 of them received instruction on Risk Factors from health care practitioners. Psychological concerns was the topic most neglected: only one of the patients that had identified this as important received instruction on this topic. While the majority of patients (n=10) indicated that the IPTG provided them with an opportunity to identify their learning needs, only four of the patients surveyed felt that their learning needs were completely met in the hospital setting. The other six patients indicated that the information provided to them was insufficient. It seems that some of the topics identified as important were addressed in the clinical setting. Furthermore, the tool did allow patients an opportunity to identify learning needs. However, given that the majority of patients indicated dissatisfaction with the amount of education they received in the hospital setting, it may be concluded that the IPTG did not accomplish the goal of improving the in-patient learning experience. Reasons for this are discussed. / Thesis (Master, Education) -- Queen's University, 2008-07-25 11:33:49.114
76

A Mobile Deaf to hearing Communication Aid for Med

Mutemwa, Muyowa January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
77

Fault diagnosis and condition monitoring for NC/CNC machine tools

Harris, C. G. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
78

Multivariate tool condition monitoring in a metal cutting operation using neural networks

Dimla, Dimla E. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
79

A distributed decision support system for turning and milling operations using the internet

Revere, Kelvin Mark January 2000 (has links)
The machine tool industry is highly dependent on the tooling which is needed to machine the components used to make the range of products seen in today's society. The range of tooling available to machinists is prolific and subject to continual growth. Those engineers faced with the task of process planning require advanced systems to support the decisions that need to be made for the production process to operate smoothly. The tooling data made available by these systems is a key factor in defining the efficiency with which the production processes can be carried out. This research examines the technical decision support systems made available to industrialists and highlights the scope to provide tooling engineers with up-to-date tooling performance and use data that can be used both in the planning stages as well as dealing with problems encountered during production. Specifically, this research identifies the role performed by widespread tool trials, associated with new tools or new materials, and goes on to show how the information obtained from tool trials can be collated in a structured manner and used to enhance the provision of data with which to carry out the process planning task. The goal of this research was to develop and implement a framework capable of collecting and disseminating data related to tool trials in a coherent and supportive fashion using distributed methods. This target resulted in the deployment of a system named JadeT, which is capable of receiving and analysing data from tool trials and subsequently enhancing the process planning task by basing cutting parameter selection on a combination of fundamental cutting parameter algorithms in parallel with using the approved data generated from tool trials. The JadeT system was tested via the creation of a database using actual tool trial reports, and the manner in which this data was used to provide cutting parameters was analysed. The JadeT system has been developed, deployed and evaluated. The opportunity to use data contained within tool trial reports to support process planning tasks has been identified and exploited. The testing of JadeT indicates that the system fulfils the initial goals and was able to provide suggestions for further research in this area.
80

Benchmarking in the south African Tool and die manufacturing industry /

Malherbe, D. C. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (MScIng)--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / Bibliography.

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