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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.
31

Development of tin-bronze and copper based journal bearing materials with Tribaloy alloy additives /

Tavakoli, Arash. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.App.Sc.) - Carleton University, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 66-71). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
32

Solidification under pressure of aluminum castings

Chintalapati, Pavan. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D)--University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2009. / Title from PDF t.p. (viewed June 30, 2010). Additional advisors: Viola L. Acoff, Krishan K. Chawla, Raymond J. Donahue, Gregg M. Janowski, Harry E. Littleton (ad hoc). Includes bibliographical references (p. 143-138).
33

Paleoenvironment and shore displacement since 3200 BC in the central part of the  Långhundraleden Trail, SE Uppland

Katrantsiotis, Christos January 2013 (has links)
In this study, litho-, bio- and chronostratigraphic investigations combined with RTK GPSleveling have been carried out to reconstruct the paleoenvironment in the central part of theLånghundraleden Trail. The area displays four shallow lake basins of varyingmorphologies. The basins are now covered with peat as a result of infilling and overgrowth.The emergence of the saddle-point, i.e. the highest point of the underlying minerogenicsurface, was estimated to have occurred c. BC/AD. The isolation events of two basins, atc.12.4 and c.12.3 m a.s.l. west and east of the saddle-point, were dated to c.AD 20 andc.AD 30, respectively. By combining these isolation data with six previously investigatedbasins a shore displacement curve for the central part of the Långhundraleden Trail and thesurrounding area, i.e. east of the Ekoln basin was constructed. The curve indicates anaverage regressive shore displacement rate of c.6.2 mm/yr since c. 3200 BC. Around 1500BC, this trend was interrupted by a short period of retarded regression, correlated with theL4 event. The isolation ages of the basins in the Långhundraleden Trail appears relativelyyoung when compared to an average shore displacement rate of 5.6 mm/year in thenorthern part of L. Mälaren, west of the Ekoln basin. As the area is dominated by a fissurevalleylandscape, this discrepancy could be attributed to small-scale irregular tectonicmovements, which caused faster uplift rate, i.e. 6.2 mm/year, east of the Ekoln basin.
34

Projections of Sea Level Along the East Coast of North America

Love, Ryan January 2014 (has links)
Projections of sea level rise for the east coast of North America at 2100CE were generated considering contributions from: ocean warming, land ice melting and isostatic land motion. The primary contribution of this study is the development of an improved Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) model that includes an assessment of model uncertainty using 36 ice loading histories, 363 Earth models and a new sea level proxy database comprising over 500 sea level index points. We find that, while there are differences between our projections and the Global Mean Sea Level (GMSL) projections from the recent International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Assessment Report, the two sets of results agree to within uncertainty largely because some of the regional processes cancel. Our results indicate that the isostatic signal is large, contributing up to 1/4 of sea level change at 2100CE, and so must be included to generate accurate projections for this region.
35

Constraining the Source Distribution of Meltwater Pulse 1A Using Near- and Far-Field Sea-level Data

Liu, Jean January 2013 (has links)
Meltwater pulse 1A (MWP-1A) is the largest land ice melt event of the last deglaciation. In a period of no more than 340 years, between 14.65 and 14.31 ka (Dechamps et al, 2012), ~10% of the total deglacial sea-level rise occurred (Hanebuth et al, 2000; Peltier and Fairbanks, 2006; Deschamps et al, 2012), resulting in the highest reported rate of global mean sea-level rise in the geological record, which may have exceeded 4 m per century (Deschamps et al, 2012). Yet, the implications of MWP-1A for constraining the rates of the underlying processes and its role in the sequence of climate events during Termination 1 remain unclear due to the lack of information on its melt source distribution. While glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) modelling experiments (Clark et al, 2002; Bassett et al, 2005; Deschamps et al, 2012) and recent assessments of ice-sheet histories (Carlson and Clark, 2012) suggest that at least 50% of the event may have come from Antarctica, other interpretations of Antarctic ice-extent and sea-level records suggest a substantially smaller (including zero) Antarctic contribution (Ackert et al, 2007; Mackintosh et al, 2011; Whitehouse et al, 2012). In this study, we show that after reassessments of local MWP-1A amplitudes at Barbados and Sunda Shelf based on the well-constrained timing derived from the Tahiti sea-level record (Deschamps et al, 2012), the sea-level data from Barbados, Sunda Shelf, and Tahiti do not provide as tight of a constraint on the Antarctic contribution as previously thought. We find that between 1 to 10 m sea-level equivalent (sle) could have melted from the Antarctic, compared to 7 to 15 m sle from previous analyses (Clark et al, 2002; Bassett et al, 2005; Deschamps et al, 2012). To better constrain the source of MWP-1A, we also consider sea-level data from Scotland (Shennan et al, 2000), which have, until now, been excluded from MWP-1A fingerprinting experiments because they are strongly influenced by local ice unloading. To overcome this, we isolate the elastic MWP-1A amplitude (i.e. fingerprint signal) at this location using a suite of models that provide optimal fits to the Scottish data, and thereby remove near-field contamination. Preliminary results show that the inclusion of these data leads to an improved MWP-1A source distribution constraint compared to that obtained using the far- and intermediate-field data alone.
36

A comparison of pressurised cylinders in HIP systems using CFD and FEM

Lindqvist, Lisa January 2021 (has links)
A hot isostatic press (HIP) is a system which utilises high temperatures and pressure in order to densifyand enhance the material properties of components in the aerospace, automotive and additive manufacturingindustries, to mention a few. Quintus is a world leading manufacturer of HIP systems, and this master’s thesiswork has been written in collaboration with them. A HIP consists of a cylinder which gets filled with an inert gas, a gas which is then pressurised using compressors.Inside of the cylinder are heaters which ensure that the gas and load reach the desired temperature. Quintus’HIP construction has a wire wound cylinder. This means that a pre-stressed wire is wound around the cylinderfor a number of laps, resulting in the cylinder always being in a compressive stress state, thus ensuring a safeconstruction if a crack were to propagate in the material. This construction also allows for a more slim design ofthe cylinder which is beneficial when the gas is to be cooled, as the heat gets transported through the cylinder.An alternative design to this wire wound cylinder is a so called monoblock cylinder. This is a solid, thicker,cylinder, not wound by any wire. Quintus does not manufacture the monoblock HIP system, but these HIPs areon the market and therefore Quintus is keen to learn more about them. In this work, differences in the cooling capabilities with respect to the cylinders’ strength has been investigated,regarding the wire wound and monoblock cylinders. This has been done by the means of CFD and FEM(ANSYS CFX and ANSYS Mechanical), where a simplified 2D axisymmetric model of each HIP version wasused. In CFX, both a steady state and transient simulation was run for each model in order to capture the coolingof the gas. The resulting temperature load on the cylinder was then exported to the Mechanical setup to solvefor the arising stresses of the cylinders. The results of the work showed that the wire wound HIP does indeed exceed the monoblock cylinder when itcomes to the cooling rate, especially after some time when the gas has cooled off. Neither one of the cylinderswere at risk of yielding, and the monoblock cylinder was calculated to withstand >20 000 cycles, which is alsothe fatigue life of the wire in Quintus’ HIPs. The models and boundary conditions used in this work weresubjected to approximations, but the results obtained have still brought a lot of new insights to the monoblockconstruction, and have provided a good foundation for further analyses.
37

Structural and physical properties of ReN i03 (Re=Sm, N d) nanostructured films prepared by Pulsed Laser Deposition

Diop, Ngom, Balla January 2010 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / Very few systems allow the study of the relationship between structural changes and physical properties in such a clear way as rare earth nickelate ReNi03 perovskites (Re (rare earth) = Pr, Nd, Sm and Gd). Synthesized for the first time by Demazeau et al [1] in 1971 and completely forgotten for almost twenty years, these compounds have regained interest since the discovery of high-temperature superconductivity and giant magnetoresistive effects in other perovskite-related systems. Due to its Metal-Insulator Transition (MIT) and thermochromic properties, the rare earth nickelate perovskite ReNi03 has received a great deal of attention for the past ten years in their thin films form [12]. Such unusual electronic and optical features are all the more interesting since the metal-insulator transition temperature (TMn) can be tuned by changing the Re cation: LaNi03 is metallic. No minimum of the metallic conductivity of Sm0 . ssNd 0.45Ni03, as observed by Gire et al [12] (entropic effect), was reported by Ambrosini and Hamet [11]. It has been suggested by Obradors et al. [13] that changing the rare earth cation in the ReNi03 system, acts as internal chemical pressure (increasing internal pressure by substituting the rare earth cation with another one of larger ionic radius) which can lead, as for the isostatic pressure experiment, to a tunability of the metal-insulator transition temperature [14, 15]. Obradors et al [13] reported on a decrease of T MIT upon increasing isostatic pressure but with remaining metallic properties of PrNi03 and NdNi03 (same magnitude and thermal dependence of the electrical resistivity)
38

The Role of Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) Process On the Determination of Present-Day Sea-Level Rise

Huang, Zhenwei 22 August 2013 (has links)
No description available.
39

Holocene Lake-Level Change and Submerged Archaeological Site Potential of Rice Lake, Ontario

Sonnenburg, Elizabeth 12 1900 (has links)
<p> Isostatic rebound and climatic changes throughout the Holocene have resulted in several periods of lowered water-levels in the Great Lakes watershed. The Early Holocene lowstand phase corresponds with the Paleoindian period in the Great Lakes Region (11,000-9000 YBP), and subsequent water-level rise has inundated Paleoindian archaeological sites. This research sought to reconstruct the water-level history of Rice Lake (located north of Lake Ontario) in order to identify areas of high potential for submerged prehistoric sites. </p> <p> Over 750 line km of detailed geophysical data (single-beam bathymetry) and 16 sediment cores were collected over a 30 km2 area of Rice Lake. Sediment cores were visually logged and analyzed for particle size, microfossils and microdebitage. Water-level reconstructions accounting for sediment infill and isostatic rebound of the lake record a post Lake Iroquois (after 12 ka BP) Early Holocene lowstand (~10-12 m below present level (bpl)) (EH-1). At 10 ka BP, gradually rising water-levels and establishment of wetlands as indicated by thecamoebian assemblages coincide with a newly discovered Paleoindian occupation of the Mcintyre basin, where quartz microdebitage was found. Waterlevel continued to rise to almost 2 m bpi until 6.5 ka BP, when warmer and drier temperatures caused a sudden drop in water-levels as recorded by a pollen hiatus. After 4 ka BP, water-levels quickly recovered and stabilized as shown by rapid recovery of pre-hiatus thecamoebian biofacies and the establishment of wild rice stands. </p> <p> The small number of known, well-preserved Great Lakes Paleoindian sites has limited analysis of Early Holocene population densities, migration patterns, cultural diffusion, or the chronology of settlement. The method of modelling water-level fluctuations and associated archaeological potential developed in this thesis represents a substantial advance in our understanding of Early Holocene archaeology in the Great Lakes. These methods will have broader application to exploration of submerged terrestrial landscapes elsewhere in the Great Lakes and will allow for future regional synthesis of archaeological site distribution and characteristics. </p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
40

Crustal motion in the Antarctic interior from a decade of global positioning system measurements

Willis, Michael J. 07 January 2008 (has links)
No description available.

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