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Tool Condition Monitoring and Replacement for Tubesheet Drilling2013 September 1900 (has links)
Tool Condition Monitoring (TCM) methods have shown significant potential to automatically detect worn tools without intervention in the machining process, thus decreasing machine downtime and improving reliability and part quality. Previous research on TCM systems have used a wide variety of time-domain and frequency-domain features extracted from cutting force related parameters as well as mechanical and acoustical vibrations to infer the wear state of tools. This project concerns the process of drilling thousands of tight-tolerance holes on tubesheets and baffles of heat exchangers using large diameter indexable insert drills on a horizontal boring machine. To address the issues involved in the process, the aim of this research is to develop a non-intrusive, indirect, online TCM system on the horizontal boring machine to monitor the drill wear and hole quality while drilling. The specific objectives are to establish an indirect TCM system for the drilling process, to develop models to predict tool wear and the machining accuracy of the drilled holes, and to develop an optimum tool replacement strategy.
The TCM system developed used two cutting-force related signals on the horizontal boring machine, namely the spindle motor current and the axial feed motor current. Features extracted from these data streams, as well as the machining parameters, the cutting speed and the feed rate, and the number of holes drilled with the current inserts, are the inputs to a series of models to predict the tool wear state and the hole diameter. The first model is an autoregressive model that allows the prediction of the extracted features for the next hole before it is drilled. As each hole is drilled, this model is updated with the most recent data to improve the accuracy of the prediction. The predicted values for the features are then used as inputs to the second and third models which are surface response models, one to estimate the tool wear state and one to estimate the hole diameter.
A tool replacement strategy based on applying limits to the predicted hole diameter was also developed. Adjusting these limits allows the strategy to be tuned for either hole accuracy or tool life depending on the requirements of a specific application. Tuning the replacement strategy for tool life resulted in a significant 44% increase in tool life and a non-trivial reduction in machine down time due to fewer tool changes while holding a hole diameter tolerance of ±0.1mm. The TCM system ensured that not a single over tolerance hole would have been drilled which is critically important since over tolerance holes can result in a scrapped workpiece.
The proposed 3-model TCM system shows promise in being able to significantly reduce the risk of drilling out of tolerance holes while at the same time increasing tool life and correspondingly decreasing tool change time. The models are able to accurately predict the insert flank wear and as well as the actual hole diameter within acceptable error. The TCM system could be implemented in an industrial settingwith minimal revision and since it is an indirect system there would be no intrusion into the manufacturing operation.
One limitation of the TCM system as proposed is that it is only capable of detecting gradual tool wear and not catastrophic tool failure, a limitation that was known from the outset but was not investigated as it was beyond the scope of this project. The proposed TCM system would allow the integration of additional functionality to instantaneously detect catastrophic tool failure.
Finally, for use in a production environment, the developed models need to be implemented on a standalone device that requires essentially no operator input to monitor continuous drilling operations for tubesheet and baffle applications. This implementation could include automatic detection of the machining parameters using frequency analysis of the motor signals.
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Policy Driven Software MonitoringWong, Yat Fai Alfred January 2007 (has links)
Software monitoring and logging is one of the most important tools a software
engineer has when faced with the challenge of auditing or analysing a software
system. However, the difficulty in effectively monitoring a system, managing its
logs and cross referencing them with source code makes software re-engineering a
rigorous and complex task. This thesis aims to address this issue by providing
a framework that enables pattern matching between a software log and an event
pattern expression that is based on a monitoring policy. The framework consists of
parsers and annotators that facilitates transformation of a monitoring policy into
a Petri Net as well as source code annotation for gathering data through logged
events. It further expands upon this work by proposing an adaptive logging framework
that will greatly improve the quality of log management by autonomically
adjusting the amount of information logged based on the application???s operational
environment. Finally, a prototype system of the policy driven monitoring framework
is implemented and tested with applications of different scales as a proof of
concept for the proposed framework.
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Concealment and revelation : a linguistic stylistic approach to suspense in detective discourseDutta, Ranjawati January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Barnacles as monitors of heavy metal pollutionPowell, Michael Ian January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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Electrochemical noise and corrosion monitoring of steel in concreteSearson, P. C. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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Chemical dynamics in North Sea estuaries and plumesTurner, Andrew January 1990 (has links)
Observational and experimental studies have been undertaken in the southern North Sea environment, including five major estuaries (Humber, Thames, Scheldt, Weser and Elbe), with the aim of elucidating the mechanistic and kinetic details of trace metal reactivity required for the refinement of pollutant transport models. The results of a systematic investigation of suspended particle characteristics (BET specific surface area and porosity, carbon content. Fe and Mn oxide coatings) indicated that, although there exists significant yet explicable variability among the North Sea estuaries, such compositional factors do not exert an observable influence on solid-solution interactions. Furthermore, chemical reactivity was not usually demonstrable from observations of leachable particulate trace metals as phase interactions Impart relatively little influence on their concentrations; particulate metal distributions therefore generally conformed with mixing of fluvial and marine material unless perturbed by major anthropogenic sources as in the Humber. Solid-solution redistributions were revealed by following the partitioning of artificial radiotracers in a series of carefully controlled experiments in which salinity and suspended solids concentration gradients were simulated by mixing river and sea water end-member samples. Relationships between salinity and the solid:solution concentration of radiotracers as quantified by a distribution coefficient ( K Q ) indicated substantial desorption from particles of ^^®Cd and ^"^^Cs. conservative behaviour of ^ ^ Z n , and oxidative removal from solution of ^^Mn. Radiochemical techniques applied in situ to study solid-solution partitioning in the southern North Sea established a more significant role of particle composition (in particular, estuarine-derived versus plankton-rich material) in regulating trace metal behaviour in offshore waters. This finding was corroborated by distinct seasonal contrasts in measured particulate metal concentrations; whereas most metals (Fe, Mn. Cu, Pb, Zn) were enriched during winter when detrital and terrigenous components from fluvial/resuspension inputs dominate. Cd was elevated during summer in tandem with amplification of the biomass. These results provide a valuable basis for both future long-term pollutant monitoring programmes, and the conceptual development of estuarine chemical flux models, specifically the incipient Plymouth Marine Laboratory model of the Humber plume.
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Investigations on the use of fucus germlings in the study of estuarine and coastal pollutionGrundy, Sarah R. January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Intelligent remote chromatic processingAhmed, Saad Uddin January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Measurement and modelling of the optical properties of human tissue in the near infraredVan der Zee, Pieter January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Process monitoring and fault diagnosis methods using constraint suspensionLeary, Jerome J. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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