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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.
391

A microprocessor based air pressure controller

Hulan, Gregory T. 01 August 2012 (has links)
A microprocessor based air pressure controller is discussed. The particular implementation was designed around an existing pressure measurement, and display unit. The unit is controlled by a 6809 microprocessor. It is shown that due to the many functions that the unit must perform and control, a microprocessor based system is a good choice. The controller is economical since it uses standard chips, yet it is very accurate since it uses state of the art pressure transducers. Experimental results and the user friendly interface will also be discussed. A commented listing of the controller software, and the circuit diagrams are appended. / Master of Science
392

Development of internal pressure monitoring system for control of explosive spalling in refractory castables

Hipps, DeForrest Lovell January 1982 (has links)
During the initial heating of hydraulically bonded castable refractories, dehydration of cement phases causes build-up of high levels of internal steam pressure. If this pressure exceeds material strength, explosive spalling results. A probe capable of measuring internal steam pressures"in-situ" has been developed and tested. Correlation of cement calorimetry and pressure data suggests that castable heating schedules can be modified to reduce explosive spalling. / Master of Science
393

Effect of pressure on viscoplasticity and its usefulness in designing impact devices

Jarachi, Marouane 10 May 2024 (has links) (PDF)
This work investigates the interactions between impact devices and material response in the realm of solid mechanics, utilizing explicit finite element analysis and experimental methods based on the split-hopkinson pressure bar. It focuses on understanding how tools like jackhammers use hammer strikes to generate pressure waves, then the wave is transferred through a chisel to materials such as rocks to cause fracture. The interaction between the wave and the rock is complex. Under dynamic loading the mechanical response of materials changes and significant losses occur due to reflections and inefficient pressure states. This research explores how chisel geometry can be optimized to control critical parameters influencing rock fracture, including stress state, pulse length, and peak pressure. The use of notches to influence the stress state, periodic boundaries to influence the pulse length and pressure amplification in tapers the increase the pressure showed an improvement in efficiency in jackhammers. Additionally, this work extends insights of the concept of pressure amplification in solids, to liquids inside tapered pipes, enhancing the understanding of phenomena like pulse pressure amplification in arteries and water hammer effects in piping systems. Two innovative contributions emerge from this work: a novel amplifier design for water cannons, improving these machines efficiency and showing promise for applications in water jet cutting and drilling, and a novel process for extruding nanocrystalline magnesium. This process leverages pressure amplification and impact-induced plastic shear deformations to refine crystal size, offering a new avenue for producing various nanocrystalline materials.
394

The Effects of Pressure Gradient and Roughness on Pressure Fluctuations Beneath High Reynolds Number Boundary Layers

Fritsch, Daniel James 16 September 2022 (has links)
High Reynolds number turbulent boundary layers over both smooth and rough surfaces subjected to a systematically defined family of continually varying, bi-directional pressure gradient distributions are investigated in both wind tunnel experiments and steady 2D and 3D Reynolds Averaged-Navier-Stokes (RANS) computations. The effects of pressure gradient, pressure gradient history, roughness, combined roughness and pressure gradient, and combined roughness and pressure gradient history on boundary growth and the behavior of the underlying surface pressure spectrum are examined. Special attention is paid to how said pressure spectra may be effectively modeled and predicted by assessing existing empirical and analytical modeling formulations, proposing updates to those formulations, and assessing RANS flow modeling as it pertains to successful generation of spectral model inputs. It is found that the effect of pressure gradient on smooth wall boundary layers is strongly non-local. The boundary layer velocity profile, turbulence profiles, and associated parameters and local skin friction at a point that has seen non-constant upstream pressure gradient history will be dependent both on the local Reynolds number and pressure gradient as well as the Reynolds number and pressure gradient history. This shows itself most readily in observable downstream lagging in key observed behaviors. Steady RANS solutions are capable of predicting this out-of-equilibrium behavior if the pressure gradient distribution is captured correctly, however, capturing the correct pressure gradient is not as straightforward as may have previously been thought. Wind tunnel flows are three-dimensional, internal problems dominated by blockage effects that are in a state of non-equilibrium due to the presence of corner and juncture flows. Modeling a 3D tunnel flow is difficult with the standard eddy viscosity models, and requires the Quadratic Constitutive Relation for all practical simulations. Modeling in 2D is similarly complex, for, although 3D effects can be ignored, the absence of two walls worth of boundary layer and other interaction flows causes the pressure gradient to be captured incorrectly. These effects can be accounted for through careful setup of meshed geometry. Pressure gradient and history effects on the pressure spectra beneath smooth wall boundary layers show similar non-locality, in addition to exhibiting varying effects across different spectral regions. In general, adverse pressure gradient steepens the slope of the mid-frequency region while favorable shallows it, while the high frequency region shows self-similarity under viscous normalization independent of pressure gradient. The outer region is dominated by history effects. Modeling of such spectra is not straightforward; empirical models fail to incorporate the subtle changes in spectral shape as coherent functions of flow variables without becoming overly-defined and producing non-physical spectral shapes. Adopting an analytical formulation based on the pressure Poisson equation solves this issue, but brings into play model inputs that are difficult to predict from RANS. New modeling protocols are proposed that marry the assumptions and limitations of RANS results to the analytical spectral modeling. Rough surfaces subjected to pressure gradients show simplifications over their smooth wall relatives, including the validity of Townsend's outer-layer-Reynolds-number-similarity Hypothesis and shortened history effects. The underlying pressure spectra are also significantly simplified, scaling fully on a single outer variable scaling and showing no mid-frequency slope pressure gradient dependence. This enables the development of a robust and accurate empirical model for the pressure spectra beneath rough wall flows. Despite simplifications in the flow physics, modeling rough wall flows in a steady RANS environment is a challenge, due to a lack of understanding of the relationship between the rough wall physics and the RANS model turbulence parameters; there is no true physical basis for a steady RANS roughness boundary condition. Improvements can been made, however, by tuning a shifted wall distance, which also factors heavily into the mathematical character of the pressure spectrum and enables adaptations to the analytical model formulations that accurately predict rough wall pressure spectra. This work was sponsored by the Office of Naval Research, in particular Drs. Peter Chang and Julie Young under grants N00014-18-1-2455, N00014-19-1-2109, and N00014-20-2821. This work was also sponsored by the Department of Defense Science, Mathematics, and Research for Transformation (SMART) Fellowship Program and the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division (NAWCAD), in particular Mr. Frank Taverna and Dr. Phil Knowles. / Doctor of Philosophy / Very near to a solid surface, air or water flow tends to be highly turbulent: chaotic and random in nature. This is called a boundary layer, which is present on almost every system that involves a fluid and a solid with motion between them. When the boundary layer is turbulent, the surface of the solid body experiences pressures that fluctuate very rapidly, and this can fatigue the structure and create noise that radiates both into the structure to passengers and out from the structure to observers far away. These pressure fluctuations can be described in a statistical nature, but these statistics are not well understood, particularly when the surface is rough or the average pressure on the surface is changing. Improving the ability to predict the statistics of the pressure fluctuations will aid in the design of vehicles and engineering systems where those fluctuations can be damaging to the structure or the associated noise is detrimental to the role of the system. Wind turbine farm noise, airport community noise, and air/ship-frame longevity are all issues that stand to benefit from improved modeling of surface pressure fluctuations beneath turbulent boundary layers. This study aims to improve said modeling through the study of the effects of changing average surface pressure and surface roughness on the statistics of surface pressure fluctuations. This goal is accomplished through a combination of wind tunnel testing and computer simulation. It was found that the effect of gradients in the surface pressure is not local, meaning the effects are felt by the boundary layer at a different point than where the gradient was actually applied. This disconnect between cause and effect makes understanding and modeling the flow challenging, but adjustments to established modeling ideas are proposed that prove more effective than what exists in the literature for capturing those effects. Roughness on the surface causes the flow to become even more turbulent and the surface pressure fluctuations to become louder and more damaging. Fortunately, it is found that the combination of roughness with a gradient in surface pressure is actually simpler than equivalent smooth surfaces. These simplifications offer significant insight into the underlying physics at play and enable the development of the first analytically based model for rough wall pressure fluctuations.
395

PNEUMATIC ARTIFICIAL HEART DRIVER PARAMETER EFFECTS ON THE RATE OF PRESSURE CHANGE ((+) DP/DT MAX)

Henker, Richard January 1987 (has links)
The aim of the research was to investigate the effects of three parameters of the artificial heart on the (+) dP/dt max. The study was conducted using a mock circulation which was connected to an artificial heart. The data were collected using the COMDU software developed for the computer which monitors the artificial heart. Stepwise regression analysis was utilized to test the three hypotheses. Two of the null hypotheses for the study could not be rejected, as the independent variable did not significantly affect (+) dP/dt max. Although the third hypothesis was accepted, the results were not clinically significant. Limitations in the study were multicollinearity among the independent variables, small sample size, and the inability of the mock circulation to represent human responses.
396

An exploration into the elements affecting strategy formation of a public interest group: a case study on thePeople's Council on Squatter Policy

Chui, Yuen-fun, Angela., 崔婉芬. January 1987 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Master / Master of Social Work
397

Coefficient of earth pressure at rest of Hong Kong soils

陳特昌, Chan, Dak-cheong. January 1976 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Civil Engineering / Master / Master of Philosophy
398

Effects of microstructure on toughness in pressure vessel steel

Bowen, P. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
399

Dynamics of laser-atom interactions

Power, William January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
400

The Avon Childhood Diabetes Project : evolution of microvascular disease and autonomic neuropathy

Karachaliou, Fotini-Heleni January 1997 (has links)
No description available.

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