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Food texture and perceptionChauvin, Maite Andrea, January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D. in food science)--Washington State University, December 2007. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting dateO'Barr, John Houston 16 August 2006 (has links)
Clomazone is an effective herbicide widely used for preemergence grass control in rice. However, use of clomazone on sandy textured soils of the western Texas rice belt may cause serious rice injury. When labeled for rice in 2001, sandy textured soils were excluded. Laboratory experiments were conducted to determine the effect of soil characteristics and water potential on plant-available clomazone and rice injury. A centrifugal double-tube technique was used to determine plant-available concentration in soil solution (ACSS), total amount available in soil solution (TASS), and Kd values for clomazone on four soils at four water potentials. A rice bioassay was conducted parallel to the plant-available study to correlate biological availability to ACSS, TASS, and Kd. TASS was significantly different in all soils at the 1% level of significance. The order of increasing TASS for the soils studied was Morey Edna Nada Crowley which correlated well with soil characteristics. Two field experiments at three locations were conducted in 2002 and 2003 to determine the optimum rate range that maximizes weed control and minimizes crop injury across a wide variety of soil textures and planting dates. At Beaumont, Eagle Lake, and Ganado, TX, preemergence application of 0.41 to 0.56, 0.38 to 0.43, and 0.36 to 0.42 kg ha-1 clomazone, respectively, provided optimum weed control with minimal rice injury. Data suggests that clomazone is safe to use on rice on sandy textured soils. Injury may occur, but, rates suggested from this research will minimize injury and achieve excellent weed control. As a result, amendments to the herbicide label will allow clomazone use on sandy textured soils giving rice producers more flexibility and access to another effective herbicide.
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Optimization of Single and Layered Surface TexturingBair, Alethea S. 2009 May 1900 (has links)
In visualization problems, surface shape is often a piece of data that must be shown effectively. One factor that strongly affects shape perception is texture. For example, patterns of texture on a surface can show the surface orientation from foreshortening or compression of the texture marks, and surface depth through size variation from perspective projection. However, texture is generally under-used in the scientific visualization community. The benefits of using texture on single surfaces also apply to layered surfaces. Layering of multiple surfaces in a single viewpoint allows direct comparison of surface shape. The studies presented in this dissertation aim to find optimal methods for texturing of both single and layered surfaces. This line of research starts with open, many-parameter experiments using human subjects to find what factors are important for optimal texturing of layered surfaces. These experiments showed that texture shape parameters are very important, and that texture brightness is critical so that shading cues are available. Also, the optimal textures seem to be task dependent; a feature finding task needed relatively little texture information, but more shape-dependent tasks needed stronger texture cues. In visualization problems, surface shape is often a piece of data that must be shown effectively. One factor that strongly affects shape perception is texture. For example, patterns of texture on a surface can show the surface orientation from foreshortening or compression of the texture marks, and surface depth through size variation from perspective projection. However, texture is generally under-used in the scientific visualization community. The benefits of using texture on single surfaces also apply to layered surfaces. Layering of multiple surfaces in a single viewpoint allows direct comparison of surface shape. The studies presented in this dissertation aim to find optimal methods for texturing of both single and layered surfaces. This line of research starts with open, many-parameter experiments using human subjects to find what factors are important for optimal texturing of layered surfaces. These experiments showed that texture shape parameters are very important, and that texture brightness is critical so that shading cues are available. Also, the optimal textures seem to be task dependent; a feature finding task needed relatively little texture information, but more shape-dependent tasks needed stronger texture cues.
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Study on rolling texture evolution of electrodeposited NiCo alloysChen, Yu-Shen 31 August 2010 (has links)
"none"
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Optimization of Single and Layered Surface TexturingBair, Alethea S. 2009 May 1900 (has links)
In visualization problems, surface shape is often a piece of data that must be shown effectively. One factor that strongly affects shape perception is texture. For example, patterns of texture on a surface can show the surface orientation from foreshortening or compression of the texture marks, and surface depth through size variation from perspective projection. However, texture is generally under-used in the scientific visualization community. The benefits of using texture on single surfaces also apply to layered surfaces. Layering of multiple surfaces in a single viewpoint allows direct comparison of surface shape. The studies presented in this dissertation aim to find optimal methods for texturing of both single and layered surfaces. This line of research starts with open, many-parameter experiments using human subjects to find what factors are important for optimal texturing of layered surfaces. These experiments showed that texture shape parameters are very important, and that texture brightness is critical so that shading cues are available. Also, the optimal textures seem to be task dependent; a feature finding task needed relatively little texture information, but more shape-dependent tasks needed stronger texture cues. In visualization problems, surface shape is often a piece of data that must be shown effectively. One factor that strongly affects shape perception is texture. For example, patterns of texture on a surface can show the surface orientation from foreshortening or compression of the texture marks, and surface depth through size variation from perspective projection. However, texture is generally under-used in the scientific visualization community. The benefits of using texture on single surfaces also apply to layered surfaces. Layering of multiple surfaces in a single viewpoint allows direct comparison of surface shape. The studies presented in this dissertation aim to find optimal methods for texturing of both single and layered surfaces. This line of research starts with open, many-parameter experiments using human subjects to find what factors are important for optimal texturing of layered surfaces. These experiments showed that texture shape parameters are very important, and that texture brightness is critical so that shading cues are available. Also, the optimal textures seem to be task dependent; a feature finding task needed relatively little texture information, but more shape-dependent tasks needed stronger texture cues.
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Effects of partial annealing on the tensile deformation behavior of heavily cold-rolled aluminumChen, Chun-hao 24 July 2007 (has links)
none
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Development of Low Temperature Superplasticity and Analyses of Deformation Mechanisms in 5083 Al AlloysHsiao, I-Ching 01 February 2001 (has links)
The current study developed a simple rolling-type TMT to process the commerical 5083 Al to exhibit low temperature superplacticity at 230 and 250 oC, with optimum tensile elongation to 511% and 443%. The TMT processed thin sheet contained (sub)grains measureing 0.3 um.
The bimodal of grain boundary misorientation distribution of as-TMT3 would be gradually replaced by a more random distribution if the alloy was subjected to increase TMT or tensile deformation strain level.
It would be lost it's superplasticity when the testing temperature was higher than 270 oC. But it would exhibit superplasticity again when the thsting temperature was higher than 400 oC.
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Rice (Oryza sativa L.) response to clomazone as influenced by rate, soil type, and planting dateO'Barr, John Houston 16 August 2006 (has links)
Clomazone is an effective herbicide widely used for preemergence grass control in rice. However, use of clomazone on sandy textured soils of the western Texas rice belt may cause serious rice injury. When labeled for rice in 2001, sandy textured soils were excluded. Laboratory experiments were conducted to determine the effect of soil characteristics and water potential on plant-available clomazone and rice injury. A centrifugal double-tube technique was used to determine plant-available concentration in soil solution (ACSS), total amount available in soil solution (TASS), and Kd values for clomazone on four soils at four water potentials. A rice bioassay was conducted parallel to the plant-available study to correlate biological availability to ACSS, TASS, and Kd. TASS was significantly different in all soils at the 1% level of significance. The order of increasing TASS for the soils studied was Morey Edna Nada Crowley which correlated well with soil characteristics. Two field experiments at three locations were conducted in 2002 and 2003 to determine the optimum rate range that maximizes weed control and minimizes crop injury across a wide variety of soil textures and planting dates. At Beaumont, Eagle Lake, and Ganado, TX, preemergence application of 0.41 to 0.56, 0.38 to 0.43, and 0.36 to 0.42 kg ha-1 clomazone, respectively, provided optimum weed control with minimal rice injury. Data suggests that clomazone is safe to use on rice on sandy textured soils. Injury may occur, but, rates suggested from this research will minimize injury and achieve excellent weed control. As a result, amendments to the herbicide label will allow clomazone use on sandy textured soils giving rice producers more flexibility and access to another effective herbicide.
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Parameters defining flow resistance and the friction factor behavior in liquid annular seals with deliberately roughened surfacesVillasmil Urdaneta, Larry Alfonso 30 October 2006 (has links)
Non-contacting annular seals are internal sealing devices used in rotating machinery,
such as multistage centrifugal pumps and compressors. Their design affects both efficiency
and rotor stability. Traditional plain and labyrinth seals are being replaced with stators
containing different roughness patterns to reduce leakage and enhance rotor response.
Several roughened seal experiments with liquid and air have produced leakage data
indicating that the friction factor increases as the seal clearance is increased. Simplified
models based on bulk flow theory and MoodyâÂÂs approach to characterize wall friction in
pipes cannot explain this outcome.
This research is an extension of a 2-D numerical analysis of flat plate experiments with
water which found that friction factor of these surfaces is governed by the roughnessâÂÂ
ability to develop high static pressures. An exhaustive 3-D numerical analysis of several
experiments with liquid annular seals has been performed using a CFD code. Direct
numerical simulations (DNS) of turbulent channel flow and smooth seals were replicated
within 1% using Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations and turbulence
modeling. Similarly, measured groove seal leakage rates were reproduced within 2%. On
the other hand, no turbulence model combination predicts the leakage in most 3-D pattern
roughened seals with the same accuracy. Present results reproduce the friction factor
âÂÂplateauâ behavior predicted with the 2-D analysis and observed in the flat plate
experiments. They also reproduce the friction-factor-to-clearance indifference behavior, the
maximum friction factor observed in a specific roughness pattern size is independent of the actual clearance in a certain Reynolds number range, but clarify the role of the roughness
length-to-clearance ratio and the actual roughness size in defining the friction-factor-toclearance
proportionality.
All simulations indicate that roughened surface area and roughness aspect ratios are the
parameters defining the friction factor at a given seal clearance. The roughness pattern size,
relevant in determining the friction-factor-to-clearance proportionality, plays a moderate
role once the above cited ratios are defined. In any shape and size, shallow patterns are
predicted and observed to provide larger friction factors than deep patterns. Predictions also
confirm limited experimental data showing that friction factor is affected by the mean flow
orientation relative to the roughness pattern.
Solving RANS equations is sufficient to model simple seal geometries but might not be
enough to replicate turbulent flow in liquid annular seals with roughened surfaces.
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Mapping textures on 3d terrains: a hybrid cellular automata approachSinvhal, Swapnil 25 April 2007 (has links)
It is a time consuming task to generate textures for large 3D terrain surfaces in
computer games, flight simulations and computer animations. This work explores the
use of cellular automata in the automatic generation of textures for large surfaces. I
propose a method for generating textures for 3D terrains using various approaches - in
particular, a hybrid approach that integrates the concepts of cellular automata,
probabilistic distribution according to height and Wang tiles. I also look at other hybrid
combinations using cellular automata to generate textures for 3D terrains. Work for this
thesis includes development of a tool called "Texullar" that allows users to generate
textures for 3D terrain surfaces by configuring various input parameters and choosing
cellular automata rules.
I evaluate the effectiveness of the approach by conducting a user survey to
compare the results obtained by using different inputs and analyzing the results. The
findings show that incorporating concepts of cellular automata in texture generation for
terrains can lead to better results than random generation of textures. The analysis also
reveals that incorporating height information along with cellular automata yields better
results than using cellular automata alone. Results from the user survey indicate that a hybrid approach incorporating height information along with cellular automata and
Wang tiles is better than incorporating height information along with cellular automata
in the context of texture generation for 3D meshes.
The survey did not yield enough evidence to suggest whether the use of Wang
tiles in combination with cellular automata and probabilistic distribution according to
height results in a higher mean score than the use of only cellular automata and
probabilistic distribution. However, this outcome could have been influenced by the fact
that the survey respondents did not have information about the parameters used to
generate the final image - such as probabilistic distributions, the population
configurations and rules of the cellular automata.
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