53 research outputs found

    Development of wear-resistant coatings compounds for high-speed steel tool using a combined cathodic vacuum arc deposition

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    This article presents the work on wear-resistance coatings (WRC), formed on the working surfaces of HSS tools, in order to increase their efficiency. The wear-resistant complex includes nitride layer, which increases the plastic strength of the HSS tool cutting wedge and cutting tool wear resistance, as well as a three-layer nano-structured composite coating that increases tool life. The equipment for the processes of ion nitriding in the gas plasma and the formation of nano-structured multi-layer composite coatings in the filtered metal-gas plasma cathode vacuum arc discharge has been developed. Particular attention was paid to the regularities in the formation of the nitride layer and optimization of its parameters and structure, together with the study of the properties and structure of functional coating layers, depending on the parameters of the deposition process. The parameters of the combined cathodic vacuum arc processing (CCVAP), provides minimum intensity of tool wear during the cutting tests. Sample of coated tools were used to conduct a certification of the developed WRC. This allowed determining the optimal parameters WRC that provided the maximum increase in tool life for a variety of cutting conditions. The outcomes are compared with uncoated HSS tool and standard commercial coatings

    Large deep-sea zooplankton biomass mirrors primary production in the global ocean

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    The biological pump transports organic carbon produced by photosynthesis to the meso- and bathypelagic zones, the latter removing carbon from exchanging with the atmosphere over centennial time scales. Organisms living in both zones are supported by a passive flux of particles, and carbon transported to the deep-sea through vertical zooplankton migrations. Here we report globally-coherent positive relationships between zooplankton biomass in the epi-, meso-, and bathypelagic layers and average net primary production (NPP). We do so based on a global assessment of available deep-sea zooplankton biomass data and large-scale estimates of average NPP. The relationships obtained imply that increased NPP leads to enhanced transference of organic carbon to the deep ocean. Estimated remineralization from respiration rates by deep-sea zooplankton requires a minimum supply of 0.44 Pg C y(-1) transported into the bathypelagic ocean, comparable to the passive carbon sequestration. We suggest that the global coupling between NPP and bathypelagic zooplankton biomass must be also supported by an active transport mechanism associated to vertical zooplankton migration
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