8 research outputs found

    Flash boiling effect on swirled injector spray angle

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    Abstract A swirled injector for gasoline direct injection was used to investigate the effect of fuel flash boiling on the initial angle of the spray. The hollow cone spray was injected into a constant pressure bomb filled with quiescent air. The fuel was fed at 7 MPa constant pressure to the injector. Three parameters were changed to study the effect of the injection conditions on the spray angle: fuel composition, fuel temperature and air pressure in the test bomb. The injector tip was heated up to 150°C to keep the fuel to be injected at the desired temperature. Different blends of iso-octane and n-pentane were used to obtain fuels with different bubble temperature at the same air pressure. In a reduced set of experiments, only with pure fuels, the ambient pressure was varied to change the bubble temperature independently from the fuel temperature. It was observed that, when the fuel conditions exceed the bubble point, the spray angle, measured close to the injector, becomes wider. This angle was chosen as an indicator of the flash boiling intensity. The experimental results show that the angle value is well fitted by a unique correlation if it is expressed as a function of the ratio P=Pb/ Pair between the fuel bubble pressure and the bomb pressur

    Fatigue analysis-based numerical design of stamping tools made of cast iron

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    This work concerns stress and fatigue analysis of stamping tools made of cast iron with an essentially pearlitic matrix and containing foundry defects. Our approach consists at first, in coupling the stamping numerical processing simulations and structure analysis in order to improve the tool stiffness geometry for minimizing the stress state and optimizing their fatigue lifetime. The method consists in simulating the stamping process by considering the tool as a perfect rigid body. The estimated contact pressure is then used as boundary condition for FEM structure loading analysis of the tool. The result of this analysis is compared with the critical stress limit depending on the automotive model. The acceptance of this test allows calculating the fatigue lifetime of the critical zone by using the S–N curve of corresponding load ratio. If the prescribed tool life requirements are not satisfied, then the critical region of the tool is redesigned and the whole simulation procedures are reactivated. This method is applied for a cast iron EN-GJS-600-3. The stress-failure (S–N) curves for this material is determined at room temperature under push pull loading with different load ratios R0σmin/σmax0−2, R0−1 and R00.1. The effects of the foundry defects are determined by SEM observations of crack initiation sites. Their presence in tested specimens is associated with a reduction of fatigue lifetime by a factor of 2. However, the effect of the load ratio is more important

    Survey of Infectious Etiologies of Bovine Abortion during Mid- to Late Gestation in Dairy Herds.

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    Bovine abortion of unknown infectious etiology still remains a major economic problem. Thus, we investigated whether Brucella spp., Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., Campylobacter spp. and Coxiella burnetii are associated with abortion and/or stillbirth in Tunisian dairy cattle. Using a pan-Chlamydiales PCR, we also investigated the role of Chlamydiaceae, Waddlia chondrophila, Parachlamydia acanthamoebae and other members of the Chlamydiales order in this setting. Veterinary samples taken from mid to late-term abortions from twenty dairy herds were tested. From a total of 150 abortion cases collected, infectious agents were detected by PCR in 73 (48.66%) cases, 13 (8.66%) of which represented co-infections with two infectious agents. Detected pathogens include Brucella spp (31.3%), Chlamydiaceae (4.66%), Waddlia chondrophila (8%), Parachlamydia acanthamoebae (5.33%), Listeria monocytogenes (4.66%) and Salmonella spp. (3.33%). In contrast, Campylobacter spp. and Coxiella burnetii DNA were not detected among the investigated veterinary samples. This demonstrates that different bacterial agents may cause bovine abortion in Tunisia. This is the first report suggesting the role of Parachlamydia acanthamoebae in bovine abortion in Africa. Further studies with a larger number of samples are necessary to confirm whether this emerging pathogen is directly linked to abortion in cattle

    Sexual EDC-ucation: What we Have Learned About Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals and Reproduction

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