110 research outputs found

    Influence of the cutting tool compliance on the workpiece surface shape in face milling of workpiece compounds

    Get PDF
    A currently common method to design high-performance workpieces is to combine two or more materials to one compound. In this way, workpieces can be composed of the most qualified materials according to local loads. When machining high-performance workpiece compounds high quality requirements concerning the accuracy of dimension and shape as well as surface roughness must be fulfilled. However, in case of parallel machining, where the cutting edge moves from one material into the other within one cutting tool revolution, unequal cutting properties have a significant negative influence on tool wear and surface quality. Shape deviations of the surface occur, which are not detected when machining the single materials. The four most significant shape deviations that affect the workpiece quality are the material height deviation, transition deviation at the material joint as well as surface roughness deviation. This paper contains new approaches on the prediction of the surface shape that is generated by a face milling process. The focus is on the transition deviation at the material joint. It arises from a force impulse that is applied on the cutting tool and creates a wavy surface on the workpiece. This shape is predicted via cutting force prediction as well as frequency response analysis of the cutting tool and workpiece in relation to different tool holders. Furthermore, deviations between calculated surface shapes and measured surface shapes subsequent to machining tests are evaluated.DFG/DE 447/113-

    Modeling of Workpiece Shape Deviations in face Milling of Parallel Workpiece Compounds

    Get PDF
    The mass reduction of components is one of the most effective ways to reduce fuel consumption and emissions in the automotive and aircraft industry. A lightweight strategy used for highly loaded components is the combination of different materials to workpiece compounds. In that way components can be designed depending on the local load using the most qualified material. For the production of high-performance workpiece compounds high quality requirements concerning the accuracy of dimension and shape as well as surface roughness must be fulfilled. However, machining of workpiece compounds leads to unfavorable changes of the workpiece quality in comparison to machining of the single materials. Significant shape deviations occur when different materials are machined alternately in one cutting operation. This is due to unequal material properties, cutting characteristics, chip formation mechanisms as well as characteristic interactions between the single components. This paper describes the causes of the three main criteria material height deviation, transition deviation and surface roughness deviation that significantly influence the surface quality in parallel machining. The focus is on the process understanding as well as modeling of the surface defects. The approaches and results show that the characteristic shape deviations can be predicted. With the knowledge of the causes that lead to the surface defects in parallel machining it is possible to optimize the process setup for a surface quality oriented machining process of a workpiece compound. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V

    Cardiac Mechanical Alterations and Genotype Specific Differences in Subjects With Long QT Syndrome

    Get PDF
    AbstractObjectivesThis study aimed to explore systolic and diastolic function and to investigate genotype-specific differences in subjects with long QT syndrome (LQTS).BackgroundLQTS is an arrhythmogenic cardiac ion channelopathy that traditionally has been considered a purely electrical disease. The most commonly affected ion channels are the slow potassium channel, IKs (KCNQ1 gene/LQT1), and the rapid potassium channel, IKr (KCNH2 gene/LQT2). Recent reports have indicated mechanical abnormalities in patients with LQTS.MethodsWe included 192 subjects with genotyped LQTS (139 LQT1, 53 LQT2). Healthy persons of similar age and sex as patients served as controls (n = 60). Using echocardiography, we assessed systolic function by left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF), global longitudinal strain (GLS), and contraction duration (16 LV segments). Mechanical dispersion was calculated as standard deviation of contraction duration. Time difference between contraction duration and QT interval from electrocardiography (ECG) was defined as electromechanical time difference. We assessed diastolic function by transmitral filling velocities, early diastolic myocardial velocity (e′), and left atrial volume index (LAVI). Heart rate corrected QT interval (QTc) was assessed from 12-lead ECG.ResultsSystolic function by GLS was reduced in subjects with LQTS compared with healthy controls (−22.1 ± 2.1% vs. −23.0 ± 2.0%, p = 0.01), and GLS was worse in subjects with LQT2 compared with subjects with LQT1 (p = 0.01). Subjects with LQTS had longer contraction duration (426 ± 41 ms vs. 391 ± 36 ms, p < 0.001) and more dispersed contractions (33 ± 14 ms vs. 21 ± 7 ms, p < 0.001) compared with healthy controls. Diastolic function was also reduced in subjects with LQTS compared with healthy controls; e′ was lower (10.7 ± 2.7 cm/s vs. 12.5 ± 2.0 cm/s, p < 0.001), and LAVI was increased (30 ± 8 ml/m2 vs. 26 ± 5 ml/m2, p = 0.01), also when adjusted for age and other possible confounders.ConclusionsSubjects with LQTS had a consistent reduction in both systolic and diastolic function compared with healthy controls. Differences in myocardial function between subjects with LQT1 and subjects with LQT2 may indicate that mechanical alterations in LQTS are genotype specific

    The phase-dependent linear conductance of a superconducting quantum point contact

    Full text link
    The exact expression for the phase-dependent linear conductance of a weakly damped superconducting quantum point contact is obtained. The calculation is performed by summing up the complete perturbative series in the coupling between the electrodes. The failure of any finite order perturbative expansion in the limit of small voltage and small quasi-particle damping is analyzed in detail. In the low transmission regime this nonperturbative calculation yields a result which is at variance with standard tunnel theory. Our result predicts the correct sign of the quasi-particle pair interference term and exhibits an unusual phase-dependence at low temperatures in qualitative agreement with the available experimental data.Comment: 12 pages (revtex) + 1 postscript figure. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    From prison to detention: the carceral trajectories of foreign-national prisoners in the United Kingdom

    Get PDF
    The United Kingdom has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using law and policy to pave the way for their expulsion from the country. Imprisonment, then, becomes the first stage in a complex process intertwining identity, belonging and punishment. We draw here on research data from two projects to understand the carceral trajectories of foreign-national offenders in the UK. We consider the lived experiences of male foreign-nationals in two sites: prison and immigration detention. The narratives presented show how imprisonment and detention coalesce within the deportation regime as a ‘double punishment’, one that is highly racialised and gendered. We argue that the UK’s increasingly punitive response to foreign-national offenders challenges the traditional purposes of punishment by sidestepping prisoners’ rehabilitative efforts and denying ‘second chances’ while enacting permanent exclusion through bans on re-entry

    The role of oversight in foreign-national only prisons: counteracting the disapplication of rehabilitation

    Get PDF
    In several European countries, prisons have been created solely to house foreign national prisoners without leave to remain. Contrary to contemporary international human rights law and standards on prison management, there seems to be a trend towards the disapplication of rehabilitative theory and practice for this group of prisoners. In particular, they do not seem to receive the same preparation for release and reintegrative support as other prisoners. This paper explores the role international standards and oversight bodies have in upholding rehabilitation as the foundational objective for prison management in foreign national only prisons. It outlines the changes to the prison estate, policy and regime that have resulted from the increasing focus on removal within both the prison and penal process. The consequences of the disapplication of rehabilitation for prisons, prison officers, prisoners and society itself are analysed before the paper moves to examine the role oversight bodies could and should play in the protection of the rights of this vulnerable category of prisoner and the primacy that should be accorded to rehabilitative theory and practice. It concludes by asking whether such standards and oversight have inverted the panopticon by placing the trigger for international reactions in the hands of prisoners and NGOs

    The area-based social patterning of injuries among 10 to 19 year olds Changes over time in the Stockholm County

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Area-based studies of childhood injuries strongly suggest that neighborhood socio-demographic and economic circumstances impact on various – though not all – types of injuries. The primary aim of this study was to investigate the stability over time of the association between area characteristics and childhood injuries of various causes.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Register-based and ecological, the study encompassed Stockholm County's 138 parishes, and considered two time periods (1993–95; 2003–05). Two indices were measured: economic deprivation and social fragmentation, and parishes were allocated to their respective quintile on each index. Data on both unintentional and intentional injuries for children (boys and girls) aged 10–14 and 15–19 respectively were gathered from the County Council's hospital inpatient register. For each period and index, gender, age and cause-specific comparisons were made to assess the rate ratios (with 95% confidence intervals) of being injured using parishes belonging to the best index level as a comparison group. A series of simple and partial Pearson correlations were also calculated to assess the independent contribution of each index.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Regardless of time period, there were rather few significant rate ratios and, when they occurred, there were both under and excess risks. For instance, in each period, boys from both age groups living in parishes with the highest levels of economic deprivation had lower rate of injury as a motor vehicle rider. Most strikingly, intentional injuries were more frequent during the second time period and in considerable excess among girls aged 15–19 from more economically deprived areas. Also, during that last period, none of the injury causes correlated significantly with the index of social fragmentation after adjustment for economic deprivation (partial correlation).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Over a ten-year period, differential economic deprivation among parishes has widened more than social fragmentation in Stockholm County. The correlation between those indices is high in both periods of time whilst the association between the levels of each index and injury rates varies depending on group of injuries or time period considered. It is of concern that intentional injuries have increased numerically and are significantly and positively correlated with economic deprivation (net of social fragmentation), in particular among girls.</p
    • …
    corecore