53,125 research outputs found
Small fuel cell to eliminate pressure caused by gassing in high energy density batteries Progress report, 30 Sep. - 30 Dec. 1965
Miniature fuel cells to eliminate pressure caused by gassing in sealed silver-zinc batterie
Small fuel cell to eliminate pressure caused by gassing in high energy density batteries Final report, 30 Jun. 1965 - 30 Jun. 1966
Gas pressure reduction in silver-zinc batteries by installing miniature hydrogen-oxygen fuel cel
Small fuel cell to eliminate pressure caused by gassing in high energy density batteries Progress report, 30 Dec. 1965 - 31 Mar. 1966
Miniature fuel cell as pressure regulators in silver-zinc batterie
Rare earth elements in Andaman Island surface water : geochemical tracers for the monsoon
The Asian summer monsoon affects the lives of billions of people. With the aim of identifying geochemical tracers for the monsoon related freshwater input from the major rivers draining into the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea we have taken surface seawater samples from various locations up and down the Andaman Islands during 2011. Importantly, in some locations samples have been taken in March, July and November, covering most of a seasonal cycle and different monsoon phases. Samples were collected from the side of small wooden boats or while swimming and were filtered within a few hours at 0.45 or 0.22 microns using the vacuum produced by a water jet or a hand operated peristaltic pump. Filtered and unfiltered samples were acidified to < pH 2 and analysed for Y and the REEs with an automated online preconcentration ICP-MS technique [1].
The local input of REEs from streams and sediment rich areas such as mangrove environments is clearly identified by middle REE enrichments in the shale normalised patterns of some samples. These middle REE bulges accompany large increases in dissolved REE concentrations at some locations, especially for the July samples obtained during the peak monsoon season with frequent storms. Y/Ho fractionation aslo occurs during the local input of dissolved REEs with affected samples having lower Y/Ho ratios. Conversly, some samples, in particular those taken after heavy rainfall in March, show strong REE scavenging accompanied by the prefferential removal of dissolved light REEs and higher Y/Ho ratios.
The time series at a location away from local input sources shows remarkably similar REE patterns and concentraions in March and July. Then in October-November, following the peak in monsoon river discharge, the dissolved REE concentration increases by almost a factor of 2. The notable exception to this seasonal pattern is the Ce anomally which is around 0.3 in March and November but 0.6 in July, implying less oxidative removal of Ce(IV) during the peak summer monsoon rains. With the exception of elevated dissolved Ce concentrations, the North Pacific Deep Water normalised REE patterns are similar to those reported for offshore samples from the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea [2]. These seawater normalised patterns are distinctive having a middle REE enriched arc with similar light and heavy REE values suggesting the input from large rivers in the region is traceable using seawater REE chemistry.
[1] Hathorne et al. (2012), Online preconcentration ICP-MS analysis of rare earth elements in seawater, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 13, Q01020, doi:10.1029/2011GC003907.
[2] Amakawa et al. (2000), Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 64, 1715-1727
Small fuel cell to eliminate pressure caused by gassing in high energy density batteries Progress report, 30 Jun. - 30 Sep. 1965
Miniature fuel cells as proposed solution to gassing and pressure rise problems in sealed silver-zinc batterie
Some Calculable Contributions to Entanglement Entropy
Entanglement entropy appears as a central property of quantum systems in
broad areas of physics. However, its precise value is often sensitive to
unknown microphysics, rendering it incalculable. By considering parametric
dependence on correlation length, we extract finite, calculable contributions
to the entanglement entropy for a scalar field between the interior and
exterior of a spatial domain of arbitrary shape. The leading term is
proportional to the area of the dividing boundary; we also extract finite
subleading contributions for a field defined in the bulk interior of a
waveguide in 3+1 dimensions, including terms proportional to the waveguide's
cross-sectional geometry; its area, perimeter length, and integrated curvature.
We also consider related quantities at criticality and suggest a class of
systems for which these contributions might be measurable.Comment: 4+ pages, 1 figure. v2: Some clarifications and more references;
updated to resemble version published in PR
Thrust-reverser flow investigation on a twin-engine transport
An investigation was conducted in the NASA Langley 14 x 22 foot Subsonic Tunnel to study the effects of engine thrust reversing on an aft-mounted twin-engine transport and to develop effective testing techniques. Testing was done over a fixed and a moving-belt ground plane and over a pressure instrumented ground board. Free-stream dynamic pressure was set at values up to 12.2 psf, which corresponded to a maximum Reynolds number based on the mean aerodynamic chord of 765,000. The thrust reversers examined included cascade, target and four-door configurations. The investigation focused on the range of free-stream velocities and engine thrust-reverser flow rates that would be typical for landing ground-roll conditions. Flow visualization techniques were investigated, and the use of water or smoke injected into the reverser flow proved effective to determine the forward progression of the reversed flow and reingestion limits. When testing over a moving-belt ground plane, as opposed to a fixed ground plane, forward penetration of the reversed flow was reduced. The use of a pressure-instrumented ground board enabled reversed flow ground velocities to be obtained, and it provided a means by which to identify the reversed flow impingement point on the ground
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