574 research outputs found

    Electro-chemical machining

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    This report introduces the reader to the process and to the requirements which must be considered for its installation on the shop floor. Although only electro-chemical shaping is dealt with, many of the parameters investigated are fundamental to other configurations. The machining characteristics of several high strength alloys and die steels have been investigated; also of aluminium and mild steel. Electrolyte heating effects and the physical attributes of the machined surface have been considered. Electrode and workpiece shapes have been simulated for static field examinations and these followed by investigations under dynamic machining conditions

    Integration interrupted: value loss from SIFT taxation

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    An after-tax value loss ratio compares newly defined SIFT’s to income trusts affected by the taxation change announced on October 31, 2006. The legislation produces after-tax loss of roughly 8% based on 2010 tax rates, approaching 15% for those in higher brackets. Tax integration is incomplete, providing 5% of the loss, but the legislation penalizes the payout of capital gains and return of capital, hampering efforts to determine a clientele result in the sector. Reduction in pre-tax cash flows and additional after-tax loss in valuation, made conversion and privatization of trusts the only viable alternatives when the tax became effective

    Quality of recording of diabetes in the UK: how does the GP’s method of coding clinical data affect incidence estimates? Cross-sectional study using the CPRD database

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    Objective: To assess the effect of coding quality on estimates of the incidence of diabetes in the UK between 1995 and 2014. Design: A cross-sectional analysis examining diabetes coding from 1995 to 2014 and how the choice of codes (diagnosis codes vs codes which suggest diagnosis) and quality of coding affect estimated incidence. Setting: Routine primary care data from 684 practices contributing to the UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink (data contributed from Vision (INPS) practices). Main outcome measure: Incidence rates of diabetes and how they are affected by (1) GP coding and (2) excluding ‘poor’ quality practices with at least 10% incident patients inaccurately coded between 2004 and 2014. Results: Incidence rates and accuracy of coding varied widely between practices and the trends differed according to selected category of code. If diagnosis codes were used, the incidence of type 2 increased sharply until 2004 (when the UK Quality Outcomes Framework was introduced), and then flattened off, until 2009, after which they decreased. If non-diagnosis codes were included, the numbers continued to increase until 2012. Although coding quality improved over time, 15% of the 666 practices that contributed data between 2004 and 2014 were labelled ‘poor’ quality. When these practices were dropped from the analyses, the downward trend in the incidence of type 2 after 2009 became less marked and incidence rates were higher. Conclusions: In contrast to some previous reports, diabetes incidence (based on diagnostic codes) appears not to have increased since 2004 in the UK. Choice of codes can make a significant difference to incidence estimates, as can quality of recording. Codes and data quality should be checked when assessing incidence rates using GP data

    Evaluating Floor Losses in the Context of QUB Measurements of a Passivhaus Dwelling

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    Measuring the performance of building fabric is increasingly important as stakeholders wish to compare as-built performance with design expectations. When measuring whole house performance (Heat Transfer Coefficient) heat losses through the floor in slab-on-ground type constructions are intractable and introduce uncertainty into measurements. As such efforts are often made to isolate them from measurements. The QUB method is a practical method of measuring whole house building performance. Previous work has shown floor losses can successfully be isolated from measurement through use of heat flux measurements and additional calculation steps. To further test this isolation procedure, three QUB tests were performed on a slab-on-ground Passivhaus dwelling. Whilst the whole house performance measurements agree with the design performance (all results within 11% of the design) the floor losses measured appear unrealistically high. The conditions of the tests, conducted in late summer and in a highly insulated property, are likely causing the heat flux measurements to capture heat being stored in the floor construction rather than heat being lost from the property. Follow up measurements in more preferable conditions are planned which will assist in determining the cause of these observations

    Party Wall Behaviour and Impact in QUB and Coheating Tests

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    In situ measurement can enable accurate evaluation of a building’s as-built performance. However, when measuring whole house performance, party walls introduce measurement uncertainty. Subsequently, it is common to “adjust” measurements to isolate heat transfer through party walls. This study explores the behaviour and impact of party walls in QUB and coheating measurements of a semi-detached house, presenting empirical evidence on the validity of these measurements where a party wall is present. Two different party wall heat transfer behaviours were observed through heat flux density measurements. Thermal charging is apparent in QUB tests and the initial stages of coheating. After 48 h of coheating, the party wall has become heat saturated and exhibits stable heat transfer. Consequently, using heat flux density measurements to isolate party wall heat transfer in QUB tests, where thermal saturation has not been achieved, can result in misleading inferences. The coheating and QUB measurements without party wall adjustment are in close agreement, irrespective of differing heating patterns in the neighbouring property. The generalisation of these findings is problematic since they describe the impact of the case study-specific built form and the test conditions. Future work to explore the impact of built form and test conditions is needed

    A methodology for creating building energy model occupancy schedules using personal location metadata

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    Occupants affect energy consumption in buildings by contributing internal heat gains, increasing internal carbon dioxide levels and adapting their behaviour. Estimated occupancy schedules are used in building energy models for regulatory compliance purposes and when empirical data are not available. Metadata, such as personal location data, is now collected and visualised on a global scale and can be used to create more realistic occupancy schedules for non-domestic facilities, such as large retail outlets. This paper describes a protocol for extracting and using freely available metadata to create occupancy schedules that are used as inputs for dynamic simulation models. A sample set of twenty supermarket building models are used to demonstrate the impact metadata schedules have when compared with models using the estimated schedules from regulatory compliance. Metadata can be used to create bespoke occupancy profiles for specific buildings, groups of buildings and building archetypes. This method could also help reduce the gap between predicted and actual performance. In the example models, those using the regulatory compliance schedules underestimated heating demand by approximately 10% and overestimated cooling demand by over 50% when compared to models using the metadata schedules. Although this work focuses on UK facilities, this methodology has scope for global application

    Lymph node homing cells biologically enriched for γδ T cells express multiple genes from the T19 repertoire

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    Sheep γδ T cells have been shown serologically to express T19, a membrane protein of 180-200 kDa which is a member of the scavenger receptor superfamily. Previous work from this laboratory resulted in the detection of a multigene family of T19-like genes in the sheep genome. In this study nucleotide sequences from several T19 genes were determined and are reported along with the corresponding segments of a number of expressed mRNA molecules. A segment of a single sheep T19-like gene was sequenced and these data, along with the corresponding sequences from cloned T19-like cDNA molecules from sheep and cow, were used to design an ollgonucleotide primer system suitable for amplification of corresponding segments of many T19 genes and their cDNAs. Between 30 and 40% of cloned T19 genes were amenable to amplification using the selected primers, and sequence analysis of cloned PCR products confirmed that different T19 genes encode unique amino acid sequences. The expression of multiple T19 genes was established using cDNA molecules obtained from a single sample of sheep lymphocyte mRNA. The possible role of the T19 family of genes is discusse
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