14,638 research outputs found
A simple method for enhanced vibration-based structural health monitoring
This study suggests a novel method for structural vibration-based health monitoring for beams which only utilises the first natural frequency of the beam in order to detect and localise a defect. The method is based on the application of a static force in different positions along the beam. It is shown that the application of a static force on a damaged beam induces stresses at the defect which in turn cause changes in the structural natural frequencies. A very simple procedure for damage detection is suggested which uses a static force applied in just one point, in the middle of the beam. Localisation is made using two additional application points of the static force. Damage is modelled as a small notch through the whole width of the beam. The method is demonstrated and validated numerically, using a finite element model of the beam, and experimentally for a simply supported beam. Our results show that the frequency variation with the change of the force application point can be used to detect and in the same time localize very precisely even a very small defect. The method can be extended for health monitoring of other more complicated structures
A simple method for enhanced vibration-based structural health monitoring
This study suggests a novel method for structural vibration-based health monitoring for beams which only utilises the first natural frequency of the beam in order to detect and localise a defect. The method is based on the application of a static force in different positions along the beam. It is shown that the application of a static force on a damaged beam induces stresses at the defect which in turn cause changes in the structural natural frequencies. A very simple procedure for damage detection is suggested which uses a static force applied in just one point, in the middle of the beam. Localisation is made using two additional application points of the static force. Damage is modelled as a small notch through the whole width of the beam. The method is demonstrated and validated numerically, using a finite element model of the beam, and experimentally for a simply supported beam. Our results show that the frequency variation with the change of the force application point can be used to detect and in the same time localize very precisely even a very small defect. The method can be extended for health monitoring of other more complicated structures
Dressing approach to the nonvanishing boundary value problem for the AKNS hierarchy
We propose an approach to the nonvanishing boundary value problem for
integrable hierarchies based on the dressing method. Then we apply the method
to the AKNS hierarchy. The solutions are found by introducing appropriate
vertex operators that takes into account the boundary conditions.Comment: Published version Proc. Quantum Theory and Symmetries 7
(QTS7)(Prague, Czech Republic, 2011
SWKB Quantization Rules for Bound States in Quantum Wells
In a recent paper by Gomes and Adhikari (J.Phys B30 5987(1997)) a matrix
formulation of the Bohr-Sommerfield quantization rule has been applied to the
study of bound states in one dimension quantum wells. Here we study these
potentials in the frame work of supersymmetric WKB (SWKB) quantization
approximation and find that SWKB quantization rule is superior to the modified
Bohr-Sommerfield or WKB rules as it exactly reproduces the eigenenergies.Comment: 8 page
Structural properties of crumpled cream layers
The cream layer is a complex heterogeneous material of biological origin
which forms spontaneously at the air-milk interface. Here, it is studied the
crumpling of a single cream layer packing under its own weight at room
temperature in three-dimensional space. The structure obtained in these
circumstances has low volume fraction and anomalous fractal dimensions. Direct
means and noninvasive NMR imaging technique are used to investigate the
internal and external structure of these systems.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted in J. Phys. D: Appl. Phy
Ionization rates in a Bose-Einstein condensate of metastable Helium
We have studied ionizing collisions in a BEC of He*. Measurements of the ion
production rate combined with measurements of the density and number of atoms
for the same sample allow us to estimate both the 2 and 3-body contributions to
this rate. A comparison with the decay of the number of condensed atoms in our
magnetic trap, in the presence of an rf-shield, indicates that ionizing
collisions are largely or wholly responsible for the loss. Quantum depletion
makes a substantial correction to the 3-body rate constant.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Getting the elastic scattering length by observing inelastic collisions in ultracold metastable helium atoms
We report an experiment measuring simultaneously the temperatureand the flux
of ions produced by a cloud of triplet metastablehelium atoms at the
Bose-Einstein critical temperature. The onsetof condensation is revealed by a
sharp increase of the ion fluxduring evaporative cooling. Combining our
measurements withprevious measurements of ionization in a pure BEC,we extract
an improved value of the scattering length nm. The analysis
includes corrections takinginto accountthe effect of atomic interactions on the
criticaltemperature, and thus an independent measurement of the
scatteringlength would allow a new test of these calculations
Crescimento de Eucalyptus benthamii submetido à aplicação de lama de cal e cinza de madeira.
bitstream/item/145220/1/CT-373-Maeda.pd
Development of paper-based color test-strip for drug detection in aquatic environment: Application to oxytetracycline
The wide use of antibiotics in aquaculture has led to the emergence of resistant microbial species. It should be avoided/minimized by controlling the amount of drug employed in fish farming. For this purpose, the present work proposes test-strip papers aiming at the detection/semi-quantitative determination of organic drugs by visual comparison of color changes, in a similar analytical procedure to that of pH monitoring by universal pH paper. This is done by establishing suitable chemical changes upon cellulose, attributing the paper the ability to react with the organic drug and to produce a color change. Quantitative data is also enabled by taking a picture and applying a suitable mathematical treatment to the color coordinates given by the HSL system used by windows.
As proof of concept, this approach was applied to oxytetracycline (OXY), one of the antibiotics frequently used in aquaculture. A bottom-up modification of paper was established, starting by the reaction of the glucose moieties on the paper with 3-triethoxysilylpropylamine (APTES). The so-formed amine layer allowed binding to a metal ion by coordination chemistry, while the metal ion reacted after with the drug to produce a colored compound. The most suitable metals to carry out such modification were selected by bulk studies, and the several stages of the paper modification were optimized to produce an intense color change against the concentration of the drug. The paper strips were applied to the analysis of spiked environmental water, allowing a quantitative determination for OXY concentrations as low as 30 ng/mL. In general, this work provided a simple, method to screen and discriminate tetracycline drugs, in aquaculture, being a promising tool for local, quick and cheap monitoring of drugs
O aumento da produção de carvão vegetal por meio carbonização em alta pressão.
Carvão vegetal é largamente utilizado em alguns setores da indústria brasileira, e o estudo de dispositivos para melhorar a conversão de biomassa em carvão é muito importante para o setor. A carbonização em alta pressão testadas neste trabalho é uma possível rota para o aumento da produção de carvão. Os experimentos foram realizados em um reator de leito fixo usando uma resistência de cartucho como elemento de aquecimento, tendo a temperatura monitorada por um termopar associado a um controlador PID. O tempo de aquecimento, a taxa de aquecimento, a pressão e o tempo de residência foram monitorados para estabelecer maiores rendimentos na produção de carvão. A taxa de aquecimento foi mantida em 20°C/min. O tempo de residência variou de um baixo nível de 55 minutos para um nível elevado de 95 minutos e os níveis de pressão partiu da pressão atmosférica e uma pressão de 5 bar positiva. Utilizaram-se no processo endocarpo de dendê (Elaeis guianeensis) e serragem de eucalipto (Eucalyptus spp.), contudo nos testes em pressão positiva somente a serragem pode ser neste momento testada. Com a pressão atmosférica e o tempo de permanência em 55 minutos o rendimento em carvão da serragem de eucalipto foi de 43%, enquanto que a 5 bar e 95 minutos de tempo de residência do rendimento foi de 47%. O endocarpo de dendê teve um rendimento de 41% e foi medida apenas a pressão atmosférica. Estes resultados indicam que uma pressão positiva aumenta o rendimento em carvão vegetal e que possivelmente fará o mesmo com as outras materiais primas a serem utilizadas, incluindo o endocarpo de dendê, o qual será o próximo passo do trabalho
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