1,632 research outputs found
Patterns of transition. Female native Dutch and ethnic minority employment patterns in the Dutch labour market, 1991 and 2002
This study analyses female native Dutch and ethnic minority employment patterns in the Dutch labour market. Focusing on life-course employment patterns, it aims to find out if native Dutch and ethnic minority women in the Netherlands have undergone a transition towards more labour market participation between 1991 and 2002. Three patterns of change in employment integration by age can be discerned. First, increasing employment levels for native Dutch women of almost all age groups, but in particular for those age groups that have to combine employment with rearing children. Second, a high employment level for Surinamese and Antillean women, revealing strong employment integration of all age groups, so that combining market work and rearing children does not hamper labour market integration. Third, a more traditional pattern for Turkish and Moroccan women, yet indicating an increased employment rate for almost all age groups, in particular 20-24 years. We find that critical life events such as motherhood have different effects on employment for Mediterranean, Caribbean and native Dutch women. In addition, the analysis shows that the attachment of both native Dutch and ethnic minority women to the labour market becomes stronger, and the influence of motherhood becomes smaller, over time. All in all, Caribbean women are the most attached to the labour market. Š 2006 Taylor & Francis
Literature review on pickling inhibitors and cadmium electroplating processes
Because introduction of hydrogen during bright-cadmium electroplating of high strength steels causes hydrogen-stress cracking, a program was undertaken to evaluate various processes and materials. Report describes effectiveness of inhibitors for reducing hydrogen absorption by steels
Study to minimize hydrogen embrittlement of ultrahigh-strength steels
Hydrogen-stress cracking in high-strength steels is influenced by hydrogen content of the material and its hydrogen absorption tendency. Non-embrittling cleaning, pickling, and electroplating processes are being studied. Protection from this hydrogen embrittlement is important to the aerospace and aircraft industries
Escapement of the Cape rock lobster (Jasus lalandii ) through the mesh and entrance of commercial traps
Metal-framed traps covered with polyethylene mesh used in the fishery for the South African Cape rock lobster (Jasus lalandii) incidentally capture large numbers of undersize (<75 mm CL) specimens. Air-exposure, handling, and release
procedures affect captured rock lobsters and reduce the productivity of the stock, which is heavily fished.
Optimally, traps should retain legalsize rock lobsters and allow sublegal animals to escape before traps are hauled. Escapement, based on lobster morphometric measurements, through meshes of 62 mm, 75 mm, and 100 mm was investigated theoretically under controlled conditions in an aquarium, and during field trials. SELECT models were used to model
escapement, wherever appropriate. Size-selectivity curves based on the logistic model fitted the aquarium and field data better than asymmetrical Richards curves. The lobster length at 50% retention (L50) on the escapement curve for 100-mm mesh in the aquarium (75.5 mm CL) approximated the minimum legal size (75 mm CL); however estimates of L50 increased to 77.4 mm in field trials where trapentrances
were sealed, and to 82.2 mm where trap-entrances were open.
Therfore, rock lobsters that cannot escape through the mesh of sealed field traps do so through the trap entrance of open traps. By contrast, the wider selection range and lower
L25 of field, compared to aquarium, trials (SR = 8.2 mm vs. 2.6 mm; L25 =73.4 mm vs. 74.1 mm), indicate that small lobsters that should be able to escape from 100-mm mesh
traps do not always do so. Escapement from 62-mm mesh traps with open entrance funnels increased by 40â60% over sealed traps. The findings of this study with a known size
distribution, are related to those of a recent indirect (comparative) study for the same species, and implications for trap surveys, commercial catch rates, and ghost fishing are discussed
A review of the literature on cleaning, pickling, and electroplating processes and relief treatments to minimize hydrogen embrittlement of ultrahigh-strength steels Special report
Cleaning, pickling, and electroplating processes to minimize hydrogen embrittlement of ultrahigh strength steel
A review of the literature on pickling inhibitors and cadmium electroplating processes to minimize hydrogen absorption by ultrahigh-strength steels
Literature review on pickling inhibitors and cadmium electroplating processes to minimize hydrogen absorption by ultrahigh strength steel
A study of hydrogen embrittlement of various alloys Annual summary report, 24 Jun. 1965 - 23 Jun. 1966
Hydrogen embrittlement of alloy cathodically charged and notched tensile metal
Review of literature on hydrogen embrittlement
Hydrogen embrittlement in high strength iron-base and nickel-base alloys and titaniu
Methodology for systematic design of cleanroom assembly workstations
Given the growth of cleanroom manufacturing for high-tech products and the high costs of operating within a cleanroom environment, an accompanying efficient manufacturing system is important. While abundant examples of efficient assembly manufacturing systems exist today, implementation of these into a sensitive cleanroom manufacturing environment has proven to be difficult. Against this background, this paper presents a transferable methodology to support the design of cleanroom assembly workstations which brings together aspects like cleanliness, ergonomics, modularity/flexibility and flow in an integrated manner. A set of guidelines was developed and embedded into a systematic procedure. The methodology was implemented and validated in a case at a high-tech precision manufacturing company, with high-mix-low-volume characteristics. The case study underlines the feasibility of the approach and the multicriterial improvement of workstation design towards the current state of the art. It also lead to a transferable cleanroom workstation design.</p
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