1,818 research outputs found

    Analysis and modeling of green wood milling: Chip production by slabber

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    During the primary transformation of wood, logs are faced with slabber heads. Chips produced are raw materials for pulp paper and particleboard industries. Efficiency of these industries is partly due to particle size distribution. Command of this distribution is no easy matter because of great dependence on cutting conditions and variability in material. This study aimed a better understanding and predictionof chip fragmentation. It starts with a detailed description of cutting kinematic and interaction between knife and log. This leads to the numerical development of a generic slabber head. Chip fragmentation phenomena were studied through experiments in dynamic conditions. These experiments were carried out thanks to a pendulum (Vc = 400 m/min). It was instrumented with piezoelectric force sensors and high speed camera. Obtained results agreed very well with previous quasi-static experiments

    Microvertebrates of the Lourinhã Formation (Late Jurassic, Portugal)

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    The Upper Jurassic of Portugal has been globally known for its microfossil vertebrate fauna thanks to the Konzentrat-Lagerstätte of the Guimarota mine, which provided thousands of bone fragments, isolated teeth, and even complete specimens. Other vertebrate microfossil assemblages have been studied around the world. Besides Guimarota, no other Portuguese Jurassic assemblage has been extensively studied. Hereby is presented a revision of the state of the art on Portuguese microvertebrate record, and the first microvertebrate studies on three localities from the Lourinhã Formation (Late Jurassic) hosted by a Portuguese institution; Porto das Barcas, Zimbral, and Valmitão has provided 2,497 microvertebrates skeletal remains and teeth, from which 824 specimens have been identified, described and assessed to the conservative-most taxa. The stratigraphy and sedimentology of the localities suggest that Porto das Barcas and Zimbral were floodplain mud deposits, and Valmitão was an oxbow lake mud deposit, with a slow rate of sedimentation. The remains have been attributed to fishes, amphibians, squamates, crocodylomorphs, and dinosaurs; but unfortunately, no mammaliaform material has been collected. Paleoecological analyses suggest Zimbral and Valmitão were dominated by a terrestrial fauna and more diverse than Porto das Barcas, dominated by an amphibious fauna. The Lourinhã Formation appears to have been closer to the shoreline than American localities in the Morrison and Cloverly Formations were, but more continental than Buenache and Las Hoyas localities (Spain) with swamp to lacustrine paleoenvironments. A detailed study on 125 crocodylomorph teeth from Valmitão support the presence of Goniopholididae, at least two Atoposauridae taxa, and Bernissartiidae in the Late Jurassic of Portugal, with a fauna either dominated by relative small individuals, either juveniles or adults or small taxa

    Real-time Kirchhoff migration for ultrasound imaging of the bone cortex

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    International audienceIn this paper, we explore the feasibility of real-time ultrasound imaging of the cortex of a long bone. We show that it is possible in vivo with a conventional clinical ultrasound probe and a fully programmable ultrasound scanner. The ultrasound images are reconstructed using Kirchhoff migration and taking into account the elastic anisotropy of cortical bone tissue. An image rate of 1 image per second was achieved

    Fast unfolding of communities in large networks: 15 years later

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    The Louvain method was proposed 15 years ago as a heuristic method for the fast detection of communities in large networks. During this period, it has emerged as one of the most popular methods for community detection, the task of partitioning vertices of a network into dense groups, usually called communities or clusters. Here, after a short introduction to the method, we give an overview of the different generalizations and modifications that have been proposed in the literature, and also survey the quality functions, beyond modularity, for which it has been implemented

    Radical azidation reactions and their application in the synthesis of alkaloids

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    Recent advances in radical azidation using sulfonyl azides are presented. For instance, radical carboazidation using α-iodoketones, desulfitative carboazidation, and anti-Markovnikov hydroazidation of alkenes are described. These novel methods tolerate a large number of functional groups and allow the synthesis of organic azides that would be difficult to synthesize otherwise. The transformation of the azides using reductive processes as well as a Schmidt reaction under nonacidic conditions were used to synthesize alkaloids including indolizidine 167B, monomorine I, cylindricine C, and lepadiformine

    Energy Model for the Design of Ultra-Low Power Nodes for Wireless Sensor Networks

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    AbstractThis article describes the modeling of a microsensor node for wireless sensor network applications. Considering the heterogeneous aspect of a sensor node, the developed model allows comparing different node configurations in order to make the best choice of components according to the specifications of the application. Therefore, our model allows identifying the need to design specific element or to use Components Of the Shelf

    Quantification of the volumetric benefit of image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) in prostate cancer: margins and presence probability map

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    International audiencePURPOSE: To quantify the prostate and seminal vesicles (SV) anatomic variations in order to choose appropriate margins including intrapelvic anatomic variations. To quantify volumetric benefit of image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty patients, receiving a total dose of 70 Gy in the prostate, had a planning CT scan and eight weekly CT scans during treatment. Prostate and SV were manually contoured. Each weekly CT scan was registered to the planning CT scan according to three modalities: radiopaque skin marks, pelvis bone or prostate. For each patient, prostate and SV displacements were quantified. 3D maps of prostate and SV presence probability were established. Volumes including minimal presence probabilities were compared between the three modalities of registration. RESULTS: For the prostate intrapelvic displacements, systematic and random variations and maximal displacements for the entire population were: 5mm, 2.7 mm and 16.5mm in anteroposterior axis; 2.7 mm, 2.4mm and 11.4mm in superoinferior axis and 0.5mm, 0.8mm and 3.3mm laterally. Margins according to van Herk recipe (to cover the prostate for 90% of the patients with the 95% isodose) were: 8mm, 8.3mm and 1.9 mm, respectively. The 100% prostate presence probability volumes correspond to 37%, 50% and 61% according to the registration modality. For the SV, these volumes correspond to 8%, 14% and 18% of the SV volume. CONCLUSIONS: Without IGRT, 5mm prostate posterior margins are insufficient and should be at least 8mm, to account for intrapelvic anatomic variations. Prostate registration almost doubles the 100% presence probability volume compared to skin registration. Deformation of SV will require either to increase dramatically margins (simple) or new planning (not realistic)

    Experimental and Numerical Study of High-Altitude Ignition of a Turbojet Combustor

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    This paper aims at contributing to the methodology used for the numerical prediction of ignition inside a combustion chamber. For this purpose, experiments are carried out in a model combustor with improved optical access. Laser tomography and high-speed video give a first insight of the unsteady airflow and the flame structure. Laser Doppler Anemometry is used to measure the gas flow velocity field, and the non-reactive two-phase flow is studied in detail using Particle Doppler Analysis. The velocity field of the burning spray is measured using Particle Image Velocimetry. Ignition tests are performed to evaluate the minimum global equivalence ratio. This in-depth database is used to validate RANS simulations conducted in parallel using ONERA CFD code CEDRE. The numerical model for transient, spherical kernel ignition, proposed in previous work, has been improved and fully implemented in CEDRE. A first parametric study on a basic configuration has been partially validated for gaseous, monodisperse and polydisperse two-phase mixtures, and gives a better understanding of the first stages of flame propagation. This model is then used in combination with CEDRE to estimate the ignition probability of given spark- plug positions in the model combustor
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