2,007 research outputs found

    NiAl alloys for structural uses

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    Alloys based on the intermetallic compound NiAl are of technological interest as high temperature structural alloys. These alloys possess a relatively low density, high melting temperature, good thermal conductivity, and (usually) good oxidation resistance. However, NiAl and NiAl-base alloys suffer from poor fracture resistance at low temperatures as well as inadequate creep strength at elevated temperatures. This research program explored macroalloying additions to NiAl-base alloys in order to identify possible alloying and processing routes which promote both low temperature fracture toughness and high temperature strength. Initial results from the study examined the additions of Fe, Co, and Hf on the microstructure, deformation, and fracture resistance of NiAl-based alloys. Of significance were the observations that the presence of the gamma-prime phase, based on Ni3Al, could enhance the fracture resistance if the gamma-prime were present as a continuous grain boundary film or 'necklace'; and the Ni-35Al-20Fe alloy was ductile in ribbon form despite a microstructure consisting solely of the B2 beta phase based on NiAl. The ductility inherent in the Ni-35Al-20Fe alloy was explored further in subsequent studies. Those results confirm the presence of ductility in the Ni-35Al-20Fe alloy after rapid cooling from 750 - 1000 C. However exposure at 550 C caused embrittlement; this was associated with an age-hardening reaction caused by the formation of Fe-rich precipitates. In contrast, to the Ni-35Al-20Fe alloy, exploratory research indicated that compositions in the range of Ni-35Al-12Fe retain the ordered B2 structure of NiAl, are ductile, and do not age-harden or embrittle after thermal exposure. Thus, our recent efforts have focused on the behavior of the Ni-35Al-12Fe alloy. A second parallel effort initiated in this program was to use an alternate processing technique, mechanical alloying, to improve the properties of NiAl-alloys. Mechanical alloying in the conventional sense requires ductile powder particles which, through a cold welding and fracture process, can be dispersion strengthened by submicron-sized oxide particles. Using both the Ni-35Al-Fe alloys to contain approx. 1 v/o Y2O3. Preliminary results indicate that mechanically alloyed and extruded NiAl-Fe + Y2O3 alloys when heat treated to a grain-coarsened condition, exhibit improved creep resistance at 1000 C when compared to NiAl; oxidation resistance comparable to NiAl; and fracture toughness values a factor of three better than NiAl. As a result of the research initiated on this NASA program, a subsequent project with support from Inco Alloys International is underway

    “Pockets of Hope”: Changing Representations of Diversity in Newbery Medal–Winning Titles

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    Newbery Medal–winning books provide cultural models for children’s developing cultural understandings of themselves and others. This article presents results of a critical content analysis that used sociocultural and historical lenses to examine representations of race/ethnicity, gender, and ability of main characters across the Newbery-winning corpus and how these representations have changed over the history of the award, 1922–2019. Findings present a lack of consistent diverse representation across all fields, with increased diverse representation in the most recent decades. The discussion contextualizes findings against historical events. Understanding the representations of diversity in these texts and the historical contexts within which such texts have emerged provides grounding to problematize the status quo of the curriculum and suggests a need for critical questioning and grand conversations

    Design and Development of the Clementine Spacecraft Sensor Bench

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    The Clementine spacecraft was developed to demonstrate the performance of BMDO\u27s lightweight sensor suite. The suite consisted of five different sensors (Star Trackers, UV/Vis, HiRes, NIR, LWIR) and a UDAR (Laser Impulse Detection And Ranging) system. The worst-case sensor operating requirements for the Clementine mission were: interface temperature with -20 to 2° C, alignment to +/- 100µRad, and jitter kept below 40 Rad in 40msec. The average hear dissipation of the suite was over 100 Watts while operating for two of the five hour lunar orbit. To accomplish the mission the sensor suite was integrated onto a single-substrate sensor bench within the spacecraft. The bench met the stringent thermal, alignment, and jitter requirements of the sensors, and concurrently isolated the sensors from outside spacecraft contamination, as well as thermal and structural flexure. Also taken into account were the mission design drivers of hot thermal environment in lunar orbit, limited volume in the spacecraft, minimal weight, limited budget, and a six month schedule from concept to delivery of a flight bench. The design and development of the sensor bench will be discussed. Three different types of heat pipes were used to transport the heat of the sensors to radiators located on the side of the spacecraft. A beryllium metal block was used as a thermal capacitor during peak heat loads. Thermal straps connected sensors to heat pipes to keep thermal gradients as little as 3° C per inch across the interface. The bench was fastened in a quasi-kinematic fashion to eliminate the transfer of spacecraft structural loads and thermal flexing, and yet was rigid enough to keep alignment through launch. The bench substrate itself was made out of aluminum honeycomb. The alignment mechanism consisted of a nut-on-nut method to attain and keep the 100µRad requirement. Volume and alignment constraints dictated sensor location on the bench. Development of the bench involved rigorous testing to insure requirements were met. These tests involved development alignment checks, vibration testing at the sensor bench level, system level qual vibes and TDVT, system level jitter testing, as well as the flight system vibe, TV AC and functional. Lessons learned will be discussed

    A sensitive and accurate atomic magnetometer based on free spin precession

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    We present a laser-based atomic magnetometer that allows inferring the modulus of a magnetic field from the free Larmor precession of spin-oriented Cs vapour atoms. The detection of free spin precession (FSP) is not subject to systematic readout errors that occur in phase feedback-controlled magnetometers in which the spin precession is actively driven by an oscillating field or a modulation of light parameters, such as frequency, amplitude, or polarization. We demonstrate that an FSP-magnetometer can achieve a ∼200 fT/√Hz sensitivity (<100 fT/√Hz in the shotnoise limit) and an absolute accuracy at the same level

    El porqué de los cultos religiosos: el caso del espiritismo en Puerto Rico.

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    Terapéutica del sistema de una secta en Puerto Rico.

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