66,145 research outputs found
The influence of laser hardening on wear in the valve and valve seat contact
In internal combustion engines it is important to manage the wear in the valve and valve seat contact in order to minimise emissions and maximise economy. Traditionally wear in this contact has been controlled by the use of a valve seat insert and the careful selection of materials for both the valve and the insert. More recently, due to the increasing demands for both performance and cost, alternative methods of controlling the wear, and the resulting valve recession, have been sought. Using the heating effect of a laser to induce localised phase transformations, to increase hardness and wear resistance, in materials has been used since the 1970s, however it is only in recent years that it has been able to compete with more established surface treatment techniques, particularly in terms of cost, as new laser hardware has been developed. In this work, a laser has been used to treat the valve seat area of a cast iron cylinder head. In order to optimise the laser parameters for use on the head, preliminary tests were carried out to investigate the fundamental wear characteristics of untreated cast iron and also cast iron with a range of laser treatments. Previous work has identified the predominant wear mechanism in the valve and valve seat contact as impact on valve closure. Two bespoke test machines, one for testing basic specimens and one for testing components, were used to identify the laser parameters most likely to yield acceptable results when applied to a cylinder head to be used in a fired dynamometer test. ├В┬й 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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Intellectual Property Topics in Open University Distance-Taught Courses
Patents lie at the heart of engineering as a permanent and ongoing record of invention. We have taught the subject for about 5 years in both UG and PG courses, written from scratch owing to the absence of textbooks aimed specifically at engineers. Most practising engineers develop patent skills on the job rather than through conventional courses. But there is a need to present such courses as early as possible in the engineering curriculum, so that graduates have a flying start in their first employment
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Assessing atmospheric predictability on Mars using numerical weather prediction and data assimilation
Introduction: Studies of the time series of surface measurements of wind, pressure and temperature at the two Viking landers by Barnes [1], [2] revealed that baroclinic transient travelling waves on Mars occur mostly during northern hemisphere autumn, winter and early spring, and typically take the form of highly coherent patterns with planetary wavenumbers 1-3 that can persist for intervals of up to 30-60 sols before changing erratically. Such behaviour is almost unknown on Earth, where individual baroclinic weather systems typically persist for no longer than 5-10 days and seldom remain coherent around entire latitude circles. This occurrence of planetary-scale coherent baroclinic wave-like weather systems on Mars led to suggestions [3] that Mars' atmospheric circulation operates in a quite different dynamical regime to that of the Earth, one that tends to favour regular, symmetrical baroclinic wave activity in a manner reminiscent of the regular wave regimes found in laboratory fluid dynamics experiments on sloping convection in a rotating, thermally-driven fluid annulus (e.g. [4], [5]). In its extreme form, this hypothetical comparison would suggest the possibility of a fully non-chaotic atmospheric circulation on Mars, though subsequent modelling work [6] indicated that perturbations due to the thermal tide would lead to chaotic transitions back and forth between different intransitive wave states. This form of (relatively low-dimensional) chaotic modeflipping appeared to be consistent with the Viking observations of Mars, suggesting nevertheless that the intrinsic predictability of Mars' mid-latitude meteorology was qualitatively and quantitatively quite different from that of the Earth
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Effects of aerosols on the observed irradiance from the ultraviolet to near-infrared at the surface of Mars
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Potential vorticity, angular momentum and inertial instabilities in the Martian atmospheric circulation from assimilated analyses of MGS/TES
Data based on re-analyses of the MGS/TES observations have been used to map distributions of potential vorticity and axial absolute angular momentum per unit mass. The data, discussed in more details in [1] and [2] stretches over nearly three Martian years and cover a wide range of atmospheric conditions. The spatial distribution and variation in time of angular momentum and potential vorticity are closely related to the zonal-mean circulation. Maps of potential vorticity distributions have been used to establish regions and times favourable for inertial instabilities. A narrow region near the equator which extends throughout the atmosphere is shown to be able to sustain inertial instabilities at different times of the year. The presence of inertial instabilities is predicted from the necessary (but not sufficient) condition for the occurrence of regions of atmosphere with PV of opposite sign to that of the planetary vorticity (PVanomalies). These regions are characterized as being favorable to mixing on small scales, while at larger scales there may be potential links to Rossby wave breaking (Knox et. al. 2005][3]. Analyses of the data indicates a hemispheric asymmetry where the northern hemisphere is more favorable to inertial instabilities particularly during NH winter. Barnes et. al. (1996)[4] used a global Martian circulation model to find that, during dusty solstice conditions, the Martian tropical and mid-latitude atmospheric circulation approximates to an angular-momentum conserving Hadley circulation, and is responsible for creating regions near the equator of low potential vorticity. Using the assimilated data we re-examine these results for a wider range of atmospheric states, including the period of the 2001 planet-encircling dust storm
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The depth of the convective boundary layer and implications for a Walker-like circulation on Mars
Radio science observations indicate that the depth of the martian convective boundary layer varies strongly with surface height, although the surface temperature does not. We show that this effect is reproduced in martian limited area models and in global climate models. The implications for the global circulation when convective boundary layer depth varies with location are considered
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