120 research outputs found

    Influence of Axial Workpiece Positioning during Magnetic Pulse Welding of Aluminum-Steel Joints

    Get PDF
    Magnetic Pulse Welding (MPW) offers a method to economically join similar and dissimilar metals without the need for external physical or chemical binders, while avoiding the adverse heating effects seen in many welding techniques. MPW allows for the fabrication of joints via the harnessing of Lorentz forces, which result from discharging a current pulse through a coil. In the process an outer piece (flyer) is accelerated onto an inner piece (parent), and welding is achieved using propagating impact fronts. There are several geometrical factors to be considered including the flyer-coil distance, the parentflyer distance, as well as the axial relationship between flyer and coil (working length). Various shapes of the front are possible and each configuration has its own advantages and drawbacks. The goal of this work is to show not only how the aforementioned parameters are related, but also ways to optimize front propagations, which are vital to the welding result. This is done primarily by determining the influence of the working length of tubular MPW specimens. It is shown that for steel-aluminum joints in the given arrangements, three different front regimes exist, which are related to geometrical factors. These results are especially useful to avoid seemingly favorable but nevertheless suboptimal conditions for flyer movement that would reduce weld quality and energy efficiency of the process

    Symmetric evaluation of multimodal human-robot interaction with gaze and standard control

    Full text link
    © 2018 by the authors. Control of robot arms is often required in engineering and can be performed by using different methods. This study examined and symmetrically compared the use of a controller, eye gaze tracker and a combination thereof in a multimodal setup for control of a robot arm. Tasks of different complexities were defined and twenty participants completed an experiment using these interaction modalities to solve the tasks. More specifically, there were three tasks: the first was to navigate a chess piece from a square to another pre-specified square; the second was the same as the first task, but required more moves to complete; and the third task was to move multiple pieces to reach a solution to a pre-defined arrangement of the pieces. Further, while gaze control has the potential to be more intuitive than a hand controller, it suffers from limitations with regard to spatial accuracy and target selection. The multimodal setup aimed to mitigate the weaknesses of the eye gaze tracker, creating a superior system without simply relying on the controller. The experiment shows that the multimodal setup improves performance over the eye gaze tracker alone (p 0.05)

    INTCare: a knowledge discovery based intelligent decision support system for intensive care medicine

    Get PDF
    This paper introduces the INTCare system, an intelligent information system based on a completely automated Knowledge Discovery process and on the Agents paradigm. The system was designed to work in Hospital Intensive Care Units, supporting the physicians’ decisions by means of prognostic Data Mining models. In particular, these techniques were used to predict organ failure and mortality assessment. The main intention is to change the current reactive behaviour to a pro-active one, enhancing the quality of service. Current applications and experimentations, the functional and structural aspects, and technological options are presented

    Economics education and value change: The role of program-normative homogeneity and peer influence

    Get PDF
    In the light of corporate scandals and the recent financial crisis, there has been an increased interest in the impact of business education on the value orientations of graduates. Yet our understanding of how students' values change during their time at business school is limited. In this study,weinvestigate the effects of variations in the normative orientations of economics programs. We argue that interaction among economics students constitutes a key mechanism of value socialization, the effects of which are likely to vary across more-or-less normatively homogeneous economics programs. In normatively homogeneous programs, students are particularly likely to adopt economics values as a result of peer interaction. We specifically explore changes in power, hedonism, and self-direction values in a 2-year longitudinal study of economics students (N 5 197) in a normatively homogeneous and two normatively heterogeneous economics programs. As expected, for students in a normatively homogeneous economics program, interaction with peers was linked with an increase in power and hedonism values, and a decrease in self-direction values. Our findings highlight the interplay between program normative homogeneity and peer interaction as an important factor in value socialization during economics education and have important practical implications for business school leaders
    • …
    corecore