8,909 research outputs found
Effect of fuel molecular structure on soot formation in gas turbine combustion
The effect of fuel variations at the same hydrogen content on the formation of soot in a gas turbine combustor was studied. Six fuels were burned to a combustor over a matrix of about 50 test conditions with test conditions ranging over 500-1800 kPa (5-18 atm) pressure and 500-1000 K burner inlet temperature; fuel-air ratios were varied from 0.008-0.024. Flame radiation measurements were made through a sapphire window toward the end of the primary zone. The hydrogen content of the six test fuels ranged from 12.80 to 12.88%. Five fuels emphasized hydrocarbon types: (mono, di, and tricyclic), naphthenes (decalin) and partially hydrogenated aromatics (tetralin); the sixth fuel emphasized final boiling point
Tangent power sums and their applications
For integer we study tangent power sum
We prove that, for every it
is integer, and, for a fixed p, it is a polynomial in of degree We
give recurrent, asymptotical and explicit formulas for these polynomials and
indicate their connections with Newman's digit sums in base Comment: 14 pages. Addition of reference: A.M. and I.M. Yaglom (1953
Fuel quality combustion analysis
A high pressure research combustor operating over a wide range of burner inlet conditions was used to determine the effects of fuel molecular structure on soot formation. Six test fuels with equal hydrogen content (12.8%) were blended to stress different molecular components and final boiling points. The fuels containing high concentrations (20%) of polycyclic aromatics and partially saturated polycyclic structures such as tetralin, produced more soot than would be expected from a hydrogen content correlation for typical petroleum based fuels. Fuels containing naphthenes such as decalin agreed with the hydrogen content correlation. The contribution of polycyclic aromatics to soot formation was equivalent to a reduction in fuel hydrogen content of about one percent. The fuel sensitivity to soot formation due to the polycyclic aromatic contribution decreased as burner inlet pressure and fuel/air ratio increased
Dewpoint temperature inversions analyzed
Dewpoint temperature inversion, with regard to other simultaneous meteorological conditions, was examined to establish the influence of meteorological variables on the variation of dewpoint temperature with height. This report covers instrumentation and available data, all the climatological features of dewpoint inversions, and specific special cases
The Deepwater Port Act of 1974
During the past two years of the 93rd Congress, no less than eleven different bills were introduced to deal with the various aspects of deep-water port development. Much has been made of the supposition that with energy conservation, higher petroleum prices, import quotas and all the other gas-saving ideas in vogue, deepwater ports have become an anachronism of pre-energy crisis days, the days of world-scale 400 in tankers and dreams of million-ton ULCC\u27s. The truth of the matter is that we shall still, for an indeterminate period, require imported oil, by the dictum of economics, it will come via the VLCC, and it will need to be off-loaded via the quickest and safest means possible. For better or worse, necessary or not, the Deepwater Port Act of 1974 was signed by President Ford as Public law 93-627 on January 3, 1975. The purpose of this work will be to examine this legislation, identify potential problems created, and suggest a decision-making framework within which coastal zone management agencies or other bodies can operate when faced with a deepwater port application
Obfuscation Framework Based on Functionally Equivalent Combinatorial Logic Families
This thesis aims to be a few building blocks in the bridge between theoretical and practical software obfuscation that researchers will one day construct. We provide a method for random uniform selection of circuits based on a functional signature and specific construction specifiers. Additionally, this thesis includes the first formal definition of an algorithm that performs only static analysis on a program; that is analysis that does not rely on the input and output behavior of the analyzed program. This is analogous to some techniques used in real-world software reverse engineering. Finally, this thesis uses the equivalent circuit library to empirically produce some statistical data about enumerated circuit families and explains how this data may be useful to future researchers
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