67 research outputs found
Determination and emulation of motor-like flux conditions for loss characterization by means of a single tooth geometry
High quantities and a demand on low costs in automotive drives result in new production methods of electrical machines. Besides, the electric drive train efficiency is improved to offer long ranges. Referring to this relationship the loss models of electrical machines are improved more and more. Focusing on iron losses, remarkable influences on the loss characteristics are attributed to the manufacturing processes. In this publication, a new approach of measuring the losses of a single stator tooth of an electrical machine considering motor-like flux conditions is introduced. Derivation of motor-like flux conditions is described, transfer to the test bench is defined and measurements are shown - concluding with a comparison of simulation and measurement as well as the identified tooth losses of the investigated machine. This gives the possibility to improve iron loss models in case of additional losses due to manufacturing influences
Decoding accuracy in eRF1 mutants and its correlation with pleiotropic quantitative traits in yeast
Translation termination in eukaryotes typically requires the decoding of one of three stop codons UAA, UAG or UGA by the eukaryotic release factor eRF1. The molecular mechanisms that allow eRF1 to decode either A or G in the second nucleotide, but to exclude UGG as a stop codon, are currently not well understood. Several models of stop codon recognition have been developed on the basis of evidence from mutagenesis studies, as well as studies on the evolutionary sequence conservation of eRF1. We show here that point mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae eRF1 display significant variability in their stop codon read-through phenotypes depending on the background genotype of the strain used, and that evolutionary conservation of amino acids in eRF1 is only a poor indicator of the functional importance of individual residues in translation termination. We further show that many phenotypes associated with eRF1 mutants are quantitatively unlinked with translation termination defects, suggesting that the evolutionary history of eRF1 was shaped by a complex set of molecular functions in addition to translation termination. We reassess current models of stop-codon recognition by eRF1 in the light of these new data
Services provision and temporary mobility: freedoms and regulation in the EU
International posting of workers and mobility of self-employed service suppliers lie between outright migration and trade in goods: their regulation, for both distributional and marketcorrecting purposes, is not as difficult to harmonize as that of labour markets, but personal mobility is more visible and socially intrusive than product market interactions. This paper analyzes economic and legal tensions between national regulatory frameworks and international competition in these areas, in both the intra-EU and global contexts, highlighting how interactions between the external and internal roles of the European Commission may foster efficient integration of markets and policies in this and other fields
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