5 research outputs found

    Recovery of materials from recycling of spent furnace linings

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    The objective of this research study is to evaluate the technical feasibility of liberating metal entrapped in the spent melting furnace linings obtained from a non-ferrous metal producer and develop an economic technique to recycle all of the materials presently landfilled. Five to six million pounds of spent melting furnace linings are landfilled annually from this non-ferrous producer --Abstract, page iii

    High frequency high amplitude magnetic field driving system for magnetostrictive actuators

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    Magnetostrictive actuators are the focus of many research and development activities, especially for high frequency applications. A key component of these actuators is the magnetic field driving system. In this research work, magnetic field drivers for magnetostrictive actuators are studied and a detailed methodology to build a low cost, power efficient, High Frequency High Amplitude (HFHA) magnetic field driver system is developed. The detailed study of magnetic field drivers suitable for magnetostrictive actuators revealed that the design of the driver must be done at a system level. Changes in geometry of the magnetostrictive material and the mechanical structure have significant effect on the efficiency of the driver. For the purposes of the research work, the magnetostrictive material was limited to two forms, viz. bulk rod and thin film. First, a suitable mechanical structure must be selected based on the amplitude and frequency requirements. For purposes of this work, a cantilever beam was chosen so that large amplitude can be achieved with proper sizing. Simple vibration analysis was used to size the beam so that the designed actuator frequency is within the third bending mode. Second, the magnetostrictive actuator was designed so that a mechanical bias and a magnetic bias can be applied to maximize the output of the actuator. The driver design primarily consists of a coil, a least resistant magnetic return path, a power source, and a command signal generator. Power drawn by the magnetic field driver increases with the frequency of operation due to increases in its inductance, skin effect losses, and eddy current losses. The magnetostrictive material with its low resistivity, when used as a core, therefore requires system level approach in designing the driver. Methodology developed to drive a magnetostrictive actuator includes determining optimal values of diameter of the magnetic wire, number of turns, length of the coil, and overall geometry. This methodology also accounts for the skin effect losses in the driving coil wire and the eddy current losses in magnetostrictive material. The power consumption is further reduced by creating an electrical resonance at the desired operating frequency by adding a capacitor in series with the driver. The least resistance magnetic return path is ensured by using a high magnetic permeability material and custom geometry permanent magnets. In this research work, response of the system comprising a well known model of cantilever beam with mirror and 1-d model of actuator with nonlinear magnetostrictive rod is measured empirically. The developed methodology is validated experimentally using a custom fabricated magnetostrictive mirror deflector for rapidly tunable laser system. The fabricated mirror deflector is capable of producing a deflection of 6.1 mrad at 5.28 kHz with a power consumption of 0.8 W and a deflection of 3.8 mrad at 10.8 kHz with 0.65 W. The electrical resonance circuits used have further reduced the power consumption by as much as 32%. The methodology is extended to MEMS thin film mirror deflectors. The work reported here is the first step towards building a comprehensive model of High Frequency High Amplitude driver for Magnetostrictive actuators. This needs more work to include the true nonlinear behavior of the magnetostrictive rod and the integrated system

    High Frequency High Amplitude Magnetic Field Driving System For Magnetostrictive Actuators

    No full text
    Magnetostrictive actuators are the focus of many research and development activities, especially for high frequency applications. A key component of these actuators is the magnetic field driving system. In this research work, magnetic field drivers for magnetostrictive actuators are studied and a detailed methodology to build a low cost, power efficient, High Frequency High Amplitude ( HFHA) magnetic field driver system is developed. The detailed study of magnetic field drivers suitable for magnetostrictive actuators revealed that the design of the driver must be done at a system level. Changes in geometry of the magnetostrictive material and the mechanical structure have significant effect on the efficiency of the driver. For the purposes of the research work, the magnetostrictive material was limited to two forms, viz. bulk rod and thin film. First, a suitable mechanical structure must be selected based on the amplitude and frequency requirements. For purposes of this work, a cantilever beam was chosen so that large amplitude can be achieved with proper sizing. Simple vibration analysis was used to size the beam so that the designed actuator frequency is within the third bending mode. Second, the magnetostrictive actuator was designed so that a mechanical bias and a magnetic bias can be applied to maximize the output of the actuator. The driver design primarily consists of a coil, a least resistant magnetic return path, a power source, and a command signal generator. Power drawn by the magnetic field driver increases with the frequency of operation due to increases in its inductance, skin effect losses, and eddy current losses. The magnetostrictive material with its low resistivity, when used as a core, therefore requires system level approach in designing the driver. Methodology developed to drive a magnetostrictive actuator includes determining optimal values of diameter of the magnetic wire, number of turns, length of the coil, and overall geometry. This methodology also accounts for the skin effect losses in the driving coil wire and the eddy current losses in magnetostrictive material. The power consumption is further reduced by creating an electrical resonance at the desired operating frequency by adding a capacitor in series with the driver. The least resistance magnetic return path is ensured by using a high magnetic permeability material and custom geometry permanent magnets. In this research work, response of the system comprising a well known model of cantilever beam with mirror and 1- d model of actuator with nonlinear magnetostrictive rod is measured empirically. The developed methodology is validated experimentally using a custom fabricated magnetostrictive mirror deflector for rapidly tunable laser system. The fabricated mirror deflector is capable of producing a deflection of 6.1 mrad at 5.28 kHz with a power consumption of 0.8 W and a deflection of 3.8 mrad at 10.8 kHz with 0.65 W. The electrical resonance circuits used have further reduced the power consumption by as much as 32%. The methodology is extended to MEMS thin film mirror deflectors. The work reported here is the first step towards building a comprehensive model of High Frequency High Amplitude driver for Magnetostrictive actuators. This needs more work to include the true nonlinear behavior of the magnetostrictive rod and the integrated system

    High Frequency High Amplitude Magnetic Field Driving System For Magnetostrictive Actuators

    No full text
    Magnetostrictive actuators are the focus of many research and development activities, especially for high frequency applications. A key component of these actuators is the magnetic field driving system. In this research work, magnetic field drivers for magnetostrictive actuators are studied and a detailed methodology to build a low cost, power efficient, High Frequency High Amplitude ( HFHA) magnetic field driver system is developed. The detailed study of magnetic field drivers suitable for magnetostrictive actuators revealed that the design of the driver must be done at a system level. Changes in geometry of the magnetostrictive material and the mechanical structure have significant effect on the efficiency of the driver. For the purposes of the research work, the magnetostrictive material was limited to two forms, viz. bulk rod and thin film. First, a suitable mechanical structure must be selected based on the amplitude and frequency requirements. For purposes of this work, a cantilever beam was chosen so that large amplitude can be achieved with proper sizing. Simple vibration analysis was used to size the beam so that the designed actuator frequency is within the third bending mode. Second, the magnetostrictive actuator was designed so that a mechanical bias and a magnetic bias can be applied to maximize the output of the actuator. The driver design primarily consists of a coil, a least resistant magnetic return path, a power source, and a command signal generator. Power drawn by the magnetic field driver increases with the frequency of operation due to increases in its inductance, skin effect losses, and eddy current losses. The magnetostrictive material with its low resistivity, when used as a core, therefore requires system level approach in designing the driver. Methodology developed to drive a magnetostrictive actuator includes determining optimal values of diameter of the magnetic wire, number of turns, length of the coil, and overall geometry. This methodology also accounts for the skin effect losses in the driving coil wire and the eddy current losses in magnetostrictive material. The power consumption is further reduced by creating an electrical resonance at the desired operating frequency by adding a capacitor in series with the driver. The least resistance magnetic return path is ensured by using a high magnetic permeability material and custom geometry permanent magnets. In this research work, response of the system comprising a well known model of cantilever beam with mirror and 1- d model of actuator with nonlinear magnetostrictive rod is measured empirically. The developed methodology is validated experimentally using a custom fabricated magnetostrictive mirror deflector for rapidly tunable laser system. The fabricated mirror deflector is capable of producing a deflection of 6.1 mrad at 5.28 kHz with a power consumption of 0.8 W and a deflection of 3.8 mrad at 10.8 kHz with 0.65 W. The electrical resonance circuits used have further reduced the power consumption by as much as 32%. The methodology is extended to MEMS thin film mirror deflectors. The work reported here is the first step towards building a comprehensive model of High Frequency High Amplitude driver for Magnetostrictive actuators. This needs more work to include the true nonlinear behavior of the magnetostrictive rod and the integrated system

    The Comprehensive Biomechanics and Load-Sharing of Semirigid PEEK and Semirigid Posterior Dynamic Stabilization Systems

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    Alternatives to conventional rigid fusion have been proposed for several conditions related to degenerative disc disease when nonoperative treatment has failed. Semirigid fixation, in the form of dynamic stabilization or PEEK rods, is expected to provide compression under loading as well as an intermediate level of stabilization. This study systematically examines both the load-sharing characteristics and kinematics of these two devices compared to the standard of internal rigid fixators. Load-sharing was studied by using digital pressure films inserted between an artificially machined disc and two loading fixtures. Rigid rods, PEEK rods, and the dynamic stabilization system were inserted posteriorly for stabilization. The kinematics were quantified on ten, human, cadaver lumbosacral spines (L3-S1) which were tested under a pure bending moment, in flexion-extension, lateral bending, and axial rotation. The magnitude of load transmission through the anterior column was significantly greater with the dynamic device compared to PEEK rods and rigid rods. The contact pressures were distributed more uniformly, throughout the disc with the dynamic stabilization devices, and had smaller maximum point-loading (pressures) on any particular point within the disc. Kinematically, the motion was reduced by both semirigid devices similarly in all directions, with slight rigidity imparted by a lateral interbody device
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