16,474 research outputs found

    Lessons learned for composite structures

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    Lessons learned for composite structures are presented in three technology areas: materials, manufacturing, and design. In addition, future challenges for composite structures are presented. Composite materials have long gestation periods from the developmental stage to fully matured production status. Many examples exist of unsuccessful attempts to accelerate this gestation period. Experience has shown that technology transition of a new material system to fully matured production status is time consuming, involves risk, is expensive and should not be undertaken lightly. The future challenges for composite materials require an intensification of the science based approach to material development, extension of the vendor/customer interaction process to include all engineering disciplines of the end user, reduced material costs because they are a significant factor in overall part cost, and improved batch-to-batch pre-preg physical property control. Historical manufacturing lessons learned are presented using current in-service production structure as examples. Most producibility problems for these structures can be traced to their sequential engineering design. This caused an excessive emphasis on design-to-weight and schedule at the expense of design-to-cost. This resulted in expensive performance originated designs, which required costly tooling and led to non-producible parts. Historically these problems have been allowed to persist throughout the production run. The current/future approach for the production of affordable composite structures mandates concurrent engineering design where equal emphasis is placed on product and process design. Design for simplified assembly is also emphasized, since assembly costs account for a major portion of total airframe costs. The future challenge for composite manufacturing is, therefore, to utilize concurrent engineering in conjunction with automated manufacturing techniques to build affordable composite structures. Composite design experience has shown that significant weight savings have been achieved, outstanding fatigue and corrosion resistance have been demonstrated, and in-service performance has been very successful. Currently no structural design show stoppers exist for composite structures. A major lesson learned is that the full scale static test is the key test for composites, since it is the primary structural 'hot spot' indicator. The major durability issue is supportability of thin skinned structure. Impact damage has been identified as the most significant issue for the damage tolerance control of composite structures. However, delaminations induced during assembly operations have demonstrated a significant nuisance value. The future challenges for composite structures are threefold. Firstly, composite airframe weight fraction should increase to 60 percent. At the same time, the cost of composite structures must be reduced by 50 percent to attain the goal of affordability. To support these challenges it is essential to develop lower cost materials and processes

    Gamow-Teller GT+ distributions in nuclei with mass A=90-97

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    We investigate the Gamow-Teller strength distributions in the electron-capture direction in nuclei having mass A=90-97, assuming a 88Sr core and using a realistic interaction that reasonably reproduces nuclear spectroscopy for a wide range of nuclei in the region as well as experimental data on Gamow-Teller strength distributions. We discuss the systematics of the distributions and their centroids. We also predict the strength distributions for several nuclei involving stable isotopes that should be experimentally accessible for one-particle exchange reactions in the near future.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures (from 17 eps files), to be submitted to Phys.Rev.C; corrected typos, minor language change

    Internal heating driven convection at infinite Prandtl number

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    We derive an improved rigorous bound on the space and time averaged temperature of an infinite Prandtl number Boussinesq fluid contained between isothermal no-slip boundaries thermally driven by uniform internal heating. A novel approach is used wherein a singular stable stratification is introduced as a perturbation to a non-singular background profile, yielding the estimate 0.419[Rlog(R)]1/4\geq 0.419[R\log(R)]^{-1/4} where RR is the heat Rayleigh number. The analysis relies on a generalized Hardy-Rellich inequality that is proved in the appendix

    "Ultimate state" of two-dimensional Rayleigh-Benard convection between free-slip fixed temperature boundaries

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    Rigorous upper limits on the vertical heat transport in two dimensional Rayleigh-Benard convection between stress-free isothermal boundaries are derived from the Boussinesq approximation of the Navier-Stokes equations. The Nusselt number Nu is bounded in terms of the Rayleigh number Ra according to Nu0.2295Ra5/12Nu \leq 0.2295 Ra^{5/12} uniformly in the Prandtl number Pr. This Nusselt number scaling challenges some theoretical arguments regarding the asymptotic high Rayleigh number heat transport by turbulent convection.Comment: 4 page

    Behavior of shell-model configuration moments

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    An important input into reaction theory is the density of states or the level density. Spectral distribution theory (also known as nuclear statistical spectroscopy) characterizes the secular behavior of the density of states through moments of the Hamiltonian. One particular approach is to partition the model space into subspaces and find the moments in those subspaces; a convenient choice of subspaces are spherical shell-model configurations. We revisit these configuration moments and find, for complete 0ω0\hbar\omega many-body spaces, the following behaviors: (a) the configuration width is nearly constant for all configurations; (b) the configuration asymmetry or third moment is strongly correlated with the configuration centroid; (c) the configuration fourth moment, or excess is linearly related to the square to the configuration asymmetry. Such universal behavior may allow for more efficient modeling of the density of states in a shell-model framework.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure

    Poincare duality and Periodicity

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    We construct periodic families of Poincare complexes, partially solving a question of Hodgson that was posed in the proceedings of the 1982 Northwestern homotopy theory conference. We also construct infinite families of Poincare complexes whose top cell falls off after one suspension but which fail to embed in a sphere of codimension one. We give a homotopy theoretic description of the four-fold periodicity in knot cobordism.Comment: A significant revision. In this version we produce infinite families of examples of Poincare complexes whose top cell falls off after one suspension, but which do not embed in codimension one. We also rewrote the knot periodicity section in terms of Seifert surfaces rather than knot complement

    EXPLORING THE USE OF HUMAN RELIABILITY AND ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION METHODS TO INFLUENCE DESIGN REQUIREMENTS FOR NAVAL SYSTEMS

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    This thesis explores whether established methods from human reliability analysis and accident investigation can be applied early in system development to identify the design vulnerabilities that increase risk of system failure. Human reliability analyses evaluate performance shaping factors to quantify the likelihood of human failure before an accident occurs. Mishap investigations performed after an accident identify both human contributions to the system's failure and recommendations to avoid human failures in the future. This thesis proposes a method to evaluate system resiliency to variations in human performance and estimate the likelihood of human error. This method begins with functional analysis and failure mode analysis for a system concept, and then proposes two questionnaires based on human reliability and accident investigation criteria. This method is intended for the requirements development phase before system requirements are finalized and system design prototypes are completed. A demonstration of this method evaluates the human role using the electronic chart display and information system. Results from the demonstration reveal the two dominant factors that increase human error probability. The thesis concludes with an examination of the method's performance and results in support of validation of the method. Follow-on work is proposed to conduct a human subjects experiment for further validation and verification of the method.Civilian, Department of the NavyApproved for public release. distribution is unlimite
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