22 research outputs found

    An Experimental Investigation of the Air-Side Convective Heat Transfer Coefficient on Wire and Tube Refrigerator Condenser Coils

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    This thesis presents the results of an experimental investigation of the convective airside heat transfer from wire and tube condensers. The ftrst law of thermodynamics is applied to the "refrigerant", water in this investigation, flowing through the tubes in order to determine the total heat loss from the condenser. The test section is 910 mm (36 in) wide by 300 mm (12 in) tall; thus the coil is tested in an essentially inftnite stream. During the course of the experiments, the influence of the free stream air velocity ranging from 0.15 rn/s to 2.0 rn/s (0.49 ftls to 6.56 ftls) is established. The angle of attack, n, was varied from - 40 degrees to 40 degrees with the air flow always normal to the tubes ('11= 1t/2) and varied from -20 degrees to 20 degrees with the air flow normal to the wires ('II = 0). A method for , calculating view factors and the radiation heat transfer for wire and tube condensers is derived. The effect of the length of the coil is measered at 0 and -5??angle of attack. In addition, the influence of the ftn efftciency on the heat transfer is investigated and accounted for in the deftnition of the heat transfer coefftcient. The heat transfer data in the inertia dominated regime (Richardson number less than 0.0013) are correlated assuming NUcoil = t(Re, n, 'II)' g( S: ) with the Reynolds number based on the wire diameter. The range of Reynolds numbers covered is 15.7 < Rew < 207.5. The ranges of coil geometric parameters (nondimensionlized by dividing by the wire diameter) covered in this study are: 3.022 < nondimensional tube diameter < 5.134, 18.84 < nondimensional tube spacing < 40.94,2.819 < nondimensional wire spacing < 4.427,53.80 < nondimensional tube length< 143.6, and 207.2 < nondimensional wire length < 500.2. The function is represented by tl(a)??Reh (a) for 'II = 0 and h(a).Rei4 (a) for'll=1t/2. Approximately 1700 tests were performed in this investigation using seven different coils. The ftnal correlation is capable of predicting the data with 2cr equal to 16.7% for Ri < 0.0013. A limited natural convection study is also presented.Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Center Project 4

    Evidence for Parapatric Speciation in the Mormyrid Fish, Pollimyrus castelnaui (Boulenger, 1911), from the Okavango–Upper Zambezi River Systems: P. marianne sp. nov., Defined by Electric Organ Discharges, Morphology and Genetics

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    We report on parapatric speciation in the mormyrid fish,Pollimyrus castelnaui (Boulenger, 1911), from the Okavango and the Upper Zambezi River systems. We recognise samples from the Zambezi River as a distinct species, P. marianne, displaying an eastern phenotype of electric organ discharge (EOD) waveform (Type 3) that is distinct from the western EOD phenotype (Type 1) observed in P. castelnaui samples from the neighbouring Okavango. Samples from the geographically intermediate Kwando/Linyanti River (a tributary of the Zambezi that is also intermittently connected to the Okavango) presented a more variable third EOD phenotype (Type 2). In 13 out of 14 morphological characters studied, the Zambezi River samples differed significantly from P. castelnaui. Morphologically and in EOD characters, the Kwando/Linyanti fish are distinct from both P. castelnaui and P. marianne. Sequence analysis of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene unambiguously reveals that specimens from the Zambezi River System form a well supported taxon which clearly differs from P. castelnaui from the Okavango (1.5–2.5% sequence divergence).Within specimens from theKwando–Zambezi System some geographic differentiation can be detected (nucleotide substitutions up to 0.6%); but groups cannot be resolved with certainty. Significant allozyme differences were found between the Okavango and all other EOD types from the Upper Zambezi System, and, within the Zambezi System, between the Kwando (Type 2) and Zambezi (Type 3) individuals. The low Wright’s fixation index values, the lack of fixed allele differences, and small genetic distances provide little evidence for speciation between groups within the Zambezi System, but moderate to great fixation index values and significant allele frequency differences were observed between the Okavango and the other fishes. It is concluded that within the Zambezi System, differentiation between Kwando/Linyanti and Zambezi populations (as revealed by morphology and EOD waveform comparisons) is so recent that substantial genetic (allozyme and mitochondrial sequence) differences could not have evolved, or were not detected

    Variabilidade isoenzimática em oito raças de milho Isoenzyme variation among eight races of maize

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    Com o objetivo de avaliar a variabilidade genética e as relações de afinidade entre dezenove populações de oito raças de milho (Zea mays L.) - as comerciais antigas Cateto Sulino, Cateto Sulino Grosso, Cateto Nortista e Canario de Ocho, e as raças indígenas Moroti, Lenha, Entrelaçado e Caingang - analisaram-se os seguintes sistemas enzimáticos: glutamato oxalacetato transaminase (GOT), esterase (EST) e malato desidrogenase (MDH). Observou-se maior semelhança entre as raças pertencentes a um mesmo grupo, mas as populações analisadas não se agruparam de acordo com as raças, classificadas anteriormente segundo caracteres morfológicos. Os sistemas enzimáticos utilizados não permitiram a caracterização individual de cada uma das raças analisadas. As indígenas apresentaram maior variabilidade do que as comerciais antigas quanto ao número de alelos por loco e à porcentagem de locos polimórficos.<br>The objective of this study was to evaluate the genetic variability and affinity relationships among eight races of maize (Zea mays L.): four ancient varieties (Cateto Sulino, Cateto Sulino Grosso, Cateto Nortista and Canario de Ocho) and four indigenous (Moroti, Lenha, Entrelaçado and Caingang), through isoenzymatic polymorphisms. The following isoenzymatic systems were evaluated: Glutamate Oxaloacetate Transaminase (GOT), Esterase (EST) and Malate Dehydrogenase (MDH). It was observed a higher identity among races belonging to the same racial group; however, populations within each race were not grouped according, to previous morphological classification. Indigenous races showed higher average number of alleles per loci and percentage of polymorphic loci than the ancient varieties. This fact might be due to the selection the ancient varieties had been gone through

    Molecular phylogeny and divergence dates for Australasian elapids and sea snakes (hydrophiinae): evidence from seven genes for rapid evolutionary radiations

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    The definitive version may be found at www.wiley.comOne of the most prolific radiations of venomous snakes, the Australo-Melanesian Hydrophiinae includes approximately 100 species of Australasian terrestrial elapids plus all approximately 60 species of viviparous sea snakes. Here, we estimate hydrophiine relationships based on a large data set comprising 5800 bp drawn from seven genes (mitochondrial: ND4, cytb, 12S, 16S; nuclear: rag1, cmos, myh). These data were analysed using parsimony, likelihood and Bayesian methods to better resolve hydrophiine phylogeny and provide a timescale for the terrestrial and marine radiations. Among oviparous forms, Cacophis, Furina and Demansia are basal to other Australian elapids (core oxyuranines). The Melanesian Toxicocalamus and Aspidomorphus group with Demansia, indicating multiple dispersal events between New Guinea and Australia. Oxyuranus and Pseudonaja form a robust clade. The small burrowing taxa form two separate clades, one consisting of Vermicella and Neelaps calanotus, and the other including Simoselaps, Brachyurophis and Neelaps bimaculatus. The viviparous terrestrial elapids form three separate groups: Acanthophis, the Rhinoplocephalus group and the Notechis-Hemiaspis group. True sea snakes (Hydrophiini) are robustly united with the Notechis-Hemiaspis group. Many of the retrieved groupings are consistent with previous molecular and morphological analyses, but the polyphyly of the viviparous and burrowing groups, and of Neelaps, are novel results. Bayesian relaxed clock analyses indicate very recent divergences: the approximately 160 species of the core Australian radiation (including sea snakes) arose within the last 10 Myr, with most inter-generic splits dating to between 10 and 6 Ma. The Hydrophis sea snake lineage is an exceptionally rapid radiation, with > 40 species evolving within the last 5 Myr.K. L. Sanders, M. S. Y. Lee, R. Leys, R. Foster & J. Scott Keog
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