221 research outputs found

    Internet-based Framework to Support Integration of Customer in the Design of Customizable Products

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    A necessary element to design and produce customer-centric products is the integration of customers in the design process. Challenges faced during customer integration into the design process include generating models of the customized product, performing analysis of these to determine feasibility, and optimizing to increase the performance. These tasks have to be performed relatively quickly, if not in real time, to provide feedback to the customer. The focus of this article is to present a framework that utilizes CAD, finite element analysis (FEA), and optimization to integrate the customer into the design process via the Internet for delivering user customized products. The design analysis, evaluation, and optimization need to be automated and enhanced to enable operation over the Internet. A product family CAD/FEA template has been developed to perform analysis, along with a general formulation to optimize the customized product. The CAD/FEA template generalizes the geometry building and analysis of each configuration developed using a product platform approach. The proposed setup is demonstrated through the use of a bicycle frame family. In this study, the focus is on the application of optimization and FEA to facilitate the design of customer-centric products.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline

    Evaluating Trade-Offs Between Sustainability, Performance, and Cost of Green Machining Technologies

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    The growing demand to reduce environmental impacts has encouraged manufacturers to pursue various green manufacturing technologies and strategies. These solutions, though, may have a direct impact on several productivity metrics including availability, quality, service life, and cost. This study presents an approach to evaluate the trade-offs between the environmental, performance, and financial impacts of green machining technologies by combining green manufacturing principles into life cycle performance evaluation. The approach is validated by investigating the implications of reducing the processing time by increasing the cutting speed and chip load to green a horizontal milling process

    Hsc70 Focus Formation at the Periphery of HSV-1 Transcription Sites Requires ICP27

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    The cellular chaperone protein Hsc70, along with components of the 26S proteasome and ubiquitin-conjugated proteins have been shown to be sequestered in discrete foci in the nuclei of herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infected cells. We recently reported that cellular RNA polymerase II (RNAP II) undergoes proteasomal degradation during robust HSV-1 transcription, and that the immediate early protein ICP27 interacts with the C-terminal domain and is involved in the recruitment of RNAP II to viral transcription/replication compartments.Here we show that ICP27 also interacts with Hsc70, and is required for the formation of Hsc70 nuclear foci. During infection with ICP27 mutants that are unable to recruit RNAP II to viral replication sites, viral transcript levels were greatly reduced, viral replication compartments were poorly formed and Hsc70 focus formation was curtailed. Further, a dominant negative Hsc70 mutant that cannot hydrolyze ATP, interfered with RNAP II degradation during HSV-1 infection, and an increase in ubiquitinated forms of RNAP II was observed. There was also a decrease in virus yields, indicating that proteasomal degradation of stalled RNAP II complexes during robust HSV-1 transcription and replication benefits viral gene expression.We propose that one function of the Hsc70 nuclear foci may be to serve to facilitate the process of clearing stalled RNAP II complexes from viral genomes during times of highly active transcription

    Increased template activity of liver chromatin, a result of hydrocortisone administration.

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    We have found that the administration of hydrocortisone to adrenalectomized rats increases the template activity of their liver chromatin for RNA synthesis. Such administration is known to cause a two- to threefold increase in rate of nuclear RNA synthesis in the liver (1,2). This increase is followed by an increase in the activities of a series of liver enzymes (3-5). Since the induction of these enzymes by hydrocortisone is abolished by simultaneous treatment with actinomycin D, it is clear that new RNA synthesis is required to support their formation (4,5). The increased rate of liver RNA synthesis caused by administration of hydrocortisone might in principle be due to changes in the template activity of the liver genetic material such as would accompany derepression of genes previously repressed. We shall show below that the administration of hydrocortisone does result in an increased availability of the genetic material for transcription

    Increased template activity of liver chromatin, a result of hydrocortisone administration.

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