1,378 research outputs found
Hard Turning of Sintered Cemented Carbide Parts: A Shop Floor Experience
AbstractMachining hardened steel has been a recurring issue in the literature when tools with defined geometry cutting edges are used. It is well known the use of cemented carbides to produce cutting tools. It is also well known that this occurs before applying sintering process, to facilitate the production of special tools or specific kind of parts, which will be sintered later. What is not very known is the cutting of cemented carbides to produce special kind of parts used when high hardness, high compression resistance, high surface quality and tight tolerances are demanded. To meet such requirements is necessary to machine the pieces after sintering. Despite being a satisfactory alternative, the grinding process could not meet such requirements and, moreover, probably is more expensive. The purpose of this work is to develop an experience that, by gathering data from an industry shop floor that choose not to be identified, show the feasibility of turning sintered cemented carbide. The results showed that besides to be viable, turning process could machine workpieces with tight tolerances and excellent surface roughness
Study of 9Be+12C elastic scattering at energies near the Coulomb barrier
In this work, angular distribution measurements for the elastic channel were
performed for the 9Be+12C reaction at the energies ELab=13.0, 14.5, 17.3, 19.0
and 21.0 MeV, near the Coulomb barrier. The data have been analyzed in the
framework of the double folding S\~ao Paulo potential. The experimental elastic
scattering angular distributions were well described by the optical potential
at forward angles for all measured energies. However, for the three highest
energies, an enhancement was observed for intermediate and backward angles.
This can be explained by the elastic transfer mechanism.
Keywords: 9Be+12C, Elastic Scattering, S\~aoo Paulo Potential
Forage quality and performance of sheep in Massai grass pastures managed at pre-grazing canopy heights
The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of pasture height at pre-grazing of Massai grass on the quality of available forage, forage intake and the performance of lambs raised for meat production. The treatments consisted of four pre-grazing canopy heights (35, 40, 45 and 50 cm). Pastures were managed by the intermittent stocking method and 32 sheep were used. Dry matter intake (DMI) was estimated by LipeÂź indicator. Green forage allowance was not affected by pre-grazing heights. There was no effect of heights on the chemical composition of the stem or the leaf blades, except for crude protein content of leaf blades, which showed an inverse linear effect. Grazing time had a quadratic response in function of canopy height. The minimum point was at 42.6 cm, with 502.9 min/day. DMI increased linearly with increasing pasture height. Average daily weight gain (ADG) and stocking rate (SR) responded linearly to pre-grazing heights. Weight gain per hectare was not affected by height as a result of the compensation between SR and ADG. The increase from 35 to 50 cm in Massai grass canopy height reduces its nutritional value and individual performance and increases DMI of sheep intended for meat production.Keywords: Panicum maximum, tropical pasture, voluntary intak
6Li direct breakup lifetimes
alpha-d coincidence data were studied for the 6Li + 59Co reaction at E(lab) =
29.6 MeV. By using a kinematic analysis, it was possible to identify which
process, leading to the same final state, has the major contribution for each
of the selected angular regions. Contributions of the 6Li sequential and direct
breakup to the incomplete fusion/transfer process were discussed by considering
the lifetimes obtained by using a semiclassical approach, for both breakup
components.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Invited Talk (Parrallel Sessions) of A. Szanto de
Toledo, prepared for the Proccedings of the 10th International Conference on
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, August 16-21, 2009, Beijing, China; submitted to
Nucl. Phys. A (Proceedings of NN2009
Reaction mechanisms for weakly-bound, stable nuclei and unstable, halo nuclei on medium-mass targets
An experimental overview of reactions induced by the stable, but weakly-bound
nuclei 6Li, 7Li and 9Be, and by the exotic, halo nuclei 6He, 8B, 11Be and 17F
on medium-mass targets, such as 58Ni, 59Co or 64Zn, is presented. Existing data
on elastic scattering, total reaction cross sections, fusion processes, breakup
and transfer channels are discussed in the framework of a CDCC approach taking
into account the breakup degree of freedom.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, Invited Talk given by C. Beck to the 10th
International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, August 16-21, 2009
Beijing, China; Paper submitted to the NN2009 Proceedings, Nuclear Physics A
(to be published
Induction of a gloverin-like antimicrobial polypeptide in the sugarcane borer Diatraea saccharalis challenged by septic injury
Diatraea saccharalis (Fabricius, 1794) (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) is an important pest for Brazilian sugarcane. In the present study, we detected two distinct spots in hemolymph from septic injured larvae (HDs1 and HDs2), which are separated by 2DE gel electrophoresis. Both spots were subjected to in-gel tryptic digestion and MALDI-TOF/TOF analysis, which revealed the sequence VFGTLGSDDSGLFGK present in both HDs1 and HDs2. This sequence had homology and 80% identity with specific Lepidoptera antimicrobial peptides called gloverins. Analyses using the ImageMaster 2D software showed pI 8.94 of the HDs1 spot, which is similar to that described to Hyalophora gloveri gloverin (pI 8.5). Moreover, the 14-kDa molecular mass of the spot HDs1 is compatible to that of gloverins isolated from the hemolymph of Trichoplusia ni, Helicoverpa armigera and H. gloveri. Antimicrobial assays with partially purified fractions containing the HDs1 and HDs2 polypeptides demonstrated activity against Escherichia coli. This is the first report of antimicrobial polypeptides in D. saccharalis, and the identification of these peptides may help in the generation of new strategies to control this pest
Reaction mechanisms in the 6Li+59Co system
The reactions induced by the weakly bound 6Li projectile interacting with the
intermediate mass target 59Co were investigated. Light charged particles
singles and - coincidence measurements were performed at the near
barrier energies E_lab = 17.4, 21.5, 25.5 and 29.6 MeV. The main contributions
of the different competing mechanisms are discussed. A statistical model
analysis, Continuum-Discretized Coupled-Channels calculations and two-body
kinematics were used as tools to provide information to disentangle the main
components of these mechanisms. A significant contribution of the direct
breakup was observed through the difference between the experimental sequential
breakup cross section and the CDCC prediction for the non-capture breakup cross
section.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figure
Root dentinal microcracks: a post-extraction experimental phenomenon?
Aim
To investigate the prevalence, location and pattern of preâexisting microcracks in nonâendodontically treated teeth from fresh cadavers. Microâcomputed tomography (microâCT) technology was used as the analytical tool enabling full screening of the root dentine with the teeth retained in their original alveolar socket.
Methodology
As a pilot study and to validate the present method, a series of 4 highâresolution scans were performed on one boneâblock specimen with teeth collected postâmortem: (i) entire boneâblock including the teeth, (ii) second molar tooth extracted atraumatically from the boneâblock, (iii) extracted tooth dehydrated to induce dentinal defects and (iv) entire boneâblock following reinsertion of the extracted tooth into its matching alveolar socket. In the main study, fortyâtwo dentoalveolar maxillary and mandibular boneâblocks each containing 3â5 adjacent teeth (a total of 178 teeth) were collected postâmortem and scanned in a microâCT device. All crossâsection images of the 178 teeth (n = 65 530) were screened from the cementoenamel junction to the apex to identify the presence of dentinal defects.
Results
In the pilot study, the microcracks observable when the dehydrated tooth was outside the boneâblock remained detectable when the entire boneâblock plus reinserted tooth was scanned. This means that the screening process revealed the presence of the same microcracks in both experimental situations (the tooth outside and inside the maxillary boneâblock). From a total of 178 teeth in the boneâblocks removed from cadavers, 65 530 crossâsectional images were analysed and no dentinal microcracks were detected.
Conclusions
This in situ cadaveric model revealed the lack of preâexisting dentinal microcracks in nonâendodontically treated teeth. Thus, the finding of dentinal microcracks observed in previous crossâsectional images of stored extracted teeth is unsound and not valid. It should be assumed that microcracks observed in stored extracted teeth subjected to root canal procedures are a result of the extraction process and/or the postâextraction storage conditions. Therefore, as a consequence, the presence of such dentinal microcracks in stored extracted teeth â observable in crossâsectional images of the roots â should be referred to as experimental dentinal microcracks
- âŠ