scholarly journals Investigation Into the Cause of Failure of a Turboprop Impeller in Service

Author(s):  
H. Y. Wong

A 2-stage centrifugal flow turboprop Dart engine failed recently in service due to the failure of the low pressure impeller. Examination by various techniques including electron microscopy based on scanning, energy dispersive analysis of x-ray and transmission electron fractography indicates that the cause was metallurgical in nature, resulting from a material manufacturing defect followed by fatigue fracture and finally by tensile rupture of the material.

Author(s):  
R.F. Dodson ◽  
T. Akematsu ◽  
M.G. Williams ◽  
M.F. O'Sullivan ◽  
G. A. Hurst

The eruption of Mt. St. Helens on May 18, 1980, resulted in a concentrated short-term exposure for a large segment of the population of eastern Washington, northern Idaho, and western Montana. Samples were collected from all three regions and the respirable size particles (⋜0.6μ) were separated and analyzed. The predominance of the respirable size fraction was found by X-ray energy dispersive analysis to be alumino silicates. A homogeneous preparation was intratracheally injected into young adult guinea pigs. The dose given the animals consisted of 52.5 mg in saline. This dose provided a short-term heavy exposure setting similar to that of the populus. At the end of the selected post-injection intervals of either 2 or 4 hours or 1 through 7 days, the animals were sacrificed by vascular perfusion through the right ventricle.Embedded tissue samples were reviewed at the light microscopy level and selected fields were thin sectioned for transmission electron microscopy and scanning transmission electron microscopy (correlated with X-ray energy dispersive analysis). The EM was carried out on a JEOL 100CX TEMSCAN.


2000 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 315-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.M. Lewis ◽  
G. Yan ◽  
R.M. Julià ◽  
L. Coderch ◽  
P. Erra

2021 ◽  
pp. 104063872110575
Author(s):  
Bianca R. Pfisterer ◽  
Anthony L. Ashley ◽  
Robert L. Donnell ◽  
John R. Dunlap ◽  
Kim M. Newkirk

Two rock hyraxes ( Procavia capensis), from the Chattanooga Zoo, were submitted separately for autopsy at the University of Tennessee Veterinary Medical Center. The first was a 4-y-old intact female that died without premonitory signs and the second was a 10-y-old intact male that was euthanized because of severe renal disease. Microscopically, the lungs of both hyraxes had multifocal-to-coalescing, <1-mm diameter aggregates of epithelioid macrophages separated by streams of fibrous tissue. Macrophages contained intracytoplasmic, clear, acicular, birefringent crystals. Transmission electron microscopy and energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy findings on the lung samples were consistent with silica crystal deposition. The hyraxes had been housed together on commercially sourced play sand composed of 99–99.5% quartz, a crystalline silica polymorph. The microscopic findings, transmission electron microscopy, and energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy of the intrahistiocytic crystals, in addition to the history of exposure to crystalline silica, were consistent with pulmonary silicosis. Pulmonary silicosis has not been reported previously in rock hyraxes, to our knowledge.


1984 ◽  
Vol 222 (1229) ◽  
pp. 427-438 ◽  

Silicified macrohairs from mature and immature lemmas of the grass Phalaris canariensis L. have been studied by scanning (s.e.m.) and transmission electron microscopy (t.e.m.) and energy dispersive X-ray analysis (e.d.X.a.) at various times after emergence of the inflorescence. Within the macrohairs a variety of morphologies of silica particles was observed. E.d.X.a. revealed the time-dependent concentrations in the macrohairs of the elements K, Cl, P, and S, in addition to Si. Much lower levels of these elements were found in highly silicified mature macrohairs than in the immature macrohairs. It is proposed that the hairs are silicified under strict cellular control.


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