scholarly journals Evaluation of an improved design for large-scale storage of wood chip and bark

2021 ◽  
Vol 154 ◽  
pp. 106255
Author(s):  
Erik Anerud ◽  
Anders Eriksson
2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 (2) ◽  
pp. 74-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron Johnson ◽  
Rob Jansen ◽  
Nicholas Hopper ◽  
Aaron Segal ◽  
Paul Syverson

Abstract We present PeerFlow, a system to securely load balance client traffic in Tor. Security in Tor requires that no adversary handle too much traffic. However, Tor relays are run by volunteers who cannot be trusted to report the relay bandwidths, which Tor clients use for load balancing. We show that existing methods to determine the bandwidths of Tor relays allow an adversary with little bandwidth to attack large amounts of client traffic. These methods include Tor’s current bandwidth-scanning system, TorFlow, and the peer-measurement system EigenSpeed. We present an improved design called PeerFlow that uses a peer-measurement process both to limit an adversary’s ability to increase his measured bandwidth and to improve accuracy. We show our system to be secure, fast, and efficient. We implement PeerFlow in Tor and demonstrate its speed and accuracy in large-scale network simulations.


2011 ◽  
Vol 368-373 ◽  
pp. 461-464
Author(s):  
Ren Le Ma ◽  
Ming Yi Zhang

With the rapid development of inland wind farm in China, the costal wind farm still has not got large-scale development as the result of the higher cost of fan foundation and the more difficulty of construction. The prefabricated prestressed cylinder foundation (PPC foundation), as a new type of wind turbine foundation designed for the soft soil region such as the inter-tidal coastal zone and inland wetlands, is introduced in this paper. The condition of lateral earth pressure distribution around the foundation which determines the flexural capacity of fan foundation in the soft soil is studied. Through theoretical analysis and mathematical derivation, the result shows that the lateral earth pressure around PPC foundation is changed with depth by 1.5th power curve which has good fitting to the finite element analysis result. The simplified and improved design process is applied into the practical engineering and the good economy of PPC foundation is proved.


2011 ◽  
Vol 308-310 ◽  
pp. 2478-2481
Author(s):  
Xing Xing Li ◽  
Ben Niu Zhang ◽  
Zhi Xiang Zhou ◽  
Lian Tang

Structural health monitoring is a promising way for evaluating the integrity and safety of large-scale bridges, and crack monitoring is thought to be a challenging problem in this field. An improved design based on smart film for monitoring crack width of concrete bridges is proposed in this paper. Experiments are also implemented to verify the effectiveness of this design.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto C. Aguirre ◽  
Haris J. Catrakis

In many fluid engineering devices, improved design and performance require knowledge of the dynamics of turbulent fluid interfaces. Depending on the device, and the application, the performance may be more sensitive to the large scales or the small scales of the interfaces. We distinguish between cases depending on whether the surface area of, or the volume enclosed by, the interfaces is practically more relevant. For turbulent interfaces, the surface area is dominated by the small scales whereas the volume enclosed is dominated by the large scales. We examine the interfacial dynamics in separated flows and we demonstrate the differences in the area-volume behavior in the context of mixing. Resolution effects on the interfacial behavior reveal that the mixing efficiency is strongly dominated by the large-scale interfacial properties. This has broad implications, at least for fluid-mixing devices, for the development of flow-prediction and flow-control techniques.


2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 724-738
Author(s):  
Athanassios Mihailidis ◽  
George Savaidis ◽  
Emmanouil Bouras ◽  
Emmanouil Athanasopoulos ◽  
Nikolaos Ganavaras ◽  
...  

Purpose Large-scale belt-conveyor systems are extensively used in open mines to continuously transport bulk material. Conveyor pulleys are critical components and failures have significant financial consequences due to extended downtime. Aiming at increasing their durability, two critical spots are identified: the drum and the welds between end-plates and drum. Alternative designs have been evaluated. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach Loads on the driving drum are determined from measurements of the bearing force and the motor power. The friction interaction between belt and drum is described by the creep model and its impact is evaluated by comparing the results obtained for low and typical values of friction coefficient. Alternative designs are analysed using finite element method with optimised variable density mesh. The stress field and the deformations are calculated and evaluated. Findings Friction affects the torque transmission capacity and force distribution, but it is shown that in this case it has almost no impact on the maximum von Mises stress which occurs on the inside surface of the drum; therefore fatigue cracks initiated there, cannot be visually detected. A reinforcing diaphragm is added at the mid-plane to reduce the stress. A new, improved design is proposed to eliminate welds between the end-plates and the drum. Research limitations/implications The new proposed design has to be tested in the field to ultimately validate its higher durability. Originality/value The impact of the friction of the belt on the drum is demonstrated. The reinforcement resulting from a mid-plane diaphragm is quantitatively evaluated and assessed. A new improved pulley design is proposed aiming at significantly increased operational life compared to the one of the current design.


1993 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Frost ◽  
J. Halliday ◽  
A. S. Dee

Improved design and performance of continuous thickeners should be achieved through a better understanding of the sludge transport processes involved and the variability of sludge thickenability. A software package called PHOENICS was used to model the three-dimensional flow of sludge in the transport zone of a 20m diameter thickener. A mass transport efficiency was evaluated to test the efficacy of the ploughing system, and tracer simulations were performed to study the degree of back-mixing induced. Interpretation of the results suggests that:○Optimum orientation of the ploughs to the radial arm is 60° to 70°.○Transport of sludge to a central outlet occurs principally in the wake of the advancing ploughs, and that ploughs are less efficient than conventional theories dictate.○Sludge in the ploughing zone is mixed, thus potentially impairing thickener performance. The thickenability of mixed raw sludge arising at a large activated sludge works was monitored. Pronounced seasonal variations were observed, with a marked deterioration in thickenability in late summer and autumn. These were confirmed in trials of a 20m diameter continuous thickener. Consequently the proposed thickening strategy for this works has been revised.


Author(s):  
M. C. Villa-Uriol ◽  
I. Larrabide ◽  
J. M. Pozo ◽  
M. Kim ◽  
O. Camara ◽  
...  

In the last few years, some of the visionary concepts behind the virtual physiological human began to be demonstrated on various clinical domains, showing great promise for improving healthcare management. In the current work, we provide an overview of image- and biomechanics-based techniques that, when put together, provide a patient-specific pipeline for the management of intracranial aneurysms. The derivation and subsequent integration of morphological, morphodynamic, haemodynamic and structural analyses allow us to extract patient-specific models and information from which diagnostic and prognostic descriptors can be obtained. Linking such new indices with relevant clinical events should bring new insights into the processes behind aneurysm genesis, growth and rupture. The development of techniques for modelling endovascular devices such as stents and coils allows the evaluation of alternative treatment scenarios before the intervention takes place and could also contribute to the understanding and improved design of more effective devices. A key element to facilitate the clinical take-up of all these developments is their comprehensive validation. Although a number of previously published results have shown the accuracy and robustness of individual components, further efforts should be directed to demonstrate the diagnostic and prognostic efficacy of these advanced tools through large-scale clinical trials.


Holzforschung ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Masarin ◽  
André Ferraz

Abstract In biopulping, efficient wood colonization by a selected white-rot fungus depends on previous wood chip decontamination to avoid the growth of primary molds. Although simple to perform in the laboratory, in large-scale biopulping trials, complete wood decontamination is difficult to achieve. Furthermore, the use of fungal growth promoters such as corn steep liquor enhances the risk of culture contamination. This paper evaluates the ability of the biopulping fungus Ceriporiopsis subvermispora to compete with indigenous fungi in cultures of fresh or poorly decontaminated Eucalyptus grandis wood chips. While cultures containing autoclaved wood chips were completely free of contaminants, primary molds grew rapidly when non-autoclaved wood chips were used, resulting in heavily contaminated cultures, regardless of the C. subvermispora inoculum/wood ratio evaluated (5, 50 and 3000 mg mycelium kg−1 wood). Studies on benomyl-amended medium suggested that the fungi involved competed by consumption of the easily available nutrient sources, with C. subvermispora less successful than the contaminant fungi. The use of acid-washed wood chips decreased the level of such contaminant fungi, but production of manganese peroxidase and xylanases was also decreased under these conditions. Nevertheless, chemithermomechanical pulping of acid-washed samples biotreated under non-aseptic conditions gave similar fibrillation improvements compared to samples subjected to the standard biodegradation process using autoclaved wood chips.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Li ◽  
Shuyi Wang ◽  
Fang-Hua Lee ◽  
Ryan S. Roark ◽  
Alex I. Murphy ◽  
...  

AbstractSimian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) chimeras contain the HIV-1 envelope (env) gene embedded within an SIVmac proviral backbone. Previously, we showed that substitution of Env residue 375-Ser by bulky aromatic residues enhances Env binding to rhesus CD4 and enables primary or transmitted/founder (T/F) HIV-1 Envs to support efficient SHIV replication in rhesus macaques (RMs). Here, we test this design strategy more broadly by constructing and analyzing SHIVs containing ten strategically selected primary or T/F HIV-1 Envs corresponding to subtypes A, B, C, AE and AG, each with six allelic variants at position 375. All ten SHIVs bearing wildtype Env375 residues replicated efficiently in human CD4+ T cells, but only one of these replicated efficiently in rhesus CD4+ T cells. This was a SHIV whose subtype AE Env naturally contained a bulky aromatic His residue at position 375. Replacement of wildtype Env375 residues by Trp, Tyr, Phe or His in the other nine SHIVs uniformly led to efficient replication in rhesus CD4+ T in vitro and in RMs in vivo. Env375-Trp – the residue found most frequently among SIV strains infecting Old World monkeys – was favored for SHIV replication in RMs, although some SHIVs preferred Env375-Tyr, -His or -Phe. Nine SHIVs containing optimized Env375 alleles were grown large scale in primary activated rhesus CD4+ T cells to serve as challenge stocks in preclinical prevention trials. These virus stocks were genetically homogeneous, native-like in Env antigenicity and tier-2 neutralization sensitivity, transmissible by rectal, vaginal, penile, oral or intravenous inoculation routes, and exhibited acute and early replication kinetics that were indistinguishable from HIV-1 infection in humans. Finally, to expedite future SHIV constructions and eliminate short redundant elements in tat1 and env gp41 that were spontaneously deleted in chronically infected monkeys, we engineered a simplified second-generation SHIV design scheme and validated it in RMs. Overall, our findings demonstrate that SHIVs bearing primary or T/F Envs with bulky aromatic amino acid substitutions at position Env375 consistently replicate in RMs, recapitulating many features of HIV-1 infection in humans. We further show that SHIV challenge stocks grown in primary rhesus CD4+ T cells are efficiently transmitted by mucosal routes common to HIV-1 infection and can be used effectively to test for vaccine efficacy in preclinical monkey trials.


Author(s):  
Alex Gerrard ◽  
Jian Zuo ◽  
George Zillante ◽  
Martin Skitmore

Building Information Modeling (BIM) is a modern approach to the design, documentation, delivery, and life cycle management of buildings through the use of project information databases coupled with object-based parametric modeling. BIM has the potential to revolutionize the Architecture, Engineering and Construction (AEC) industry in terms of the positive impact it may have on information flows, working relationships between project participants from different disciplines and the resulting benefits it may achieve through improvements to conventional methods. This chapter reviews the development of BIM, the extent to which BIM has been implemented in Australia, and the factors which have affected the up-take of BIM. More specifically, the objectives of this chapter are to investigate the adoption of BIM in the Australian AEC industry and factors that contribute towards the uptake (or non uptake) of BIM. These objectives are met by a review of the related literature in the first instance, followed by the presentation of the results of a 2007 postal questionnaire survey and telephone interviews of a random sample of professionals in the Australian AEC industry. The responses suggest that less than 25 percent of the sample had been involved in BIM – rather less than might be expected from reading the literature. Also, of those who have been involved with BIM, there has been very little interdisciplinary collaboration. The main barriers impeding the implementation of BIM widely across the Australian AEC industry are also identified. These were found to be primarily a lack of BIM expertise, lack of awareness and resistance to change. The benefits experienced as a result of using BIM are also discussed. These include improved design consistency, better coordination, cost savings, higher quality work, greater productivity and increased speed of delivery. In terms of conclusion, some suggestions are made concerning the underlying practical reasons for the slow up-take of BIM and the successes for those early adopters. Prospects for future improvement are discussed and proposals are also made for a large scale worldwide comparative study covering industry-wide participants.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document