An Ambient Temperature Compensated Microthermal Convective Accelerometer with High Sensitivity Stability

Author(s):  
Xiaoyi Wang ◽  
Wei Xu ◽  
Izhar ◽  
Yi-Kuen Lee
Author(s):  
Usung Park ◽  
Dongsik Kim ◽  
Joonwon Kim ◽  
Il-Kwon Moon ◽  
Chong-Ho Kim

2019 ◽  
Vol 115 ◽  
pp. 150-158
Author(s):  
Sandesh U. Mutkule ◽  
Kailas K. Tehare ◽  
Shyam K. Gore ◽  
Krishna Chaitanya Gunturu ◽  
Rajaram S. Mane

2004 ◽  
Vol 835 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pascal Lauque ◽  
Marc Bendahan ◽  
Jean Luc Seguin ◽  
Philippe Knauth

ABSTRACTCuBr films are used to design an ammonia gas microsensor operating at ambient temperature, with high sensitivity and much improved selectivity in comparison with usual conductometric microsensors. The specific detection mechanism relies on adsorption of ammonia molecules and interactions with mobile Cu+ ions in the ionic conductor film. The CuBr films can be prepared by r.f. sputtering, but more simply and cost efficiently by chemical reaction of copper metal with bromine ions. Photolithographic techniques are applied to miniaturize the sensor.


Author(s):  
Andy Bo Wu ◽  
John Jones

A novel micromachined accelerometer without proof mass, based on the buoyancy of a heated fluid around a polysilicon heater, has previously been developed and reported. Significant features of this class of accelerometer include low cost and the combination of high sensitivity with high survivability. However, one of its big disadvantages is thermal drift: the sensitivity changes rapidly as the ambient temperature changes. A recent numerical and experimental study has shown that the sensitivity of the convective accelerometer is a function of the Rayleigh number of the working fluid. Using this criterion, a few liquids were selected as potential working fluids to improve the sensitivity of the accelerometer. The CFD program ‘FLOTRAN’ was used to model accelerometer performance using each of these fluids. Based on FLOTRAN modeling, some fluids were selected for experimental investigation. The thermal drift of the accelerometer using different working fluids was documented and the reasons for this thermal drift were discovered. Based on this observation, some possible solutions were proposed to reduce or eliminate the thermal drift.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Waldemar Gawron ◽  
Krzysztof Adamiec ◽  
Krzysztof Jozwikowski ◽  
Antoni Rogalski

2012 ◽  
Vol 51 (No. 1) ◽  
pp. 21-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Vecerek ◽  
M. Malena ◽  
M. Malena ◽  
E. Voslarova ◽  
P. Chloupek

The welfare conditions in animal transport have a significant impact on the levels of stress burden on animals before slaughter in the slaughterhouse, and have an impact on veterinary decision-making about meat and organ edibility, and also on the quality of slaughtered animal meat. The ratio of ensuring the level of welfare in animal transport can be taken as the numbers of animals having died during transport and having died in the slaughterhouse shortly after transport is completed. As to the kinds of animals raised for meat, the issue of mortality in relation to transport is especially significant in pigs. In the period from 1997 to 2004, the transport of slaughter pigs, in terms of the protection of the animals against cruelty, was monitored in theCzechRepublic. The aim was to ascertain pig losses in relation to transport to the slaughterhouse, to find out the impact of transport distance on losses of these pigs, and to determine the impact of the different seasons on losses of these pigs. The data concerning pigs fed for slaughter in the slaughterhouse (fattening pigs) was analysed, the data did not include the information concerning small sows, sows and boar kept for breeding and now excluded from breeding and slaughtered in the slaughterhouse. We have established the pig mortality level to be 0.107% ± 0.013%. However, this mortality level changed depending on the transport distance – from 0.062% ± 0.007% in the case of transport distances up to 50 km, to 0.335% ± 0.113% in the case of transport distances over and above 300 km. The level of losses of pigs increased with the length of transport distances, which is given to the long-term and higher-stress burdens in these pigs caused by longer transportation times. The seasons are expressed by the individual months, and had an impact on the transported pigs’ mortality number. Altogether, the highest losses occurred in the summer months, especially in June, July, and August. The increased mortality in the summer months is related to the higher ambient temperature in these months, which has a negative impact on the welfare of the pigs, and thus also on the higher pig losses during transport. The ascertained results produced evidence for the relatively high sensitivity of pigs to the stress burden caused by transport to the slaughterhouse and showing themselves in the number of pigs having died due to transport. The increasing transport distance and higher ambient temperature in the summer months show themselves in the increased number of pigs having died in relation to their transport to the slaughterhouse.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (19) ◽  
pp. 9753-9759
Author(s):  
Filippo Fedi ◽  
Oleg Domanov ◽  
Hidetsugu Shiozawa ◽  
Kazuhiro Yanagi ◽  
Paolo Lacovig ◽  
...  

Single-walled carbon nanotubes have enormous potential for gas sensing. This study shows that cluster filling is a key to high sensitivity and it opens the possibility for a very high desorption at ambient temperature.


1994 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 21-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. B. Gelfreikh

AbstractA review of methods of measuring magnetic fields in the solar corona using spectral-polarization observations at microwaves with high spatial resolution is presented. The methods are based on the theory of thermal bremsstrahlung, thermal cyclotron emission, propagation of radio waves in quasi-transverse magnetic field and Faraday rotation of the plane of polarization. The most explicit program of measurements of magnetic fields in the atmosphere of solar active regions has been carried out using radio observations performed on the large reflector radio telescope of the Russian Academy of Sciences — RATAN-600. This proved possible due to good wavelength coverage, multichannel spectrographs observations and high sensitivity to polarization of the instrument. Besides direct measurements of the strength of the magnetic fields in some cases the peculiar parameters of radio sources, such as very steep spectra and high brightness temperatures provide some information on a very complicated local structure of the coronal magnetic field. Of special interest are the results found from combined RATAN-600 and large antennas of aperture synthesis (VLA and WSRT), the latter giving more detailed information on twodimensional structure of radio sources. The bulk of the data obtained allows us to investigate themagnetospheresof the solar active regions as the space in the solar corona where the structures and physical processes are controlled both by the photospheric/underphotospheric currents and surrounding “quiet” corona.


Author(s):  
S.W. French ◽  
N.C. Benson ◽  
C. Davis-Scibienski

Previous SEM studies of liver cytoskeletal elements have encountered technical difficulties such as variable metal coating and heat damage which occurs during metal deposition. The majority of studies involving evaluation of the cell cytoskeleton have been limited to cells which could be isolated, maintained in culture as a monolayer and thus easily extracted. Detergent extraction of excised tissue by immersion has often been unsatisfactory beyond the depth of several cells. These disadvantages have been avoided in the present study. Whole C3H mouse livers were perfused in situ with 0.5% Triton X-100 in a modified Jahn's buffer including protease inhibitors. Perfusion was continued for 1 to 2 hours at ambient temperature. The liver was then perfused with a 2% buffered gluteraldehyde solution. Liver samples including spontaneous tumors were then maintained in buffered gluteraldehyde for 2 hours. Samples were processed for SEM and TEM using the modified thicarbohydrazide procedure of Malich and Wilson, cryofractured, and critical point dried (CPD). Some samples were mechanically fractured after CPD.


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