S0406-3-4 Determination of Time-temperature Shift Factor for Accelerated Testing of CFRP

2009 ◽  
Vol 2009.1 (0) ◽  
pp. 345-346
Author(s):  
Makoto OGATA ◽  
Katsuya FUKUSHIMA ◽  
Hongneng CAI ◽  
Masayuki NAKADA ◽  
Yasushi MIYANO
Development ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 221-252
Author(s):  
Par Maria Fernandez ◽  
Jean-Claude Beetschen

1. At the feeding stage (st. 38), a high percentage (79 %) of Pleurodeles homozygous ac/ac larvae show bent tails after a persistent ascitic blister in the dorsal part of the fin, when embryonic development occurred at 12°C; about only 25 % of them are affected by abdominal and pericardic ascites; about 40 % can feed and survive. The larval phenotype is very different when embryonic development occurred at 23 °C, in which case tail growth appears to be normal, but 95 % larvae die, due to ascitic fluid collection in the abdominal and heart regions, marked anaemia and microcephaly. 2. The exchange of posterior neural plates and dorso-lateral epidermis between normal and mutant neurulae has shown that the localization of the blister in the dorsal fin is not dependent on autonomous properties of the mutant dorsal tissues, but should be considered as resulting from general disturbances in the mutant organism. 3. Experiments were performed, involving a temperature shift from 12 to 23°C or 23 to 12°C, occurring at various developmental stages from the end of gastrulation (stage 13) to the stage of spontaneous embryonic muscle contractions (stage 26). When the temperature shift was applied after the end of neurulation (stage 21), the caudal phenotype was statistically similar to that of larvae which had been bred continuously at the first temperature. Thus temperature-sensitive phases can be characterized between neurula stages 15 and 18 (for a 12–23° shift) or 15 and 21 (for a 23–12° shift). Similarly, abdominal ascites can be induced when embryos are kept at 23 °C till stage 23 (early tail-bud) only, and occurs much less frequently when embryos are kept at 12°C till stage 23 and then transferred to 23°C. 4. It could be concluded from these experiments that the caudal mutant phenotype is already temperature-determined during neurulation, before stage 21. Nevertheless, double temperature-shift experiments showed that the second shift could modify the results which would be obtained if the first shift only occurred. Paradoxical results were obtained, more than 90 % of the tail phenotypes being of the ‘warm type’ when the embryos were first kept at 12°C, then shifted up to 23 °C between stages 22 and 26, and shifted down again to 12°C. Such a treatment markedly lowers the percentage of bent tails (‘cold type’) from the percentage which would occur if ac/ac embryos were constantly kept at 23 °C after stage 21, but this longer warm treatment is of no effect of itself as compared to the case when the whole development occurs at 12°C (bent tails are predominant in this latter case). Thus, whereas the early determination of the position of the caudal blister can be considered as a stable phenomenon under given temperature conditions, it is not irreversible. 5. As compared to cold-bred larvae, thrice as many completely anaemic larvae (66 %) were obtained from ac/ac embryos kept at 23 °C between stages 21 and 26; this offers an opportunity for the experimental study of this anaemia. 6. Implications of these results for further analysis of temperature-sensitive mutations in cold-blooded vertebrates are suggested.


1997 ◽  
Vol 1570 (1) ◽  
pp. 108-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sun Woo Park ◽  
Y. Richard Kim

New analytical procedures for temperature correction of backcalculated asphalt concrete moduli and surface deflections were developed based on the theory of linear viscoelasticity and the time-temperature superposition principle and verified using falling weight deflectometer data and field temperature measurements. The new correction procedures explicitly utilize the thermorheological properties of the asphalt mixture. The resulting temperature-modulus correction factors depend only on the relaxation modulus and time-temperature shift factor of the mixture. The temperature-deflection correction factor depends on both the material properties and the layer thicknesses of the pavement section. Emphasis has been placed on the analytical description of the mixture’s thermoviscoelasticity responsible for temperature effects on mixture modulus and pavement deflection. A mechanistic framework for dealing with temperature correction problems for asphalt pavement has been introduced.


Genetics ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 565-577
Author(s):  
Don Moir ◽  
David Botstein

ABSTRACT Cold-sensitive (cs) and heat-sensitive (ts) conditional-lethal mutations that affect specifically the cell division cycle of budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) were used to determine the order of gene function. Reciprocal temperature-shift experiments using cs-ts double mutants revealed a detailed order of function among genes whose execution points and mutant phenotypes are very similar. The data suggest that the nuclear branch of the overall cell-cycle pathway itself contains at least one branch.


2007 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 295-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susumu Nakano ◽  
Minoru Shimbo ◽  
Akihiro Misawa

In this paper, the effect of saturation pressure on the time-temperature equivalent law of the decompression rate (decompression time) and foaming temperature of the cell density, the number of cells per unit volume remaining in foamed plastic was discussed. The foaming was carried out in the method described be by using batch foaming process. The blowing agent was soaked into the resin as a solid state at various high saturation pressures under temperatures higher than the glass transition temperature of the resin. After foaming agent reached its saturation state, cell nucleation and cell growth were accelerated by decompression. Finally, cell growth was halted by cooling. The polystyrene (PS) specimens were foamed under the various saturation pressures, foaming temperatures and decompression rates. The following results were obtained. (1) Cell density of foamed PS shows time and temperature dependence as follows. The cell density increases when the decompression rate is quick, i.e. the decompression time is shortened at the condition of low foaming temperature, and cell density decreases when the decompression rate is slow, i.e. decompression time is lengthened at the condition of high foaming temperature under various saturation pressures. (2) The time-temperature equivalent law is maintained between the time dependence and temperature dependence of the cell density of foamed PS, and it can expressed with the same time-temperature shift factor if the decompression rate is the same even if saturation pressure changes.


Development ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 869-877
Author(s):  
Paul A. Farnsworth

A quantitative measure of the proportionality of the pattern of cell differentiation is obtained by separating populations of fruiting bodies into stalks and spores and determining the ratio of their dry weights. The effect of incubation temperature on the proportion of a population which becomes stalk cells is determined. The time of determination of this proportion is then indicated by the time in the developmental sequence at which a temperature shift fails to alter it. The results show that the temperatures of growth, aggregation and migration have no effect on the pattern of differentiation and that temperature alterations during early culmination alter the pattern of differentiation. This result demonstrates that the pattern of differentiation is not determined during the migrating slug stage, and it is suggested that the axial inhomogeneities seen in the slug are not directly related to the terminal pattern of differentiation of the fruiting body as has been previously suggested.


2004 ◽  
Vol 126 (4) ◽  
pp. 413-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ever J. Barbero ◽  
Kevin J. Ford

The equivalent time temperature method (ETT) is a novel extension of the equivalent time method. ETT is developed in this work to deal with time-temperature shifting of long-term polymer and polymer composite creep data, including the effects of physical aging at nonuniform temperature. Modifications to classical testing methods and protocols are presented to obtain accurate and repeatable data that can support long-term predictions with nonuniform temperature conditions through time. These techniques are used to generate momentary Time temperature superposition (TTSP) master curves, temperature shift factor rates, and aging shift factor rates. Novel interpretation and techniques are presented to deal with the coupled age-temperature behavior over long times. Validation of predictions against over 20,000 Hr of long-term data in field conditions is presented.


1971 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 1057-1064
Author(s):  
C. K. Shih

Abstract 1. The stress relaxation behavior of E/P/hexadiene polymer over wide temperature [Tg to (Tg+140°C)] and composition (molar E/P = 1.7 to 4.4) ranges is described. 2. Although Tg of the polymers is essentially constant (− 60° C), the onset temperature for rubbery flow characterized by an abrupt change in the rate of stress relaxation is highly dependent upon composition. It increases to a higher temperature as the ethylene content is increased. It is also affected by the catalysts used for polymer synthesis. 3. The time-temperature shift factor for one sample was found to follow the WLF equation over the temperature range from − 50° C to 0° C.


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