scholarly journals Design and Optimization of Wheels for Better Aerodynamics and Cooling of Brakes

Author(s):  
Rohit Jadhav

Abstract: In the world of automotive, lots of research has been done yet on overall vehicle. Researchers improved every single part of vehicle but wheel is one of the part that hasn’t changed much in automotive history. In case researchers got their desired results, they stopped working on wheel and most of the research has been done on grip of the tire. That’s why there is no innovative research done on wheels. And it is one the biggest part who contribute in vehicles performance and other aspects like comfort and ride quality. Most of the manufacturers never consider and work on aerodynamic part of wheel. So, Different aerodynamics concept vehicles have been studied in the report. The flow around wheels are manage and smoothen in proposed design also it is designed in such a way that air flowing around wheel can easily take inside through Rim design and throw on brake pads as well as on wheel hub for consistently cooling them. They key for success is to manage the flow and keep the wheel functional and attractive. In this paper new wheel is designed and compared with convectional wheel designs. Keywords: Wheel Aerodynamics, Design and Optimization of Wheel, Cooling of Brakes, 3D Wheel design, Aerodynamics of Wheel.

2021 ◽  
Vol 1996 (1) ◽  
pp. 011001

2021 The 7th International Conference on Digital Manufacturing and Automation (ICDMA 2021) was held from May 10-12, 2021 with workshop of 2021 6th International Conference on Mechanical and Electronics Engineering. Our attendees safty would be the highest priority, some participants are now facing travel restrictions and may have to cancel their schedule because of COVID-19. According to this situation, the conference is available to use all social media methods, such as online/video presentation, etc, except the regular presentation types (oral & poster). The conference is co-sponsored by National Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan and Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Australia, Science and Engineering Institute. It aims to bring together researchers, developers, and users in both industry and academia in the world for sharing state-of-art results, for exploring new areas of research and development, and to discuss emerging issues on digital manufacturing and automation. As is well known to us all, digital manufacturing and automation technology plays a more and more important role in industry advancing now, The conference is aimed at reporting up-to-the-minute innovations and developments, brought together leading researchers, engineers and scientists in the domain of interest from around the world. For conference online, three keynote speakers were invited to give the keynote speeches on May 11, 2021. This proceeding including 12 papers in two chapters of material design and optimization and industrial automation and manufacturing, the authors are from varies countries, hope those papers can help you to gain something and promote the development of Digital Manufacturing and Automation and Mechanical and Electronics Engineering. The conference received 23 submissions, and every paper was reviewed by in two rounds For the success helding of ICDMA 2021, we would like to express our appreciation to all the reviewer's review works and their support, all the conference website editor and committee members' hard works. It very nice to have you worked for conference ICDMA 2021. The conference would welcome to your join for next conference series. At last, wish you could get something from our conference and conference proceedings!! Conference Committees, Peer Review Statement, are available in this pdf


2009 ◽  
Vol 08 (01) ◽  
pp. E
Author(s):  
Nico Pitrelli ◽  
Yuri Castelfranchi

A recent article published in Science Communication addresses the training issue in issue in our discipline. Henk Mulder and his colleagues discuss the shared features that university curricula should or could have to favour the full admission of science communication into the academic circle. Having analysed analogies and differences in the curricula that a number of schools provide all over the world, the authors reached the conclusion that much remains to be done. Science communication seems far from having found shared fundamental references, lessons that cannot be missed in the practical-theoretical education of future professionals or researchers in this discipline. What should one study to become a good science communicator? And to make innovative research?


2021 ◽  
pp. 002073142199708
Author(s):  
Meghan McMahon ◽  
Marisa I. Creatore ◽  
Erin Thompson ◽  
Andrea Morgan Lay ◽  
Steven J. Hoffman ◽  
...  

The health, economic, and social crises created by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic have been global in scope and inequitable in impact. The global road to recovery can be enhanced with robust, relevant, and timely scientific evidence. This commentary seeks to illustrate the power of science, scientific collaboration, and innovative research funding programs to inform pandemic recovery and inspire transformational changes for a more equitable, resilient, and sustainable future. Specifically, this commentary provides an introduction to the United Nations (UN) Research Roadmap for the COVID-19 Recovery that was published in November 2020. It introduces 5 scoping reviews that helped inform the UN Research Roadmap and that are now available open access within this series of special papers, and it provides an overview of an innovative research funding program that facilitated rapid mobilization and collaboration to produce the scoping reviews. The publication of the scoping reviews in this journal series will help complement and amplify the UN Research Roadmap by furthering knowledge mobilization efforts and informing COVID-19 recovery around the world, to ensure a more equitable, resilient, and sustainable postpandemic future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 91-101
Author(s):  
S.M. Makhmudova

While syntax attracts the attention of an increasing number of linguists in the world, syntactic theories are created based on the linguistic material of most natural languages, the syntax of Dagestani languages remains a kind of lacuna, not known even in a simple descriptive plan. One of the most poorly studied Islands in the Dagestani syntax is single - part sentences that have not been analyzed either in terms of composition or in terms of forms of expression. In the existing research on the syntax of Dagestani languages, single-part sentences are either not considered at all, or are considered very superficially. Meanwhile, single-part sentences are a fairly developed constructive class in Dagestani languages. This work contains an attempt to analyze single-part sentences in the Rutulian language, the syntax of which has not been subjected to special research until now.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruxandra Penta ◽  
Melanie Babinski

Dr. Liane Feldman (MDCM, FACS, FRCS) has been making waves in the world of surgery through her accomplishments, innovative research and mentorship for over 30 years. From her beginnings in the Cognitive Science department at Brown University to her current position as Edward W. Archibald Professor, Dr. Feldman discusses her path to becoming the first woman Surgeon-In-Chief of the MUHC.


RSC Advances ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (59) ◽  
pp. 35856-35872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neeraj Kumar ◽  
Damini Sood ◽  
Ramesh Chandra

COVID-19 has been declared as a global health emergency and exposed the world to a deadly virus, which has dramatically changed the lives of humans for an unknown period of time.


Author(s):  
Kate Kirkpatrick

Part III (Chapters 4 to 7) is dedicated to a part-by-part examination of Being and Nothingness. Sartre, like Schleiermacher, would object to any claim to understand the whole of a work on the basis of considering a single part. The reader is asked to bear in mind, therefore, that individual chapters of this part cannot be separated from the whole. Chapter 4 (on Being and Nothingness Part I) introduces Sartrean consciousness as ‘the being by which nothingness comes into the world’, bringing Sartre’s account of human freedom into dialogue with the theorists of nothingness and negation introduced in Chapters 2 and 3. It argues that Sartre’s néant in Being and Nothingness, like that of many of his Augustinian predecessors—is intimately connected with problems of epistemology—especially, self-knowledge.


Author(s):  
Dale A. Olsen

This chapter discusses flute timbres and sonic textures. Flute timbres or tone colors, especially, are what characterize the flute and make it such a unique musical instrument. Small flutes are noted for their shrill and piercing tone colors, and in many cultures, the sounds of small flutes pierce the hearts, souls, and perhaps other areas of the human body of many listeners because of the high pitches. In some situations, the sound of the flute is like the wind, or is sad, lonely, and pensive. Like the Japanese shakuhachi and the Persian nay, most flutes are capable of a great variety of timbres that can imitate sounds of nature or evoke many emotions. The term “sonic texture,” refers to the “simultaneous sounding” of two or more instruments or voices. Throughout the stories presented in this book, flutes have mostly been played as solo instruments in a single-part texture. In many regions of the world, however, especially in the South American rainforest and Andes mountains, Africa, New Guinea, Japan, and Java, just to name a few, flutes are played in ensembles that create multipart textures.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas Feron ◽  
Pierre Mengeot ◽  
Thomas Vandenbergh ◽  
Pierre Latteur

<p>Tensegrity describes systems in which bars in compression seem to float inside cables in tension. This concept has inspired artists and designers for more than 60 years, however nowadays very few civil structures are built across the world. Although tensegrity structures seem visually light, there still remains a lack of rigorous and quantitative proofs about their structural efficiency in particular in terms of self-weight and stiffness. This article presents a 60m span tensegrity footbridge in steel composed of adapted simplex modules that contain one more cable than the classic simplex modules. The influence of this choice on the structural performances of the footbridge are here detailed. Eventually, the tensegrity footbridge is heavier and less stiff than traditional trusses but it is an aesthetic solution which offers the remarkable ability to deploy.</p>


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-55
Author(s):  
Cindy Mareyta

Robot Revolution is coming. Recent business prediction warns that, in just five years of time by 2021, we can already see 6% of our workforce will be replaced by robots or artificial intelligence machines. Currently, the world is in the middle of crisis where changes take place every day. The world and technology move so fast we are having difficulty keeping up with all of the changes altogether. These changes can bring fortune and disaster depending on how we see and embrace it. Everyday new inventions are made from one person’s idea passed on to the next. This idea may bring new hopes to one person and may put an end towards someone else's works. Throughout this paper, a detailed analysis is discussed to cover on how these changes in technology affect the labor force. Some of the questions to help us begin this innovative research are: What are the riskiest jobs in the market that will be most affected by disruptive technology? A short overview of what jobs that will most likely survive through changes of technology in 5 years of time. What is the predicted outcome of IT related workers?


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