scholarly journals Assessment of the efficiency of the explosion of the simple explosive mixtures with energy additives.

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4/2020) ◽  
pp. 43-49
Author(s):  
S. A. Kozyrev ◽  
◽  
E. A. Vlasova ◽  
A. V. Sokolov ◽  
E. A. Usachev ◽  
...  

On the basis of experimental studies in the field and on polygon, the features of the detonation of mixed explosive charges on various types of ammonium nitrate with energy additives during pneumatic load-ing are revealed. It has been established that when using porous grades of nitrate, the addition of alu-minum powders differently dispersed leads to a decrease in detonation parameters due to the peculiari-ties of aluminum oxidation at the front of the detonation wave and does not provide the theoretically expected increase in the energy of the explosion. The use of high-quality fine-grained porous nitrate in the ANFO mixtures allows obtaining the higher explosive characteristics of the mixtures. The supple-ment of energy additives in the form of aluminum powders does not increase the explosive characteris-tics of the mixture.

2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (05) ◽  
pp. 8376-8383
Author(s):  
Dayiheng Liu ◽  
Jie Fu ◽  
Yidan Zhang ◽  
Chris Pal ◽  
Jiancheng Lv

Typical methods for unsupervised text style transfer often rely on two key ingredients: 1) seeking the explicit disentanglement of the content and the attributes, and 2) troublesome adversarial learning. In this paper, we show that neither of these components is indispensable. We propose a new framework that utilizes the gradients to revise the sentence in a continuous space during inference to achieve text style transfer. Our method consists of three key components: a variational auto-encoder (VAE), some attribute predictors (one for each attribute), and a content predictor. The VAE and the two types of predictors enable us to perform gradient-based optimization in the continuous space, which is mapped from sentences in a discrete space, to find the representation of a target sentence with the desired attributes and preserved content. Moreover, the proposed method naturally has the ability to simultaneously manipulate multiple fine-grained attributes, such as sentence length and the presence of specific words, when performing text style transfer tasks. Compared with previous adversarial learning based methods, the proposed method is more interpretable, controllable and easier to train. Extensive experimental studies on three popular text style transfer tasks show that the proposed method significantly outperforms five state-of-the-art methods.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 181803 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam G. Dolezal ◽  
Jimena Carrillo-Tripp ◽  
Timothy M. Judd ◽  
W. Allen Miller ◽  
Bryony C. Bonning ◽  
...  

Honeybee population declines have been linked to multiple stressors, including reduced diet diversity and increased exposure to understudied viral pathogens. Despite interest in these factors, few experimental studies have explored the interaction between diet diversity and viral infection in honeybees. Here, we used a mixture of laboratory cage and small semi-field nucleus hive experiments to determine how these factors interact. In laboratory experiments, we found that high-quality diets (polyfloral pollen and high-quality single-source pollen) have the potential to reduce mortality in the face of infection with Israeli acute paralysis virus (IAPV). There was a significant interaction between diet and virus infection on mortality, even in the presence of high virus titres, suggesting that good diets can help bees tolerate virus infection. Further, we found that extreme stress in the form of pollen starvation in conjunction with IAPV infection increase exiting behaviour from small experimental hives. Finally, we showed that higher-quality pollen diets have significantly higher iron and calcium content, suggesting micronutrient deficiencies could be an under-explored area of bee nutrition.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 1681-1693 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zongjian Zhang ◽  
Qiang Wu ◽  
Yang Wang ◽  
Fang Chen

2018 ◽  
Vol 251 ◽  
pp. 02002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey Parfenov ◽  
Anatoly Alekseytsev ◽  
Yuriy Vinokurov

Describes the theoretical preconditions of using mechanical properties of fine-grained concrete in the design of concrete structures subject to risks and the general safety. A technique for experimental studies and data on the fine-grained concrete deformative properties at different ages and different loading levels are presented. The regularities of the modulus of elasticity change from strength, type and age of concrete are revealed. Full diagrams of deformation of concrete are constructed. The results obtained can be used in the design of the fine-grained concrete structures in buildings having risks occurrence socioeconomic losses and able to resist of emergency actions.


2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jihua Chen ◽  
Teresa Chen-Keat ◽  
Mehdi Hojjati ◽  
AJ Vallee ◽  
Marc-Andre Octeau ◽  
...  

AbstractDeveloping reliable processes is one of the key elements in producing high-quality composite components using an automated fiber placement (AFP) process. In this study, both simulation and experimental studies were carried out to investigate fiber steering and cut/restart under different processing parameters, such as layup rate and compaction pressure, during the AFP process. First, fiber paths were designed using curved fiber axes with different radii. Fiber placement trials were then conducted to investigate the quality of the steered fiber paths. Furthermore, a series of sinusoidal fiber paths were fiber placed and investigated. Moreover, a six-ply laminate with cut-outs in it was manufactured in the cut/restart trials. The accuracy of the fiber cut/restart was compared at different layup rates for both one- and bi-directional layups. Experimental results show that it was possible to layup steered fiber paths with small radii of curvature (minimum 114 mm) designed for this study when the proper process condition was used. It was observed from the cut/restart trials that the quality of tow cut was independent of layup speed; however, the accuracy of tow restart was related to the layup speed. The faster the layup speed, the less accurate was the tow restart.


2016 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 794-823 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ariel White ◽  
Kris-Stella Trump

Local governments operate 311 service request lines across the United States, and the publicly available data from these lines provide a continuously measured, geographically fine-grained, and non-self-reported measure of citizens’ interactions with government. It seems a promising measure of neighborhood political participation. However, these data are empirically and theoretically different from many common citizen-level participation measures. We compare geographically aggregated 311 call data with three other measures of political and civic participation: voter turnout, political donations, and census return rates. We show that rates of 311 calls are negatively related to lower cost activities (voter turnout and census return rates), but positively related to the high-cost activity of campaign donation. We caution against interpreting 311 data as a generic measure of political engagement or participation, at least in the absence of high-quality controls for neighborhood condition. However, we argue that these data are still potentially useful for researchers, because they are by definition a measure of the service demands that neighborhoods place on city governments.


Author(s):  
Sergii Karnaukh

The purpose of this work is to study the known method of division of pipes by introducing a figure knife and the development of promising designs of equipment for division of pipes into measured workpieces. Based on the analysis of the actuating crank-slider mechanisms used in the equipment for division of pipes into measured workpieces, promising schemes of short-connecting rod mechanisms have been discovered that provide a local pipe section along the perimeter. The developed design of the device for dividing pipes into dimensional workpieces by the eccentric twisting method, which contains a wedge-joint mechanism in combination with a compact circular actuator, also allows to reduce energy and power costs for separation, reduce the consequences of instantaneous unloading of equipment and ensure high quality workpieces. A mathematical model of the proposed equipment was developed and the modeling of the cutting process was carried out using the DEFORM-3D software package. The analysis of the results obtained showed that in the extreme positions of the knives, jamming of the knives is possible. To eliminate jamming, it is necessary that the knives do not reach the extreme position. The adequacy of the mathematical model is confirmed by experimental studies. The error of the calculated and measured values of the torque on the cutting knife does not exceed 10%. This is due to the need for a more correct accounting of friction on the contact surfaces of the equipment. Cut tubular blanks have high geometric accuracy and high quality of the cut surface.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (19) ◽  
pp. 5745
Author(s):  
Magdalena Fabin ◽  
Tomasz Jarosz

Ammonium nitrate–fuel oil (ANFO) is one of the most widely used explosives for civilian purposes. Its main advantages are its low price and simple method of production. The main disadvantages of this material are low water resistance and problems related to non-ideal detonation, which can be a potential hazard when using ANFO. Due to this, research has been conducted for many years to find suitable additives for ANFO that would have the effect of offsetting its drawbacks. The aim of this review was to describe factors affecting the energetic properties of ANFO, including the highlighting of substances that could potentially be additives to ANFO formulations that would reduce the negative effects of non-ideal detonation, while avoiding adversely impacting the effectiveness of the explosive in blasting operations, as well as its sensitivity parameters.


Crystals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 20
Author(s):  
Shiv J. Singh ◽  
Mihai I. Sturza

The discovery of iron-based superconductors (FBS) and their superconducting properties has generated huge research interest and provided a very rich physics high Tc family for fundamental and experimental studies. The 1111 (REFeAsO, RE = Rare earth) and 1144 (AEAFe4As4, AE = Ca, Eu; A = K, Rb) families are the two most important families of FBS, which offer the high Tc of 58 K and 36 K with doping and without doping, respectively. Furthermore, the crystal growth of these families is not an easy process, and a lot of efforts have been reported in this direction. However, the preparation of high-quality and suitable-sized samples is still challenging. In this short review, we will summarize the growth of materials with their superconducting properties, especially polycrystals and single crystals, for the 1111 and 1144 families, and make a short comparison between them to understand the developmental issues.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 38-38
Author(s):  
Thomas W. Broadhead ◽  
Steven G. Driese

Small skeletal sediment particles, by virtue of their size, experience physical sedimentological conditions different from those affecting large (i.e., > 4 mm) particles. In shallow, high-energy marine carbonate environments with an overall fine-grained (< 4 mm) sediment composition, grain-to-grain impacts are probably of insufficient magnitude to overcome the cushioning effect of water and cause abrasive wear. Very large skeletal grains within such a setting will promote physical degradation, but biological activity (microboring, bioerosion) is more effective in modifying particle surfaces and diminishing grain size. Only in eolian environments are collisions between small grains effective in causing abrasion. Quartz sand, a particularly important abrasive agent in the destruction of large skeletal parts under even moderate energy regimes, also appears to be appreciably important for the degradation of small skeletons only under eolian conditions.Conodonts are small (0.2–2.0 mm), phosphatic teeth, which may have belonged to an extinct (Cambrian-Triassic) group of jawless fish. They occur principally in marine and marginal marine sedimentary rocks; most specimens probably were deposited as discrete particles or as components of fecal masses. Because the extent and nature of degradation of a skeleton reflects its taphonomic history, evaluation of the susceptibility of conodonts to physical abrasion is important. Bioerosion, probably the principal cause of degradation of calcareous skeletons, was probably insignificant in alteration of conodonts. Their mineralogical composition made conodonts unlikely substrates for endoliths, and they were insufficiently abundant to serve as a recyclable source of phosphate for larger metazoans. Chemical breakdown of skeletal apatite would not have occurred, although atmospheric exposure may have promoted degradation of organic laminae, causing exfoliation.Experimental studies of abrasion (elements of Palmatolepis sp., Polygnathus sp. - U. Devonian, Iowa) plus petrographic examination of conodont bearing marine, marginal marine, and eolian facies of the Morgan Formation (M. Pennsylvanian, Utah and Colorado) suggests that abrasion of conodonts is insignificant in aqueous environments, and likely to occur to a major degree only under eolian conditions. High-energy (25.6 cm/sec) conditions were simulated in a tumbler containing quartz sand (4Φ − 2Φ), artificial sea water and moderate conodont abundances (50 specimens/kg). Abrasion produced under these artificially extreme conditions (e.g., continuous motion for up to 20 km travel distance) was at a scale detectable only with SEM. “Dry” tumbling experiments were ineffective, as noted by other authors simulating conditions for abrasion of mineral grains. Eolian conditions were simulated in a glass “wind tube” (see Kuenen, 1960, Journal of Geology) using a similar range of quartz sand sizes. Air velocity of approximately 100 cm/sec produced subtle visually detectable abrasion following 5 hours of exposure/transport in 2Φ quartz sand (1667 specimens/kg), but exhibited no visual evidence of abrasion under similar conditions with 3Φ sand.The Morgan Formation is a mixed carbonate/siliciclastic sequence that reflects repeated episodes of submergence and exposure of a carbonate shelf and laterally adjacent siliciclastic eolian “sand sea.” It represents a virtually ideal ancient example for the interpretation of the effects of natural sedimentary processes because of its well-documented environmental heterogeneity and contains both abraded and unabraded conodonts. Conodonts sampled from high-energy subtidal carbonate facies of the Morgan are unabraded, irrespective of the presence of quartz sand; platform and delicate ramiform elements are all represented. Conodonts sampled from mixed siliciclastic/carbonate eolian facies are extremely abraded; only the most durable Pa elements of Adetognathus sp. and Idiognathodus sp. are preserved, although fine surface details and denticles are worn and anterior blades are missing. Laboratory simulations confirm the interpretation that marine processes are generally insufficient to physically abrade small phosphatic skeletal grains and that highly abraded Morgan conodonts experienced extremely long residence times in the eolian environment where they were transported, repeatedly buried, and exposed to bombardment and abrasion by quartz sand.Supported by NSF EAR9004300


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