MODELING OF THERMOPHYSICAL PHENOMENA

Author(s):  
A.M. MIGRANOV ◽  
◽  
M.Sh. MIGRANOV ◽  
A.F. SADYKOV ◽  
I.I. KHUSAENOV ◽  
...  

The results of the computer modeling of thermophysical phenomena in the contact zone during blade cutting of metals with multi-layer composite wear-resistant coatings are presented. These results ensure the adaptability of the cutting wedge to friction conditions. In-situ experimental studies of the cutting temperature during turning with various coatings and structural-phase analysis of the surface layer of the cutting tool were carried out to explain the mechanism of formation of secondary structures with a shielding effect - the self-organization effect.

2021 ◽  
Vol 248 ◽  
pp. 04019
Author(s):  
Marina Volosova ◽  
Artur Migranov ◽  
Maksim Rai

The results of computer simulation of thermophysical phenomena in the contact zone during blade cutting of metals with multi-layer composite wear-resistant coatings that ensure the adaptability of the cutting wedge to friction conditions are presented. On-site experimental studies of the cutting temperature during turning with various coatings, structural-phase analysis of the surface layer of the cutting tool to explain the mechanism of formation of secondary structures with a shielding effect – the effect of selforganization.


2021 ◽  
Vol 248 ◽  
pp. 04018
Author(s):  
Sergey Grigoriev ◽  
Mars Migranov ◽  
Abdumalik Seitkulov

In the conditions of high-speed processing of parts of complex configuration, with a large end and longitudinal length, from hard-to-work steels and alloys, it is difficult to ensure the wear resistance of the cutting tool in the aisles of one technological passage. To ensure the appropriate quality indicators of the surface layer, it is impossible to replace a worn-out cutting tool. In connection with the above, the problem of ensuring the operability (wear resistance) of the cutting tool is acute. The results of theoretical and experimental studies of contact phenomena in blade cutting based on the thermodynamics of non – equilibrium processes and from the standpoint of self-organization of the tribosystem are presented. the developed thermodynamic model of blade processing with variable cutting modes (non-stationary) allows to minimize the wear of the cutting tool and generally increase production efficiency by accelerating the drive of the main movement of the metal-cutting machine.


1972 ◽  
Vol 68 (2_Supplb) ◽  
pp. S9-S25 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Urquhart ◽  
Nancy Keller

ABSTRACT Two techniques for organ perfusion with blood are described which provide a basis for exploring metabolic or endocrine dynamics. The technique of in situ perfusion with autogenous arterial blood is suitable for glands or small organs which receive a small fraction of the animal's cardiac output; thus, test stimulatory or inhibitory substances can be added to the perfusing blood and undergo sufficient dilution in systemic blood after passage through the perfused organ so that recirculation does not compromise experimental control over test substance concentration in the perfusate. Experimental studies with the in situ perfused adrenal are described. The second technique, termed the pilot organ method, is suitable for organs which receive a large fraction of the cardiac output, such as the liver. Vascular connections are made between the circulation of an intact, anaesthetized large (> 30 kg) dog and the liver of a small (< 3 kg) dog. The small dog's liver (pilot liver) is excised and floated in a bath of canine ascites, and its venous effluent is continuously returned to the large dog. Test substances are infused into either the hepatic artery or portal vein of the pilot liver, but the small size of the pilot liver and its blood flow in relation to the large dog minimize recirculation effects. A number of functional parameters of the pilot liver are described.


2013 ◽  
Vol 690-693 ◽  
pp. 3359-3364
Author(s):  
Shou Jin Sun ◽  
Milan Brandt ◽  
John P.T. Mo

A higher strength and heat resistance are increasingly demanded from the advanced engineering materials with high temperature applications in the aerospace industry. These properties make machining these materials very difficult because of the high cutting forces, cutting temperature and short tool life present. Laser assisted machining uses a laser beam to heat and soften the workpiece locally in front of the cutting tool. The temperature rise at the shear zone reduces the yield strength and work hardening of the workpiece, which make the plastic deformation of the hard-to-machine materials easier during machining. The state-of-the-art, benefits and challenges in laser assisted machining of metallic materials are summarized in this paper, and the improvement of tool life is discussed in relation to laser power, beam position and machining process parameters.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (6) ◽  
pp. 30-37
Author(s):  
Александр Анцев ◽  
Aleksandr Ancev

The process effectiveness of blade cutting is defined considerably with the prediction accuracy of cutting tool durability term. But, in spite of that cutting processes have a probabilistic character, in modern mechanical engineering there are used durability de-pendences describing only the dependence of an average period of blade cutting tool durability upon cutting modes without taking into account a stochastic nature of tool wear depending upon many factors. For ac-counting cutting process variability there are offered stochastic models of cutting tool failure, but they hold good for a cutting tool with one cutting edge and in the case with a multi-blade cutting tool they must be speci-fied. In the paper it is defined that at a fan wear model with the increase of the blade number the period of cutting tool durability decreases, as failure likelihood of even one blade increases because of the blade properties spread of one tool. The factor of a durability period variation decreases with the growth of the blade number because of the decrease of an average durability period decrease. In the case of a wear accumulation model the multi-blade tool reliability does not depend upon the blade number. The dependences of an average period of durability and a factor of variation at a complex model of wear are similar to the case with the fan model of wear, but their values will be higher. In the case of a destruction model the factor of multi-blade tool durability variation does not depend upon the blade number, but an average durability depends considerably upon the blade number, but the dependence appearance corresponds to the dependence of an average durability at a fan model of wear. The type of the dependence of durability average period upon on the blade number at a generalized model of failures is similar to the cases considered previously, and a kind of the dependence of a variation factor changes depending on model parameters


Author(s):  
Bakytzhan Donenbayev ◽  
Karibek Sherov ◽  
Assylkhan Mazdubay ◽  
Aybek Sherov ◽  
Medgat Mussayev ◽  
...  

This article presents the experimental study results of the process of rotational friction holes boring using a cup cutter surfaced by STOODY M7-G material. As a result of experimental studies, the following quality indicators were achieved: surface roughness within Ra=10÷1,25 micrometer; surface hardness within HB 212-248. Using a cup cutter surfaced by STOODY M7-G material in case of rotational friction boring of large-diameter holes for large-sized parts can improve processing performance in comparison with cutting tools equipped with hard metal plates and provided the required surface roughness. Preliminary calculations showed that the manufacture of cup cutters from non-instrumental materials reduces the cost of the cutting tool by 5-7 times and the cost of the operation by 1.5-2 times.


1965 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 188-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Chamberlain ◽  
C. R. McLeod ◽  
R. J. Traill ◽  
G. R. Lachance

The following native metals have been identified in the Muskox intrusion: native iron, native nickel–iron (awaruite), native cobalt–iron (wairauite), and native copper. Mineral distributions and textures indicate that the native metals formed more or less contemporaneously, during the period of serpentinization of the host dunites and related rocks.Conditions during serpentinization must have been more reducing in the central and lower parts of the layered series than in the margins and upper parts of the intrusion. This is indicated by the fact that most native metals are abundant in the central regions and are essentially lacking elsewhere, even in strongly serpentinized zones. This zoning suggests that reducing conditions may have been generated internally, possibly as a result of the serpentinization process itself. The composition of the primary olivine of forsterite80–88 together with the presence of abundant secondary magnetite in equivalent serpentinites indicates that a redox reaction, olivine + water = serpentine + magnetite + hydrogen, contributed to the development of a progressively more reducing, or hydrogen-rich, fluid phase.Natural phase relations indicate that each native metal formed primarily in situ as a result of the decomposition of specific earlier formed minerals that had become unstable in the reducing environment. Native iron appears to have been formed by the reduction of magnetite; awaruite by the reduction of pentlandite; wairauite by the reduction of an unknown phase, possibly cobalt pentlandite or cobaltian pyrite; and native copper by the reduction of chalcopyrite. The feasibility of most of these reactions was confirmed by experimental studies carried out in systems open to moist hydrogen.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nhan Nu Hong Ton ◽  
Binh Khanh Mai ◽  
Thanh Vinh Nguyen

Abstract: Hydroboration reaction of alkynes is one of the most synthetically powerful tools to access organoboron compounds, versatile precursors for cross coupling chemistry. This type of reaction has traditionally been mediated by transition metal or main group catalysts. Herein, we report a novel method using tropylium salts, typically known as organic oxidants and Lewis acids, to efficiently promote the hydroboration reaction of alkynes. A broad range of vinylboranes can be easily accessed via this metal-free protocol. Similar hydroboration reactions of alkenes and epoxides can also be efficiently catalyzed by the same tropylium catalysts. Experimental studies and DFT calculations suggested that the reaction follows an uncommon mechanistic paradigm, which is triggered by a hydride abstraction of pinacolborane with tropylium ion. This is followed by a series of <i>in situ</i> counterion-activated substituent exchanges to generate boron intermediates that promote the hydroboration reaction.


1991 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 747-758 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Pongracz ◽  
S. Firestein ◽  
G. M. Shepherd

1. Experimental studies employing whole cell patch recordings from freshly isolated olfactory sensory neurons of the salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum) yield much higher estimates of specific membrane resistance (Rm) than studies using conventional intracellular recordings from in situ neurons. Because Rm is critical for understanding information transfer in these cells, we have used computational methods to analyze the possible reasons for this difference. 2. Compartmental models were constructed for both the in situ and isolated neurons, using SABER, a general-purpose simulation program. For Rm in the in situ cell, we used a high value of 100,000 omega.cm2, as estimated in the whole cell recordings from isolated cells. A shunt across the cell membrane caused by the penetrating microelectrode was simulated by several types of shunt mechanisms, and its effects on lowering the apparent value of resting membrane potential (MP), input resistance (RN), and membrane time constant (tau m) and increasing the electrotonic length (L) were analyzed. 3. A good approximation of the electrotonic properties recorded intracellularly was obtained in the in situ model with high Rm combined with an electrode shunt consisting of Na and K conductances. A raised K conductance (1-5 nS) helps to maintain the resting MP while contributing to the increased conductance, which lowers RN and shortens the apparent tau m toward the experimental values. 4. Combined shunt resistances of 0.1-0.2 G omega (5-10 nS) gave the best fits with the experimental data. These shunts were two to three orders of magnitude smaller than the values reported from intracellular penetrations in muscle cells and motoneurons. This may be correlated with the smaller electrode tips used in the recordings from these small neurons. We thus confirm the prediction that even small values of electrode shunt have relatively large effects on the recorded electrotonic properties of small neurons, because of their high RN (2-5 G omega). 5. We have further explored the effects on electrotonic structure of a nonuniform Rm by giving higher Rm values to the distally located cilia compared with the proximal soma-dendritic region, as indicated by recent experiments. For the same RN, large increases in ciliary Rm above 100,000 omega.cm2 can be balanced by relatively small decreases below that value in soma-dendritic Rm. A high ciliary Rm appears to be a specialization for transduction of the sensory input, as reported also in photoreceptors and hair cells.


The papers presented at this conference have demonstrated the extraordinary range of information that can be deduced from experimental studies of the spectrum and the intensity of light scattered by matter. Indeed, these experiments provide detailed information on the energy level structure, dynamical motion and spatial structure of atoms, molecules, solids, fluids and synthetic and biological macromolecules. Each of the participants in this conference has given us the detailed analysis of his experimental studies on these various systems. I see it as my function to remind you, in the briefest way, of those physical findings which stand out most clearly in my own mind, without an effort to be complete. When considering atoms, the work of Dr Svanberg on resonance scattering provides detailed knowledge of the energy level structure of the electronic multiplets. Dr Cohen-Tannoudji has discussed the possibility of, and the theoretical basis for, an understanding of the precise dynamics of the radiation process using ‘antibunching’ experiments. For molecules, experimental studies of the Raman effect, and measurements of molecular polarizability by Dr Jones, Dr Madden, Dr Knaap and Professor Buckingham have provided accurate information on the moments of inertia and interatomic distances in molecules, the lifetimes of rotational and vibrational states and the electronic charge distribution through the polarizability. For solids, Dr Patel has shown how the Landau levels in indium antimonide can be used to produce a laser light source with great monochromaticity and high power. By combining this 'spin-flip ’ Raman laser with the sensitive detection techniques of opto-acoustic spectroscopy he has been able to measure the temporal variation in the very low concentration of NO and NO 2 in the atmosphere and the stratosphere. Dr Cummins has shown how Raman and Brillouin scattering experiments in ferroelectric crystals can provide knowledge on structural phase transitions by detecting the softening of specific normal modes of the lattice vibrations as the transition is approached. Dr Pusey has created a uniquely interesting ‘solid’ made up of highly charged polystyrene latex spheres. By studying the spectrum and angular dependence of the intensity of light scattered from this system as a function of the degree of order, he can observe the development of the diffusive motion and the time average pair correlation function as the system of spheres evolves from a solution to a solid lattice. For fluids, Dr Vinen has explained how his work and that of Dr Greytak on the spectrum of light scattered from liquid helium provides information on the rich variety of elementary excitation such as phonons, rotons (including a roton bound state), and second sound in this fascinating quantum fluid. Dr Pike has shown how optical mixing, or photon correlation spectroscopy of the Doppler shift in the light scattered from macroscopic motion in a fluid can be used to provide information on velocity profiles and turbulent motion in fluids. These methods are applied to systems as diverse as chimney stacks, vortices behind jet aircraft on takeoff and landing, and flames. In addition he uses these techniques to observe blood flow in the retinal microcirculation in the living eye as was first demonstrated by Dr Riva and his collaborators. At the conclusion of his talk he showed some vivid, beautiful moving pictures of light scattered from a variety of dynamical fluid motions.


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