• Title/Summary/Keyword: t-z model

Search Result 168, Processing Time 0.03 seconds

Damage and vibrations of nuclear power plant buildings subjected to aircraft crash part I: Model test

  • Li, Z.R.;Li, Z.C.;Dong, Z.F.;Huang, T.;Lu, Y.G.;Rong, J.L.;Wu, H.
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.53 no.9
    • /
    • pp.3068-3084
    • /
    • 2021
  • Investigations of large commercial aircraft impact effect on nuclear power plant (NPP) buildings have been drawing extensive attentions, particularly after the 9/11 event, and this paper aims to experimentally assess the damage and vibrations of NPP buildings subjected to aircraft crash. In present Part I, two shots of reduce-scaled model test of aircraft impacting on NPP building were carried out. Firstly, the 1:15 aircraft model (weighs 135 kg) and RC NPP model (weighs about 70 t) are designed and prepared. Then, based on the large rocket sled loading test platform, the aircraft models were accelerated to impact perpendicularly on the two sides of NPP model, i.e., containment and auxiliary buildings, with a velocity of about 170 m/s. The strain-time histories of rebars within the impact area and acceleration-time histories of each floor of NPP model are derived from the pre-arranged twenty-one strain gauges and twenty tri-axial accelerometers, and the whole impact processes were recorded by three high-speed cameras. The local penetration and perforation failure modes occurred respectively in the collision scenarios of containment and auxiliary buildings, and some suggestions for the NPP design are given. The maximum acceleration in the 1:15 scaled tests is 1785.73 g, and thus the corresponding maximum resultant acceleration in a prototype impact might be about 119 g, which poses a potential threat to the nuclear equipment. Furthermore, it was found that the nonlinear decrease of vibrations along the height was well reflected by the variations of both the maximum resultant vibrations and Cumulative Absolute Velocity (CAV). The present experimental work on the damage and dynamic responses of NPP structure under aircraft impact is firstly presented, which could provide a benchmark basis for further safety assessments of prototype NPP structure as well as inner systems and components against aircraft crash.

Synthesis and Crystal Structure of $Me_2Pt(PPh_2CH_2C(t-Bu)=N-N=CMe(2-py)-\kappa^2N,P)$ ($Me_2Pt(PPh_2CH_2C(t-Bu)=N-N=CMe(2-py)-\kappa^2N,P)$의 합성 및 결정 구조)

  • Cho Sung Il;Kang Sang Ook;Chang K.
    • Korean Journal of Crystallography
    • /
    • v.15 no.2
    • /
    • pp.83-87
    • /
    • 2004
  • An organometallic complex. $Me_2Pt(PPh_2CH_2C(t-Bu)=N-N=CMe(2-py)-\kappa^2N,P)$ was synthesized from phosphinohydrazone $Ph_2PCH_2C(t-Bu)=NNH_2$, 2-acetylpyridine, and $[PtMe2({\mu}-SMe_2)]_2$. The molecular structure of this complex has been determined by X-ray diffraction. Crystallographic data: monoclinic, space group $P2_1/n,\;a=11.6926(7)\;{\AA},\;b=15.6607(19)\;{\AA},\; c=14.6125(6)\;{\AA},\;\beta=93.018(4)^{\circ},\;Z=4,\;V=2672.0(4)\;{\AA}^3$. The structure was solved by direct methods and refined by full-matrix least-squares methods to give a model with a reliability factor R = 0.0363 for 5238 reflections.

The Modelling of Overhead Crane System (천장 크레인시스템의 모델링)

  • Lee, Jong-Gyu;Lee, Sang-Ryong
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
    • /
    • v.16 no.9
    • /
    • pp.166-171
    • /
    • 1999
  • An overhead crane system consists of trolley, girder, rope, object, trolley motor, girder motor, and hoist motor. An analytic model which derived from the modelling of the overhead crane system is nonlinear model which includes the swing and the twist angle of the object. this model consists of the equation of motion for motors and object. If the swing angle and the acceleration of Z for the object are small, this model becomes a simple nonlinear model which doesn't include the swing and the twist angle of the object. From the results of computer simulation, the characteristics of an actual overhead crane system could be predicted by the simple nonlinear model.

  • PDF

Intra-Rater and Inter-Rater Reliability of Brain Surface Intensity Model (BSIM)-Based Cortical Thickness Analysis Using 3T MRI

  • Jeon, Ji Young;Moon, Won-Jin;Moon, Yeon-Sil;Han, Seol-Heui
    • Investigative Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    • /
    • v.19 no.3
    • /
    • pp.168-177
    • /
    • 2015
  • Purpose: Brain surface intensity model (BSIM)-based cortical thickness analysis does not require complicated 3D segmentation of brain gray/white matters. Instead, this technique uses the local intensity profile to compute cortical thickness. The aim of the present study was to evaluate intra-rater and inter-rater reliability of BSIM-based cortical thickness analysis using images from elderly participants. Materials and Methods: Fifteen healthy elderly participants (ages, 55-84 years) were included in this study. High-resolution 3D T1-spoiled gradient recalled-echo (SPGR) images were obtained using 3T MRI. BSIM-based processing steps included an inhomogeneity correction, intensity normalization, skull stripping, atlas registration, extraction of intensity profiles, and calculation of cortical thickness. Processing steps were automatic, with the exception of semiautomatic skull stripping. Individual cortical thicknesses were compared to a database indicating mean cortical thickness of healthy adults, in order to produce Z-score thinning maps. Intra-class correlation coefficients (ICCs) were calculated in order to evaluate inter-rater and intra-rater reliabilities. Results: ICCs for intra-rater reliability were excellent, ranging from 0.751-0.940 in brain regions except the right occipital, left anterior cingulate, and left and right cerebellum (ICCs = 0.65-0.741). Although ICCs for inter-rater reliability were fair to excellent in most regions, poor inter-rater correlations were observed for the cingulate and occipital regions. Processing time, including manual skull stripping, was $17.07{\pm}3.43min$. Z-score maps for all participants indicated that cortical thicknesses were not significantly different from those in the comparison databases of healthy adults. Conclusion: BSIM-based cortical thickness measurements provide acceptable intra-rater and inter-rater reliability. We therefore suggest BSIM-based cortical thickness analysis as an adjunct clinical tool to detect cortical atrophy.

Wind direction field under the influence of topography: part II: CFD investigations

  • Li, S.W.;Hu, Z.Z.;Tse, K.T.;Weerasuriya, A.U.
    • Wind and Structures
    • /
    • v.22 no.4
    • /
    • pp.477-501
    • /
    • 2016
  • Though hilly topography influences both wind speeds and directions aloft, only the influence on wind speeds, i.e. the speed-up effect, has been thoroughly investigated. Due to the importance of a model showing the spatial variations of wind directions above hilly terrains, it is worthwhile to systematically assess the applicability and limitations of the model describing the influence of hilly topographies on wind directions. Based on wind-tunnel test results, a model, which describes the horizontal and vertical variations of the wind directions separately, has been proposed in a companion paper. CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) techniques were employed in the present paper to evaluate the applicability of the proposed model. From the investigation, it has been found that the model is acceptable for describing the vertical variation of wind directions by a shallow hill whose primary-to-secondary axis ratio (aspect ratio) is larger than 1. When the overall hill slope exceeds $20^{\circ}$, the proposed model should be used with caution. When the aspect ratio is less than 1, the proposed model is less accurate in predicting the spatial variation of wind directions in the wake zone in a separated flow. In addition, it has been found that local slope of a hill has significant impact on the applicability of the proposed model. Specifically, the proposed model is only applicable when local slope of a hill varies gradually from 0 (at the hill foot) to the maximum value (at the mid-slope point) and then to 0 (at the hill top).

A Study on the Vibration Analysis for the Composite Multi-axial Optical Structure of an Aircraft (항공기용 복합재료 다축 광학 구조의 진동해석에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Dae-Young;Kwak, Jae-Hyuck;Lee, Jun-Ho;Park, Kwang-Woo;Jeong, Kwang-Young;Cheon, Seong-Sik
    • Composites Research
    • /
    • v.24 no.2
    • /
    • pp.14-21
    • /
    • 2011
  • In this paper, a dynamic model is proposed for multi-axis optical structure of an aircraft. Modal analysis, sine-wave analysis, and random vibration analysis are done using a multi-body dynamic program for the multi-axis optical structure. By applying Al 6061-T6 and two types of CFRP to the camera module, x, y, and z responses are found and compared according to each axis excitation. The results will be used for reducing the weight of the camera module.

Experimental study of a modeled building frame supported by pile groups embedded in cohesionless soil

  • Ravi Kumar Reddy, C.;Gunneswara Rao, T.D.
    • Interaction and multiscale mechanics
    • /
    • v.4 no.4
    • /
    • pp.321-336
    • /
    • 2011
  • This paper presents the results of static vertical load tests carried out on a model building frame supported by pile groups embedded in cohesionless soil (sand). The effect of soil interaction on displacements and rotation at the column base and also the shears and bending moments in the columns of the building frame were investigated. The experimental results have been compared with those obtained from the finite element analysis and conventional method of analysis. Soil nonlinearity in the lateral direction is characterized by the p-y curves and in the axial direction by nonlinear vertical springs along the length of the piles (${\tau}-z$ curves) at their tips (Q-z curves). The results reveal that the conventional method gives the shear force in the column by about 40-60%, the bending moment at the column top about 20-30% and at the column base about 75-100% more than those from the experimental results. The response of the frame from the experimental results is in good agreement with that obtained by the nonlinear finite element analysis.

Purification of p-Dioxanone from p-Dioxanone and Diethylene Glycol Mixture by a Layer Melt Crystallization (경막형 용융결정화에 의한 파라디옥사논과 디에틸렌글리콜 혼합물로부터 파라디옥사논의 정제)

  • Kim, Sung-Il;Kim, Chul-Ung;Park, So-Jin
    • Korean Chemical Engineering Research
    • /
    • v.43 no.5
    • /
    • pp.595-602
    • /
    • 2005
  • In order to purify diethylene glycol as main impurity included in p-dioxanone, SLE (solid-liquid equilibria) and mixture density on two components system of p-dioxanone and diethylene glycol were measured and a layered melt crystallization with seed has been applied. The SLE of p-dioxanone and diethylene glycol were a simple eutectic system and the temperature and PDX concentration at eutectic point were 0.08 and 246 K, respectively. Densities of their binary mixtures were well fitted by the best correlation equation, ${\rho}_l=0.405+1.361x+0.002T-0.004xT$. In the melt crystallization, the growth rate (G) was proportional to the 1.5th power of the subcooling degree. The effective distribution coefficient ($K_{eff}$) as the degree of impurity removal was observed to increase with increasing the growth rate and initial p-dioxanone concentration. And also, $K_{eff}$ was correlated with Z function using Wintermantel's model such as $K_{eef}=-0.0604+6.392{\times}Z$. Finally, PDX purity through the optimization of this process can be obtained over 99%.

In Sacco Ruminal Degradation Characteristics of Chemical Components in Fresh Zoysia japonica and Miscanthus sinensis Growing in Japanese Native Pasture

  • Ogura, S.;Kosako, T.;Hayashi, Y.;Dohi, H.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
    • /
    • v.14 no.1
    • /
    • pp.41-47
    • /
    • 2001
  • Ruminal degradation characteristics of dry matter (DM), neutral detergent fiber (NDF) and crude protein (CP) in fresh leaves of two Japanese native grasses (Zoysia japonica and Miscanthus sinensis) and one sown temperate grass (Dactylis glomerata) were investigated by an in sacco method in spring (mid-May), summer (mid-July) and autumn (mid-September). Japanese native grasses had higher NDF and lower CP concentrations than D. glomerata, and the CP concentration in native grasses decreased in autumn. Ruminal degradability of DM, NDF and CP was lower in native grasses than in D. glomerata (p<0.05) in all seasons. DM and NDF degradability decreased in summer for Z. japonica and D. glomerata, while it decreased in autumn for M. sinensis. CP degradability in Z. japonica was constant throughout the seasons, whereas that in M. sinensis greatly decreased in summer and autumn (p<0.05). It was concluded that Z. japonica could stably supply ruminally digestible nutrients for grazing animals in Japanese native pasture. However, the degradation characteristics of freshly chopped native grasses did not fit the exponential model of $D=a+b(1-e^{-ct})$ proposed by Ørskov and McDonald.

Small-scale effects on wave propagation in curved nanobeams subjected to thermal loadings based on NSGT

  • Ibrahim Ghoytasi;Reza Naghdabadi
    • Advances in nano research
    • /
    • v.16 no.2
    • /
    • pp.187-200
    • /
    • 2024
  • This study focuses on wave propagation analysis in the curved nanobeam exposed to different thermal loadings based on the Nonlocal Strain Gradient Theory (NSGT). Mechanical properties of the constitutive materials are assumed to be temperature-dependent and functionally graded. For modeling, the governing equations are derived using Hamilton's principle. Using the proposed model, the effects of small-scale, geometrical, and thermo-mechanical parameters on the dynamic behavior of the curved nanobeam are studied. A small-scale parameter, Z, is taken into account that collectively represents the strain gradient and the nonlocal parameters. When Z<1 or Z>1, the phase velocity decreases/increases, and the stiffness-softening/hardening phenomenon occurs in the curved nanobeam. Accordingly, the phase velocity depends more on the strain gradient parameter rather than the nonlocal parameter. As the arc angle increases, more variations in the phase velocity emerge in small wavenumbers. Furthermore, an increase of ∆T causes a decrease in the phase velocity, mostly in the case of uniform temperature rise rather than heat conduction. For verification, the results are compared with those available for the straight nanobeam in the previous studies. It is believed that the findings will be helpful for different applications of curved nanostructures used in nano-devices.