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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Composite materials used in the fabrication of industrial products/components are under constant development. Applications vary widely from consumer products to high-performance aerospace components. The pultrusion process is one of the important methods of production of composite materials. In order to develop a fundamental understanding of this process, a computational model employing the finite element method is developed which enables a prediction of the material temperature and degree-of-cure at any time during the process. The model is comprehensive; it can readily be employed to perform parametric studies of the process and to aid in the development of efficient design procedures for this type of material system. Comparisons are made between model predictions and experimental results and good agreement is observed.
    Keywords: MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
    Type: Journal of Reinforced Plastics and Composites (ISSN 0731-6844); 11; 12; p. 1322-1351.
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-08-27
    Description: We analyze the cycle of great earthquakes along the San Andreas fault with a finite element numerical model of deformation in a crust with a nonlinear viscoelastic rheology. The viscous component of deformation has an effective viscosity that depends exponentially on the inverse absolute temperature and nonlinearity on the shear stress; the elastic deformation is linear. Crustal thickness and temperature are constrained by seismic and heat flow data for California. The models are for anti plane strain in a 25-km-thick crustal layer having a very long, vertical strike-slip fault; the crustal block extends 250 km to either side of the fault. During the earthquake cycle that lasts 160 years, a constant plate velocity v(sub p)/2 = 17.5 mm yr is applied to the base of the crust and to the vertical end of the crustal block 250 km away from the fault. The upper half of the fault is locked during the interseismic period, while its lower half slips at the constant plate velocity. The locked part of the fault is moved abruptly 2.8 m every 160 years to simulate great earthquakes. The results are sensitive to crustal rheology. Models with quartzite-like rheology display profound transient stages in the velocity, displacement, and stress fields. The predicted transient zone extends about 3-4 times the crustal thickness on each side of the fault, significantly wider than the zone of deformation in elastic models. Models with diabase-like rheology behave similarly to elastic models and exhibit no transient stages. The model predictions are compared with geodetic observations of fault-parallel velocities in northern and central California and local rates of shear strain along the San Andreas fault. The observations are best fit by models which are 10-100 times less viscous than a quartzite-like rheology. Since the lower crust in California is composed of intermediate to mafic rocks, the present result suggests that the in situ viscosity of the crustal rock is orders of magnitude less the rock viscosity determined in the laboratory.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 99; B11; p. 21,983-22,000
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-10
    Description: Stable Inversion techniques can be used to achieve high-accuracy output tracking. However, for nonminimum phase systems, the inverse is non-causal - hence the inverse has to be pre-computed using a pre-specified desired-output trajectory. This requirement for pre-specification of the desired output restricts the use of inversion-based approaches to trajectory planning problems (for nonminimum phase systems). In the present article, it is shown that preview information of the desired output can be used to achieve online inversion-based output tracking of linear systems. The amount of preview-time needed is quantified in terms of the tracking error and the internal dynamics of the system (zeros of the system). The methodology is applied to the online output tracking of a flexible structure and experimental results are presented.
    Keywords: Cybernetics
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The necessary phase diagram data for growing lattice-matched layers of PbSnSeTe on PbSe are presented. Solid compounds of Pb(1-x)Sn(x)Se(1-y)Te(y) lattice-matched to PbSe were grown from liquid melts consisting of (Pb/1-x/Sn/x/)(1-z)(Se/1-y/Te/y/)(z); phase equilibria data were determined together with liquidus data for values of x(liquid) from 0 to 40 percent and y(liquid) from 0 to 40 percent for temperatures between 450 and 540 C. It was found that relatively large amounts of Te must be added to the melt to achieve lattice matching because of its low segregation coefficient relative to Se. A significant lattice-pulling effect was discovered for the 5-percent Sn case, and a similar effect is expected for the 10- and 20-percent Sn cases.
    Keywords: SOLID-STATE PHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Applied Physics (ISSN 0021-8979); 62; 2994-300
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2021-01-08
    Description: Humic substances (humics) are ubiquitous in terrestrial and aquatic environments where they can serve as electron acceptors for anaerobic oxidation of organic compounds. Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas, as well as the least reactive organic molecule. Anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) coupled to microbial reduction of various electron acceptors plays a crucial role in mitigating methane emissions. Here, we reported that humics could serve as terminal electron acceptors for AOM using enriched nitrate-reducing AOM microorganisms. AOM coupled to the reduction of humics was demonstrated based on the production of 13C-labelled carbon dioxide, and AOM activity was evaluated with different methane partial pressures and electron acceptor concentrations. After three-cycle reduction, both AOM activity and copy numbers of the archaea 16S rRNA and mcrA genes were the highest when anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonic acid and anthraquinone-2-sulfonic acid were electron acceptors. The high-throughput sequencing results suggested that ANME-2d were the dominant methane oxidation archaea after humics reduction, although the partner bacteria NC10 trended downward, other reported humics reduction bacteria (Geobactor and Anammox) appeared. The potential electron transfer models from ANME-2d to humics were proposed. These results enable a better understanding of available electron acceptors for AOM in natural environments and broaden our insight into the significant role of ANME-2d.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-11-06
    Description: The research cruise M187 with the RV METEOR sailed January 25 th to March 4 th 2023 from Walvis Bay to Walvis Bay (Namibia), with a focus on investigating the biogeochemical gradients that exist between the Benguela Upwelling zone and the South Atlantic Subtropical Gyre. In order to achieve this, the two specific foci of the research cruise were to (i) track upwelling filaments as they advect offshore and interact with the subtropical gyre, and (ii) perform a high-resolution transect from upwelling sites to the subtropical gyre. On the research cruise, two filaments were successfully mapped from cold water upwelling sites near or over the Namibian shelf through to warmer waters offshore. This was followed by a transect of twelve stations outwards into the subtropical gyre, reaching a maximum westward position of 5 °W. Sampling stations were conducted to a maximum depth of 1000 m and involved an array of deployments to investigate the biogeochemistry of the water column. Further nutrient addition bioassay experiments were conducted throughout the research cruise to assess the nutrients (co-)limiting to phytoplankton growth. Collectively our research will shed light on key mechanisms establishing the major oceanic biogeochemical gradients between upwelling and subtropical gyre regions, so that they can be included in models used to predict the impacts of climate change.
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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