Letteratura scientifica selezionata sul tema "Enriched thermal instrumentation"
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Articoli di riviste sul tema "Enriched thermal instrumentation":
Porosev, V. V., e G. A. Savinov. "Evaluation of boron-enriched plastic scintillator for thermal neutron detection". Journal of Instrumentation 14, n. 06 (3 giugno 2019): P06003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/14/06/p06003.
Burak, Ya V., V. T. Adamiv, I. M. Teslyuk e V. M. Shevel. "Optical absorption of isotopically enriched Li2B4O7 single crystals irradiated by thermal neutrons". Radiation Measurements 38, n. 4-6 (agosto 2004): 681–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radmeas.2003.12.029.
Mahl, Adam, Henok A. Yemam, Roshan Fernando, Joshua T. Koubek, Alan Sellinger e Uwe Greife. "10B enriched plastic scintillators for application in thermal neutron detection". Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment 880 (febbraio 2018): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2017.10.042.
Chan, Wing-Tat, X. L. Mao e Richard E. Russo. "Differential Vaporization during Laser Ablation/Deposition of Bi-Sr-Ca-Cu-O Superconducting Materials". Applied Spectroscopy 46, n. 6 (giugno 1992): 1025–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1366/0003702924124510.
Sahani, R. M., Arun Pandya e Ambesh Dixit. "ZnO-6LiF/polystyrene composite scintillator for thermal neutron radiation detection". Review of Scientific Instruments 94, n. 2 (1 febbraio 2023): 024101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0126282.
Burkhardt, Cindy A., e Joseph A. Gardella. "Comparison of Electron and Infrared Spectroscopy with Thermal Analysis to Study Molecular Weight Effects in PVC-PMMA Blends". Applied Spectroscopy 47, n. 10 (ottobre 1993): 1636–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1366/0003702934334543.
Akula, Aparna, Ripul Ghosh, Satish Kumar e H. K. Sardana. "WignerMSER: Pseudo-Wigner Distribution Enriched MSER Feature Detector for Object Recognition in Thermal Infrared Images". IEEE Sensors Journal 19, n. 11 (1 giugno 2019): 4221–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/jsen.2019.2900268.
Tartaglione, A., F. Di Lorenzo e R. E. Mayer. "Detection of thermal-induced prompt fission neutrons of highly-enriched uranium: A position sensitive technique". Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 267, n. 14 (luglio 2009): 2453–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nimb.2009.04.019.
Borrmann, Thomas, James H. Johnston, Andrew J. McFarlane, Kenneth J. D. MacKenzie e Akihiko Nukui. "Structural elucidation of synthetic calcium silicates". Powder Diffraction 23, n. 3 (settembre 2008): 204–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1154/1.2957881.
Ackerman, N., J. Albert, M. Auger, D. J. Auty, I. Badhrees, P. S. Barbeau, L. Bartoszek et al. "The EXO-200 detector, part II: auxiliary systems". Journal of Instrumentation 17, n. 02 (1 febbraio 2022): P02015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/17/02/p02015.
Tesi sul tema "Enriched thermal instrumentation":
Strubel, Nicolas. "Brake squeal : identification and influence of frictional contact localizations". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lille (2022-....), 2023. http://www.theses.fr/2023ULILN059.
As intense acoustic radiations implying consequent environmental nuisances and customer complaints, squeal noises in brake systems are friction-induced vibration issues indubitably depending on multiphysics and multiscales problematics. Among these latter, system structure, braking operational parameters, frictional contact interfaces, coupled to temperature dependency, as well as contact non-linearities or tribological aspects, are elements considerably affecting squeal, making from this unpleasant noise a complex problem to apprehend. In this work, the full scale system is considered, and several principal tendencies are identified regarding the influence of contact localizations on acoustic emissions.NVH tests are conducted, this analysis involves several scales of interest aiming at changing contact characteristics: pads are modified either at the macroscopic scale -with the will of implicitly varying load bearing areas-, or at the mesoscopic one -tending to impact evolution of the tribological circuit-. The inherent purpose is to identify pads parameters influencing squeal, by affecting tribolayer as well as engaging noise signature differences between conducted experiments.Heavily instrumented tests are realized on a full scale brake system, focusing on different pad shapes: the development of an enriched instrumentation through in-operando thermal surface tracking allows to access to supplementary solicitation informations, permitting to follow the assumed load bearing area. The employment of clustering methods is considered to manage the analysis of thermal datas.Experimental / numerical correlated stability simulations are conducted. Subsequent analyses are realized, by investigating pads chamfer characteristic impact on squeal, influence of coefficient of friction, or implementation of global pads wear shapes. Furthermore, thermomechanical simulations are of interest, and the introduction of previously clustered-defined contact areas into models is realized.Although the full brake system consideration can involve severe experimental dispersions, initial correlations between modified pads at different scales -via pad shapes for the macroscopic one, and thermal treatments of friction material focusing on the mesoscopic level- and noise characteristics are observed. Enriched instrumented tests lead to the conclusion that contact localizations can evolve during NVH tests, depending on solicitation variables. A particular link between braking operational parameters (pressure, temperature), contact localizations, and squeal features is established through clustering. Finally, observed simulated tendencies tend to follow experimental ones, and model enrichment via a more accurate contact description could present improvements regarding squeal prediction capability of such simulation