2,421 research outputs found
Tests of the efficiency of steam separators
Citation: Whipple, James Halley and Seaton, Roy A. Tests of the efficiency of steam separators. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural College, 1904.Morse Department of Special CollectionsIntroduction: Unless steam is passed through a superheater after it leaves the boiler,it will carry with it a certain amount of entrained water. The violent ebulition in the boiler throws more or less water up in the steam space as spray,and some of this is carried along with the steam. Besides this,there is a certain amount of water in the steam caused by condensation in the pipes before it reaches the place where it is to be used. This water increases the initial condensation in the cylinder,and if there is a great deal of it present,may cause the cylinder heads to be blown out. To get rid of,so called "Steam Separators" are used. These depend for their action upon the fact that the water is several hundred times as heavy as the steam,and when the direction of flow of the steam is quickly changed,the inertia of the water carries it on out of the path of the steam into a chamber where it can be drawn off. Ribbed plates called baffles are usually used to collect the water and direct its flow
Residual Symmetries in the Spectrum of Periodically Driven Alkali Rydberg States
We identify a fundamental structure in the spectrum of microwave driven
alkali Rydberg states, which highlights the remnants of the Coulomb symmetry in
the presence of a non-hydrogenic core. Core-induced corrections with respect to
the hydrogen spectrum can be accounted for by a perturbative approach.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, to be published in Europhysics Letter
Ordering intermetallic alloys by ion irradiation: a way to tailor magnetic media
Combining He ion irradiation and thermal mobility below 600K, we both trigger
and control the transformation from chemical disorder to order in thin films of
an intermetallic ferromagnet (FePd). Kinetic Monte Carlo simulations show how
the initial directional short range order determines order propagation.
Magnetic ordering perpendicular to the film plane was achieved, promoting the
initially weak magnetic anisotropy to the highest values known for FePd films.
This post-growth treatment should find applications in ultrahigh density
magnetic recording.Comment: 7 pages, 3 Figure
Macromolecular interactions during gelatinisation and retrogradation in starch-whey systems as studied by rapid visco-analyser
Gelatinisation and retrogradation of starch-whey mixtures were studied in water (pH 7) using the Rapid Visco-Analyser (RVA). The starch:whey ratios ranged from 0:100 - 100:0. Wheat starch, and whey protein concentrate (about 80% solids basis) and isolate (about 96% solids basis) were used. Mixtures with whey isolates were generally more viscous than those with whey concentrates, and this was attributed to fewer non-protein milk components in the former. Whey protein concentrates and isolates reduced the peak, trough and final viscosities of the mixtures, but the breakdown and setback ratios of the mixtures were increased. The gelatinisation temperature increased with whey substitutions indicating that whey protein delayed starch gelatinisation. The temperature of fastest viscosity development decreased as the amount of whey was increased. Whey protein isolate generally exercised a lesser effect than the concentrate. At between 40 - 50% whey substitutions, the dominant phase changed from starch to protein irrespective of the source of the whey protein. An additive law poorly defined selected RVA parameters. Both macromolecules interacted to define the viscosity of the mixture, and an exponential model predicted the viscosity better than the additive law. The results obtained in this study are discussed to assist the understanding of extrusion processing of starch-whey systems as models for whey-fortified snack and ready-to-eat foods. Copyright ©2006 The Berkeley Electronic Press. All rights reserved
R-matrix theory of driven electromagnetic cavities
Resonances of cylindrical symmetric microwave cavities are analyzed in
R-matrix theory which transforms the input channel conditions to the output
channels. Single and interfering double resonances are studied and compared
with experimental results, obtained with superconducting microwave cavities.
Because of the equivalence of the two-dimensional Helmholtz and the stationary
Schroedinger equations, the results present insight into the resonance
structure of regular and chaotic quantum billiards.Comment: Revtex 4.
Energy Level Statistics of Quantum Dots
We investigate the charging energy level statistics of disordered interacting
electrons in quantum dots by numerical calculations using the Hartree
approximation. The aim is to obtain a global picture of the statistics as a
function of disorder and interaction strengths. We find Poisson statistics at
very strong disorder, Wigner- Dyson statistics for weak disorder and
interactions, and a Gaussian intermediate regime. These regimes are as expected
from previous studies and fundamental considerations, but we also find
interesting and rather broad crossover regimes. In particular, intermediate
between the Gaussian and Poisson regimes we find a two-sided exponential
distribution for the energy level spacings. In comparing with experiment, we
find that this distribution may be realized in some quantum dots.Comment: 21 pages 10 figure
High-quality variational wave functions for small 4He clusters
We report a variational calculation of ground state energies and radii for
4He_N droplets (3 \leq N \leq 40), using the atom-atom interaction HFD-B(HE).
The trial wave function has a simple structure, combining two- and three-body
correlation functions coming from a translationally invariant
configuration-interaction description, and Jastrow-type short-range
correlations. The calculated ground state energies differ by around 2% from the
diffusion Monte Carlo results.Comment: 5 pages, 1 ps figure, REVTeX, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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