Fully Automatic Testing with Functions as Specifications

Author(s):  
Pieter Koopman ◽  
Rinus Plasmeijer
Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 477
Author(s):  
Xizhong Shen ◽  
Ling Li ◽  
Yingjun Wang

In anti-seepage engineering, quality control and engineering applications are based on the accurate measurement of seepage indices for low-permeability materials. The test used to determine the seepage indices for low-permeability materials adopts an external source to produce water pressure, and the seepage flux produced during the process requires manual measurement; thus, the apparatus used is complex and difficult to operate, thereby lowering the testing efficiency and restricting its application. In this study, a built-in servo motor was used to produce high water pressure with a pressure transmitter, and it controlled and measured the seepage pressure. According to the rotation number of the electric cylinder motor, the volume change of water in the hydraulic cylinder was calculated and, thus, the seepage flux was deduced. A simple fully automatic seepage apparatus for low-permeability materials was designed with a human–computer interface. The results showed the successful calculation of seepage flux as a function of the rotation number of the servo motor through automatic measurement. Furthermore, the replacement of the external high-pressure source with the built-in servo motor enhanced the safety performance, and the human–computer interface enabled an interactive operation and simplified the measurement structure. This simple testing method can provide technical support for quality inspection and construction control of anti-seepage engineering.


Author(s):  
V.V. Rybin ◽  
E.V. Voronina

Recently, it has become essential to develop a helpful method of the complete crystallographic identification of fine fragmented crystals. This was maainly due to the investigation into structural regularity of large plastic strains. The method should be practicable for determining crystallographic orientation (CO) of elastically stressed micro areas of the order of several micron fractions in size and filled with λ>1010 cm-2 density dislocations or stacking faults. The method must provide the misorientation vectors of the adjacent fragments when the angle ω changes from 0 to 180° with the accuracy of 0,3°. The problem is that the actual electron diffraction patterns obtained from fine fragmented crystals are the superpositions of reflections from various fragments, though more than one or two reflections from a fragment are hardly possible. Finally, the method should afford fully automatic computerized processing of the experimental results.The proposed method meets all the above requirements. It implies the construction for a certain base position of the crystal the orientation matrix (0M) A, which gives a single intercorrelation between the coordinates of the unity vector in the reference coordinate system (RCS) and those of the same vector in the crystal reciprocal lattice base : .


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Herdinai ◽  
S Urbán ◽  
Z Besenyi ◽  
L Pávics ◽  
N Zsótér ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Király ◽  
S Urbán ◽  
Z Besenyi ◽  
L Pávics ◽  
N Zsótér ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Fernando Perez-Bueno ◽  
Miguel Vega ◽  
Valery Naranjo ◽  
Rafael Molina ◽  
Aggelos K. Katsaggelos

Author(s):  
Zhi Zeng ◽  
Yongfu Zhou

Background: Detection technology is a product development technique that serves as a basis for quality assurance. As electric energy meters (EEMs) are measurement instruments whose use is mandatory in several nations, their accuracy, which directly depends on their reliability and proper functioning, is paramount. In this study, to eliminate electromagnetic interference, a device is developed for testing a set of EEMs under a constant magnetic field interference. The detection device can simultaneously test 6 electric meters; moreover, in the future, it will be able to measure the influence of magnetic field strength on the measurement accuracy of EEMs, thereby improving the production efficiency of electric meter manufacturers. Methods: In this study, we first design a 3D model of the detection device for a single meter component; then, we establish a network, which includes a control system, and perform the planning of the path of a block that generates a constant magnetic field. Finally, we control the three-axis motion and rotation of the block using a PLC to implement detection for the five sides of the EEM. Results & Discussion: The proposed device can accurately determine whether an EEM can adequately function, within the error range prescribed by a national standard, under electromagnetic interference; this can enable reliable, automatic testing and fault detection for EEMs. Experiments show that our device can decrease the labor cost for EEM manufacturers.


1984 ◽  
Vol 20 (25-26) ◽  
pp. 1065 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Haibara ◽  
M. Tachikura ◽  
R. Arioka

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