scholarly journals Clifford Copland Paterson, 1879 - 1948

1949 ◽  
Vol 6 (18) ◽  
pp. 479-501 ◽  

Clifford Copland Paterson was born on 17 October 1879 at Stoke Newington, and was the son of Frederick Paterson, a tanner and leather merchant. In 1892, after attending a private school near his home, he entered Mill Hill, then under the headmastership of McClure, later Sir John; he went on the modern side and specialized in the study of engineering and physics. Though he reached the sixth form and gained prizes for French and German, his school career seems, on the whole, to have been undistinguished and to have given little promise of the outstanding ability that was to develop later. After leaving Mill Hill in 1896, Paterson embarked on a comprehensive training, both theoretical and practical, in general and electrical engineering. He first spent a year at Finsbury Technical College and then served a general engineering apprenticeship with Messrs George Wailes and Company of London, and subsequently with Messrs Mirrlees, Watson and Company of Glasgow. In 1901 he entered Faraday House, under Alexander Russell, as a special studentassistant in the Testing Department. Shortly after, he published, jointly with Russell, his first paper, which dealt with sparking in switches. The general adoption, about this time, of higher supply voltages made the rating of switches for use in direct current lighting circuits a matter of pressing importance. Widely different ratings were being given by different makers for switches of substantially the same size and length of break. The primary object of the work was therefore to determine detailed relations between current, voltage and the resulting spark length, so as to enable manufacturers to predict the behaviour of their switches under various conditions.

Author(s):  
Wenyu Zhang ◽  
Kohei Ohara ◽  
Yasunao Okamoto ◽  
Erika Nawa-Okita ◽  
Daigo Yamamoto ◽  
...  

This is the first occasion on which I have had the great honour of addressing the Royal Society on this anniversary of its foundation. According to custom, I begin with brief mention of those whom death has taken from our Fellowship during the past year, and whose memories we honour. Alfred Young (1873-1940), distinguished for his contributions to pure mathematics, was half brother to another of our Fellows, Sydney Young, a chemist of eminence. Alfred Young had an insight into the symbolic structure and manipulation of algebra, which gave him a special place among his mathematical contemporaries. After a successful career at Cambridge he entered the Church, and passed his later years in the country rectory of Birdbrook, Essex. His devotion to mathematics continued, however, throughout his life, and he published a steady stream of work in the branch of algebra which he had invented, and named ‘quantitative substitutional analysis’. He lived to see his methods adopted by Weyl in his quantum mechanics and spectroscopy. He was elected to our Fellowship in 1934. With the death of Miles Walker (1868-1941) the Society loses a pioneer in large-scale electrical engineering. Walker was a man of wide interests. He was trained first for the law, and even followed its practice for a period. Later he studied electrical engineering under Sylvanus Thompson at the Finsbury Technical College and became his assistant for several years. Thereafter, encouraged by Thompson, he entered St John’s College, Cambridge, with a scholarship, and graduated with 1st Class Honours in both the Natural Sciences and the Engineering Tripos. Having entered the service of the British Westinghouse Company, he was sent by them to the United States of America to study electrical engineering with the parent company in Pittsburgh. On his return to England he became their leading designer of high-speed electrical generators


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rukuan Chai ◽  
Yuetian Liu ◽  
Yuting He ◽  
Qianjun Liu ◽  
Wenhuan Gu

Abstract Tight oil reservoir plays an increasingly important role in the world energy system, but its recovery is always so low. Hence, a more effective enhanced oil recovery (EOR) technology is urgently needed. Meanwhile, greenhouse effect is more and more serious, a more effective carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) method is also badly needed. Direct current voltage assisted carbonated water-flooding is a new technology that combines direct current voltage with carbonated water-flooding to enhance oil recovery and CO2 sequestration efficiency, simultaneously. Experimental studies were conducted from macroscopic-scale to microscopic-scale to study the performance and mechanism of direct current voltage assisted carbonated water-flooding. Firstly, core flood experiments were implemented to study the effect of direct current voltage assisted carbonated water on oil recovery and CO2 sequestration efficiency. Secondly, contact angle and interfacial tension/dilatational rheology were measured to analyze the effect of direct current voltage assisted carbonated water on crude oil-water-rock interaction. Thirdly, total organic carbon (TOC), gas chromatography (GC), and electrospray ionization-fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance-mass spectrometry (ESI FT ICR-MS) were used to investigate the organic composition change of produced effluents and crude oil in direct current voltage assisted carbonated water treatment. Through direct current voltage assisted carbonated water-flooding experiments, the following results can be obtained. Firstly, direct current voltage assisted carbonated waterflooding showed greater EOR capacity and CO2 sequestration efficiency than individual carbonated water and direct current voltage treatment. With the increase of direct current voltage, oil recovery increases to 38.67% at 1.6V/cm which much higher than 29.07% of carbonated water-flooding and then decreases, meanwhile, CO2 output decreases to only 35.5% at 1.6V/cm which much lower than 45.6% of carbonated water-flooding and then increases. Secondly, in direct current voltage assisted carbonated water-flooding, the wettability alteration is mainly caused by carbonated water and the effect of direct current can be neglected. While both carbonated water and direct current have evident influence on interfacial properties. Herein, with direct current voltage increasing, the interfacial tension firstly decreases and then increases, the interfacial viscoelasticity initially strengthens and then weakens. Thirdly, GC results indicated that crude oil cracking into lighter components occurs during direct current voltage assisted carbonated water-flooding, with the short-chain organic components increasing and the long-chain components decreasing. Meanwhile, TOC and ESI FT ICR-MS results illustrated that CO2 electroreduction do occur in direct current voltage assisted carbonated water-flooding with the dissolved organic molecules increases and the emergence of formic acid. Conclusively, the synergy of CO2 electrochemical reduction into formic acid in aqueous solution and the long-chain molecules electrostimulation pyrolysis into short ones in crude oil mutually resulted in the enhancement of crude oil-carbonated water interaction. This paper proposed a new EOR & CCS technology-direct current voltage assisted carbonated water-flooding. It showed great research and application potential on tight oil development and greenhouse gas control. More work needs to be done to further explore its mechanism. This paper constructs a multiscale & interdisciplinary research system to study the multidisciplinary (EOR&CCS) problem. Specifically, a series connected physical (Core displacement, Contact angle, and Interfacial tension/rheology measurements) and chemistry (TOC, GS, and ESI FT ICR-MS) experiments are combined to explore its regularity and several physics (Atomic physics) and chemistry (Electrochemistry/Inorganic Chemistry) theories are applied to explain its mechanisms.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Aileen O'Brien

Summer schools are traditionally used to encourage sixth form students to consider a career in medicine. Is it worth attracting students earlier in their school career, concentrating on psychiatry? Wyke et al describe an innovative project attempting to do just that.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 025022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuechen Li ◽  
Panpan Zhang ◽  
Wenting Bao ◽  
Pengying Jia ◽  
Jingdi Chu

2012 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. 102201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giwan Seo ◽  
Bong-Jun Kim ◽  
Jeongyong Choi ◽  
Yong Wook Lee ◽  
Hyun-Tak Kim

2015 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 023505 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Insepov ◽  
E. Emelin ◽  
O. Kononenko ◽  
D. V. Roshchupkin ◽  
K. B. Tnyshtykbayev ◽  
...  

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