Effect of Skirt-Tip Geometry on Set-Up Outside Suction Anchors in Soft Clay

Author(s):  
Knut H. Andersen ◽  
Lars Andresen ◽  
Hans Petter Jostad ◽  
Edward C. Clukey

An important part of suction anchor design is the determination of the shear strength along the outside skirt wall. Previous work has suggested that when a suction anchor in clay is installed by applying underpressure inside the anchor, the external skin friction may be reduced compared to the skin friction expected for driven piles. The primary reason for this reduction is that the movement of soil at and beneath the caisson tip during installation will be influenced by whether the anchor is penetrated by weight or by underpressure. To further investigate the impact of installation by underpressure, additional finite element analyses have been performed where the skirt installation process has been better followed than in the previous analyses. The movement of soil around the caisson wall was studied for both a flat caisson tip and a tip with a tapered edge of 45° towards the outside of the anchor. The tapering was made to see if it would cause more of the displaced soil to move outside the anchor and thereby increase the mean total stresses and the shear strength along the outside anchor wall. The analyses were made with two separate wall roughness factors for a typical anchor in soft clay.

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 56
Author(s):  
Arkadiusz Gendek ◽  
Monika Aniszewska ◽  
Witold Zychowicz ◽  
Tadeusz Moskalik ◽  
Jan Malaťák ◽  
...  

The aim of the research was to verify the impact of selected parameters on the efficiency and organization of chipper operations. The paper analyzes chipping operations in Polish forests with a focus on work site location, overnight chipper location, chipper workload per site, fuel consumption, and work shift duration, as all of these factors may affect operating efficiency. The mean chipper travel distance between sites during a shift ranged from 4.74 km to 9.5 km (chippers moved on average every other day). The mean work shift duration was 12.4 h. At the end of a shift, the chippers traveled on average from 4.2 km to 6.3 km to an overnight location. At the beginning of a workday, the chippers were dispatched to sites at a distance of 2.5 km to 4.0 km. The average fuel consumption of the forwarder-mounted chippers was 16 L/h and that of the truck-mounted chipper was 7.7 L/h. It was found that the following actions have a decisive influence on the effectiveness of the operation of the chippers: determination of the size of individual tasks and the deployment of successive forest areas, indication of the proper location of the machine base, and the method of accessing the forest area.


2007 ◽  
Vol 16 (01) ◽  
pp. 11-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
LORENZO IORIO

In this paper we address the following question: do the recent advances in the orbit determination of the major natural satellites of Saturn obtained with the analysis of the first data sets from the Cassini spacecraft allow to detect the general relativistic gravitoelectric orbital precessions of the mean longitudes of such moons? The answer is still negative. The present-day down-track accuracy is adequate for Mimas, Enceladus, Thetys, Dione, Rhea and Titan and inadequate for Hyperion, Iapetus and Phoebe. Instead, the size of the systematic errors induced by the mismodeling in the key parameters of the Saturnian gravitational field like the even zonal harmonics Jℓ are larger than the relativistic down-track shifts by about one order of magnitude, mainly for the inner satellites like Mimas, Enceladus, Thetys, Dione, Rhea, Titan and Hyperion. Instead, Iapetus and Phoebe are not notably affected by such kind of perturbations. Moreover, the bias due to the uncertainty in Saturn's GM is larger than the relativistic down-track effects for all such moons up to two orders of magnitude (Phoebe). Thus, it would be impossible to separately analyze the mean longitudes of each satellite. Proposed linear combinations of the satellites' mean longitudes would allow to cancel out the impact of the mismodeling in the low-degree even zonal harmonics and GM, but the combined down-track errors would be larger than the combined relativistic signatures by a factor 103.


The determination of the actual pressures produced by a blow such as that of a rifle bullet or by the detonation of high explosives is a problem of much scientific and practical interest but of considerable difficulty. It is easy to measure the transfer of momentum associated with the blow, which is equal to the average pressure developed, multiplied by the time during which it acts, but the separation of these two factors has not hitherto been effected. The direct determination of a force acting for a few hundred-thousandths of a second presents difficulties which may perhaps be called insuperable, but the measurement of the other factor, the duration of the blow, is more feasible. In the case of impacts such as those of spheres or rods moving at moderate velocities the time of contact can be determined electrically with considerable accuracy.* The present paper contains an account of a method of analysing experimentally more violent blows and of measuring their duration and the pressures developed. If a rifle bullet be fired against the end of a cylindrical steel rod there is a definite pressure applied on the end of the rod at each instant of time during the period of impact and the pressure can be plotted as a function of the time. The pressure-time curve is a perfectly definite thing, though the ordinates are expressed in tons and the abscissae in millionths of a second; the pressure starts when the nose of the bullet first strikes the end of the rod and it continues until the bullet has been completely set up or stopped by the impact. Subject to qualifications, which will be considered later, the result of applying this varying pressure to the end is to send along the rod a wave of pressure which, so long as the elasticity is perfect, travels without change of type. If the pressure in different sections of the rod be plotted at any instant (fig. l) then at a later time the same curve shifted to the right by a distance proportional to the time will represent the then distribution of pressure. The velocity with which the wave travels in steel is approximately 17,000 feet per second. As the wave travels over any section of the rod, that section successively experiences pressures represented by the successive ordinates of the curve as they pass over it. Thus the curve also represents the relation between the pressure at any point of the rod and the time, the scale being such that one inch represents the time taken by the wave to travel that distance which is very nearly 1/200,000 of a second. In particular the curve giving the distribution of pressure in the rod along its length is, assuming perfect elasticity, the same as the curve connecting the pressure applied at the end and the time, the scale of time being that just given.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1876-1876
Author(s):  
Maria Franca Marongiu ◽  
Kristen Muirhead ◽  
Sara Gardenghi ◽  
Ella Guy ◽  
Stefano Rivella ◽  
...  

Abstract Patients with β-thalassemia hyper absorb dietary iron, most of which is stored in the liver. They also suffer from ineffective erythropoiesis (IE) which leads to hepatosplenomegaly, often requiring a splenectomy. We have been conducting a series of studies utilizing the th3/+ mouse model of thalassemia intermedia to investigate the absorption, distribution and erythroid utilization of iron. Here we focus on changes in the iron content of liver and spleen resulting from diets containing low (2.5 ppm), sufficient (35 ppm) and high (200 ppm) levels of iron, and assess the impact of splenectomy on its distribution. The high iron diet was standard rodent chow while the others were defined diets. Th3/+ mice were either bred or generated by transplantation of th3/+ hematopoietic stem cells from E14.5 fetal livers into lethally irradiated wild type (+/+) recipients. Wild type controls were similarly obtained. Splenectomy of bred and recipient mice was performed at 5 weeks of age and bone marrow transplantation (BMT) at 8 weeks. Non-transplanted mice were placed on the test diets at 8 weeks of age, and transplanted mice at 11 weeks. All animals were sacrificed after 4 weeks on the test diets, and livers and spleens harvested for determination of their iron content by atomic absorption. Group sizes ranged from 3 to 10 mice (median 7). In general, the mean organ iron content of mice fed the high iron diet was not significantly different from that of the animals fed the iron sufficient diet, while those fed the low iron diet had reduced levels of tissue iron. Over the course of the 4-week feeding study, the iron content of the livers and spleens of +/+ mice fed the 35-ppm diet increased 39% and 202%, respectively, while the corresponding values of those fed the 2.5-ppm diet were −21% and 30%. The changes in the liver and spleen of th3/+ mice were 79% and 32% (35-ppm diet) and 14% and 12% (2.5-ppm diet) compared to the values at baseline. The latter values, those at 8 weeks of age, were 1.8- and 30-fold higher in the th3/+ mice, the massive accumulation of iron in the spleen undoubtedly resulting from IE. Where iron intake (liver plus spleen) was low, it went preferentially to the spleen, undoubtedly to sustain erythropoiesis. Groups of splenectomized +/+ mice were also fed the three diets for 4 weeks. The mean iron content of their livers was similar to that of non-splenectomized animals. Similar studies of th3/+ mice are now in progress. A second set of studies is being conducted in transplanted +/+ and th3/+ mice, the goal being to determine whether or not the absorption and distribution of iron is the same as in bred animals. Again, the organ iron content of those mice fed the high iron diet was similar to that of the animals fed the iron sufficient diet. In the case of the transplanted +/+ animals fed iron sufficient diets, the mean iron contents of the livers and spleens were 64% and 186% increased after 4 weeks of feeding, values not markedly different from those of bred animals. The corresponding values on the 2.5-ppm diet were 27% and 72%, again the pattern being similar. The transplanted th3/+ animals accumulated significantly less iron in these organs than those that were bred. However, the rate at which they accumulated this iron was 10 to 20 times higher than that of the other groups studied, including the transplanted +/+ mice, perhaps reflecting a synergistic effect of BMT and IE on iron absorption. Mice fed the 35-ppm diet had only 75% and 46% as much iron in their livers and spleens, the animals fed the 2.5-ppm diet having even less (35% and 23%) while again showing preferential diversion of iron to the spleen. Splenectomizing the animals resulted in further increasing the liver iron, more that 2.5-fold in those fed the low iron diet. The hemoglobin levels of all the mice evaluated were unchanged as a result of the dietary studies, except for a 20% decrease seen in bred +/+ mice fed the low iron diet. We are currently studying splenectomized transplanted th3/+ mice as well as doing feeding studies of 5-months duration. In summary, a low iron diet has a marked effect on the iron levels of liver and spleen, which are accentuated under conditions of IE. Secondly, more iron is absorbed under conditions of IE than is needed for erythropoiesis, the excess being shuttled to the liver for storage.


Antibiotics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 422
Author(s):  
Chun Peng ◽  
Sanling Zuo ◽  
Yinsheng Qiu ◽  
Shulin Fu ◽  
Lijuan Peng

Colistin is considered as the last-resort treatment for multiantibiotic-resistant Gram-negative bacterial infections in humans. However, the oral administration of colistin to livestock and poultry results in the introduction of large amounts of colistin to the surrounding environment via urine and feces, potentially inducing the prevalence of colistin-resistant bacteria and the impact on the ecological environment. We established a quantitative mass spectrometry (MS) based method to measure colistin in contents recovered from the gastrointestinal segments of piglets and broilers, as well as colistin in feces from the animals. The mean recoveries of colistin from different matrices were between 73.2% and 103.9%. The quantitation limit values for different matrices ranged from 0.37 to 1.85 ng/g. In colistin-treated swine samples, the highest concentration of colistin was detected in feces samples at a level of 1248.3 ng/g. However, the highest concentration of colistin in broiler samples was around 4882.9 ng/g, which was found in the contents derived from broilers’ ceca. The employment of the proposed method to assess colistin in animals’ gastrointestinal tracts might help to understand the colistin absorption in animals’ guts and the potential impact of colistin on the emergence of resistant bacteria in animals’ gut flora and the ecological environment.


2017 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 167-173
Author(s):  
Michał Kozłowski ◽  
Jolanta Komisarek

Abstract The paper presents results of determination of temporal changes in water table depths in the toposequence of Retisols/Luvisols and Phaeozems/Gleysols. Assessment of temporal trends in the water table depth was made with the use of the linear regression analysis. The results obtained indicate that the mean water table depth and mean high and low water table depths were deeper in the soil at the upper part of the slope in comparison with soil located at the footslope. A higher amplitude of water table was observed in Retisols than in Gleysols but the highest variability of water table level was noted in the soils at the footslope compared to those at the slope summit. In Retisols, with each month of observation from 1993 to 2012, the water table showed a tendency to increase. These trends were the highest from January to April, which may be related to the tendency of increasing monthly sums of precipitation in December, January and February. In the Gleysol at the footslope, in the period 1993–2012 and in the vegetation season, the water table depth showed a tendency to decrease. This trend may be due to the impact of water table on the soil water content at the root zone, which is used in the process of evapotranspiration.


Author(s):  
Shintaro Ohashi

SummarySafety and quality standards for electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) have been introduced regionally. In 2016, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a rule to regulate e-cigarettes, requiring to report harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHCs). In the United Kingdom, the British Standards Institution (BSI) specified the metals to be monitored for e-cigarettes. In this study, a method was developed and validated for the simultaneous determination of 13 metals (Be, Al, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, As, Se, Ag, Cd, Sn and Pb) in e-cigarette aerosol. Furthermore, matrix effects of major constituents in the aerosol were investigated using glycerol or 1,2-propylene glycol solutions. E-cigarette aerosol was generated by a rotary smoking machine according to CORESTA Recommended Method N° 81 and collected by an electrostatic precipitator coupled to an impinger containing nitric acid. The collected aerosol was dissolved in nitric acid and an aliquot of this solution was analyzed by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) equipped with a collision/reaction cell.The linearity of the calibration curve was observed in the range of 0.2 to 100 ng/mL for each analyte; the correlation coefficients were 0.998 or larger, the mean recovery of each standard level ranged from 92.6 to 104.5% and the relative standard deviation amounted to max. 9.5%. Accuracy, repeatability and specificity were validated by spiking three different amounts of analytes into e-cigarette aerosol; the mean recovery of each spiking level ranged from 88.7 to 110.3% with a relative standard deviation amounting to max. 9.2% for all analytes. Background contamination from aerosol generation and collection system existed for some analytes, especially for Al, Fe, Cu and Sn. The potential sources of contamination should be identified and controlled to reduce the impact of contamination on quantification. In addition, the actual values for samples should be reported with method blank statistics. Increase of the concentrations of glycerol and 1,2-propylene glycol in the prepared sample led to the overestimation of As and Se. The amount of polyols in the collected aerosol should be monitored and controlled for the accurate quantification of As and Se.


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