3 resultados para heat treating

em Universidade do Minho


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This paper presents a simulation model, which was incorporated into a Geographic Information System (GIS), in order to calculate the maximum intensity of urban heat islands based on urban geometry data. The method-ology of this study stands on a theoretical-numerical basis (Okeâ s model), followed by the study and selection of existing GIS tools, the design of the calculation model, the incorporation of the resulting algorithm into the GIS platform and the application of the tool, developed as exemplification. The developed tool will help researchers to simulate UHI in different urban scenarios.

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The performance of parts produced by Free Form Extrusion (FFE), an increasingly popular additive manufacturing technique, depends mainly on their dimensional accuracy, surface quality and mechanical performance. These attributes are strongly influenced by the evolution of the filament temperature and deformation during deposition and solidification. Consequently, the availability of adequate process modelling software would offer a powerful tool to support efficient process set-up and optimisation. This work examines the contribution to the overall heat transfer of various thermal phenomena developing during the manufacturing sequence, including convection and radiation with the environment, conduction with support and between adjacent filaments, radiation between adjacent filaments and convection with entrapped air. The magnitude of the mechanical deformation is also studied. Once this exercise is completed, it is possible to select the material properties, process variables and thermal phenomena that should be taken in for effective numerical modelling of FFE.

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[Excerpt] A critical case from a Portuguese hospital reveals how the ultimate healthcare customer, the patient, is a complete system, not a jumble of parts. (...) The lean production philosophy has made inroads into service sectors, including medical care in the United Kingdom and the United States. Unfortunately, numerous medical organizations in those two countries and the rest of the world treat patients like they are made up of parts, not as a whole system. This leads to disjointed handoffs, bottlenecks in information flow that delay treatment, and sending the patient back and forth from department to department. The following case in Portugal shows how most of the world’s health systems still suffer from functional silos and how waste is all over the place. In this case, the missing links in communication between doctors, nurses, auxiliary staff, the patient and her family led to the patient’s death. Adopting lean healthcare with its proven tools would be a solution to many of the problems described. When a patient dies in a hospital, the family often is told that the doctors did everything they could. Normally, that is the case, as healthcare providers – doctors, nurses, auxiliary staff, therapists – do their best with the system they have.