48 resultados para transparent ceramic


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For the first time, internally reinforced aggregate polymer ceramic composites were evaluated against fragment simulating projectiles (FSPs) of various calibers to investigate their ballistic impact response. Samples were prepared by mechanically mixing B4C and cBN over a range of ratios and combinations with either thermosetting phenolic or epoxy resin and aramid pulp. Dry mixtures were then molded in a closed die using a heated platen press. The resulting tiles were then mounted as ‘‘strike faces’’ to an aramid backing material using an epoxy resin. Backed targets were tested in a fully instrumented firing range against 5.56 mm FSPs to test ballistic limit. A further series of tests using 7.62, 12.5, and 20 mm FSPs was conducted to examine round deformation across a range of fragments calibers. Round deformations were measured after impact and plotted against shot velocity. It was found that the polymer ceramic composite materials were effective round deformers and, like sintered ceramic strike faces, demonstrated improved ballistic performance at an equivalent areal density and impressive multihit capability.

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Advanced treatment of secondary wastewater generally has been achieved using polymeric microfiltration and ultrafiltration membranes. Newly developed ceramic membranes offer distinctive advantages over the currently employed membranes and were recently introduced for the purpose. This paper presents results of a pilot study designed to investigate the application of ceramic microfiltration (MF) and ultrafiltration (UF) membranes in the recovery of water from secondary wastewater. Synthetic wastewater similar to the quality of secondary treated wastewater was fed to ceramic MF and UF system in a cross-flow mode. The filtration experiments revealed that the flux recovery through tubular ceramic MF membrane was more sensitive to the variation in TMP compared with the tubular ceramic UF membrane over the range of TMP studied. The resistance in series model was used for the evaluation of the resistance to the permeate flux. The results revealed that for ceramic UF membrane, the contribution to the total resistance of fouling was higher than the inherent of the clean membrane resistance. However, both the clean membrane resistance and the fouling resistance contribute equally in the case of MF membrane. Various wastewater indices were measured to evaluate the effectiveness of the filtration treatment. The ceramic UF membrane consistently met water quality in the permeate in terms of colour, turbidity, chemical oxygen demand and absorbance, suggesting that the permeate water could be made to be reused or recycled for suitable purposes. However, MF membrane appeared to be incompetent with respect to the removal of colour. The unified membrane fouling index (UMFI) was used to measure the fouling potential of both the membranes. The result showed that for UF membrane, the value of UMFI is one order of magnitude higher than MF membrane. The overall results suggest that there were significant differences in the performance of both the ceramic UF and MF membranes that are likely to impact on the operation and maintenance of the membrane system.

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Transparent computing is an emerging computing paradigm where the users can enjoy any kind of service over networks on-demand with any devices, without caring about the underlying deployment details. In transparent computing, all software resources (even the OS) are stored on remote servers, from which the clients can request the resources for local execution in a block-streaming way. This paradigm has many benefits including cross-platform experience, user orientation, and platform independence. However, due to its fundamental features, e.g., separation of computation and storage in clients and servers respectively, and block-streaming-based scheduling and execution, transparent computing faces many new security challenges that may become its biggest obstacle. In this paper, we propose a Transparent Computing Security Architecture (TCSA), which builds user-controlled security for transparent computing by allowing the users to configure the desired security environments on demand. We envision, TCSA, which allows the users to take the initiative to protect their own data, is a promising solution for data security in transparent computing. © 2014 IEEE.