Friday, April 6, 2012

New model predicts how sand and other granular materials flow

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Sand in an hourglass might seem simple and straightforward, but such granular materials are actually tricky to model. From far away, flowing sand resembles a liquid, streaming down the center of an hourglass like water from a faucet. But up close, one can make out individual grains that slide against each other, forming a mound at the base that holds its shape, much like a solid.

Sand's curious behavior ? part fluid, part solid ? has made it difficult for researchers to predict how it and other granular materials flow under various conditions. A precise model for granular flow would be particularly useful in optimizing processes such as pharmaceutical manufacturing and grain production, where tiny pills and grains pour through industrial chutes and silos in mass quantities. When they aren't well-controlled, such large-scale flows can cause blockages that are costly and sometimes dangerous to clear.

Now Ken Kamrin of MIT's Department of Mechanical Engineering has come up with a model that predicts the flow of granular materials under a variety of conditions. The model improves on existing models by taking into account one important factor: how the size of a grain affects the entire flow. Kamrin used the new model to predict sand flow in several configurations ? including a chute and a circular trough ? and found that the model's predictions were a near-perfect match with actual results. A paper detailing the new model will appear in the journal Physical Review Letters.

"The basic equations governing water flow have been known for over a century," says Kamrin, the Class of '56 Career Development Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. "There hasn't been something similar for sand, where I can give you a cupful of sand, and tell you which equations will be necessary to predict how it will squish around if I squeeze the cup."

Blurring the lines

Kamrin explains that developing a flow model ? also known as a continuum model ? essentially means "blurring out" individual grains or molecules. While a computer may be programmed to predict the behavior of every single molecule in, say, a cup of flowing water, Kamrin says this exercise would take years. Instead, researchers have developed continuum models. They imagine dividing the cup into a patchwork of tiny cubes of water, each cube small compared to the size of the entire flow environment, yet large enough to contain many molecules and molecular collisions. Researchers can perform basic lab experiments on a single cube of water, analyzing how the cube deforms under different stresses. To efficiently predict how water flows in the cup, they solve a differential equation that applies the behavior of a single cube to every cube in the cup's grid.

Such models work well for fluids like water, which is easily divisible into particles that are almost infinitesimally small. However, grains of sand are much larger than water molecules ? and Kamrin found that the size of an individual grain can significantly affect the accuracy of a continuum model.

For example, a model can precisely estimate how water molecules flow in a cup, mainly because the size of a molecule is so much smaller than the cup itself. For the same relative scale in the flow of sand grains, Kamrin says, the sand's container would have to be the size of San Francisco.

Neighboring chatter

But why exactly does size matter? Kamrin reasons that when modeling water flow, molecules are so small that their effects stay within their respective cubes. As a result, a model that averages the behavior of every cube in a grid, and assumes each cube is a separate entity, gives a fairly accurate flow estimate. However, Kamrin says in granular flow, much larger grains such as sand can cause "bleed over" into neighboring cubes, creating cascade effects that are not accounted for in existing models.

"There's more chatter between neighbors," Kamrin says. "It's like the basic mechanical properties of a cube of grains become influenced by the movement of neighboring cubes."

Kamrin modified equations for an existing continuum model to factor in grain size, and tested his model on several configurations, including sand flowing through a chute and rotating in a circular trough. The new model not only predicted areas of fast-flowing grains, but also where grains would be slow moving, at the very edges of each configuration ? areas traditional models assumed would be completely static. The new model's predictions matched very closely with particle-by-particle simulations in the same configurations.

The model, run on a computer, can produce accurate flow fields in minutes, and could benefit engineers designing manufacturing processes for pharmaceuticals and agricultural products. For example, Kamrin says, engineers could test various shapes of chutes and troughs in the model to find a geometry that maximizes flow, or mitigates potentially dangerous wall pressure, before ever actually designing or building equipment to process granular materials.

Kamrin says understanding how granular materials flow could also help predict geological phenomena such as landslides and avalanches and help engineers come up with new ways to generate better traction in sand.

"Granular material is the second-most-handled material in industry, second only to water," Kamrin says. "I'm convinced there are a million applications."

###

Massachusetts Institute of Technology: http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice

Thanks to Massachusetts Institute of Technology for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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How to use government grants to grow your business ? iSPRINT ...

By the myBusiness techblog team

Thriving businesses know how important it is to have a strong Information Technology (IT) system to support their business processes. But for some, the cost of implementing such a system is an issue. It could be due to tighter budgets compared to their larger counterparts, and this limits their adoption of IT. To help companies accelerate their growth, the Singapore government has initiated the iSPRINT (Increase SME Productivity with Infocomm Adoption & Transformation) scheme under the Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore (iDA).

Under iSPRINT, businesses can receive subsidies of up to 70% of an IT project?s qualifying costs. However, this is only applicable to companies that are first-time users of IT. There are three types of projects that new companies can qualify for, and three prerequisites to consider before applying for grants (summarised below).

Types of Projects that Qualify for Grants

Packaged solutions

Solutions that cover basic business functions in Finance, Accounting, Payroll, Point-of-Sales and Software-as-a-Service with respect to the software cost, subscription costs, consultancy services and training costs fall into this category. For further details on the packaged solutions, click here, and for a list of IT software eligible for grants, click here.

Customised solutions

These solutions include customer relationship management and enterprise resource planning solutions. Companies can use the grant to cover any associated consultancy service fees and training costs related to these software.

Customised solutions that require extensive development efforts and business re-engineering

This category includes supply chain management solutions. Companies can tap on this to cover manpower-related costs, consultancy services, hardware and software costs, and training costs.

How to Qualify

  • Your business is registered or incorporated in Singapore.
  • At least 30% of your shareholding is local AND
  1. your company?s group annual sales turnover is less than S$100 million OR
  2. you have less than 200 employees*.
  • For customised solutions, the development must be for first time automation of business functions, carried out in Singapore and the project must not have started before the grant is approved.

* Group Tracing: All levels up for corporate shareholder(s) holding more than 50% of total shareholding of a company, and all levels down for subsidiary(s) where applicant holds more than 50% of total shareholding.

Six Noteworthy Tips

Before proceeding, do note that:

  • On average, it takes about 2 to 6 months to obtain a grant approval from iDA. So, if your business needs to implement IT solutions on a more immediate basis, and has sufficient IT funds, you might want to consider skipping it first, and applying on the next project. The grant is available until 31 March 2016.
  • Companies have to fill in and submit a 6-page business proposal.
  • Companies have to submit quotations from three IT solution providers in their application to iDA.
  • Companies have to submit the latest ACRA business profile of their company and the appointed IT solution provider.
  • Companies have to submit audited financial statements from the past two years.
  • Find out more by visiting the iSPRINT website or contact iDA directly at ida_ino@ida.gov.sg or +65 6211 1212 for a consultation.

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Computers And Internet | How Radios Work :: By Tiffany Myles R ...

Radios have played an important role in the society today. It is often used by a few, but remarkably utilized by many without even knowing they already are. Radios have been in the scene for almost a century and a half now, and have left quite a trademark in the lives of everybody. It is commonly used as a medium of communication, thus making a lot of people in the industry strive harder to develop it in a better state. It is one essential tool to the success of humanity; business, government, and even to personal matters. It somehow has built a bridge for people to get closer from one another, creating a strong bond that can never be taken away by others.

One form of radio that is commonly used by a lot of people in different departments today is the CB Radio. CB Radios, or otherwise known as Citizens? Band Radios are two-way radios that can both receive and transmit content (communication) from one party, to another. It first came in to the scene on the early 1900?s. Unlike other radio equipment you can see today, CB Radios before were only able to cater one transmission after another in different 40 channels that ranges from 27 MHz or 11 m band.

The use of radio devices were highly appreciated and amplified on the 70?s during the oil crisis in the United States, cargo personnel and truckers used it to contact other people in the line if ever they would find a site with gasoline supply. Later on, these radios were used as a mode of reaching out other people; gaining new friends, connecting with loved ones from afar, and many more. Because of this a lot of people in those times (specifically film producers and directors) were charmed by the massive effect of radio that led them to creating both fictional and true story movies that highlight the use of the said instrument.

With the generation today, the young ones are very much into the World Wide Web. Some of them are fond of indulging themselves with radios too in the form of walkie-talkies. Some toy companies produce walkie-talkies for the sake of fun and enjoyment of the young ones, but nevertheless they?re functions are still similar to the ones used on firms, private sectors, and a few departments mentioned earlier.

Often times, many people perceive radios as simple machines or instruments that works when a receiver and a transmitter would exchange communication, but how does that happen? Satellite radio is a digital radio signal that is incorporated through one or more satellites, making it more attainable in wider areas than the usual FM stations found in most common places. FM Radios are used by many people who use a network of local repeaters to broadcast a program in a wider geographical area. Same with the newly developed radios of today, they too need repeaters to disseminate broadcasts from one party to many, it works just like in the same manner.


Article Source:?http://www.bharatbhasha.net
Article Url: http://www.bharatbhasha.net/internet-and-computers.php/365221

Article Added on Thursday, April 5, 2012
LD

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?Leading The Industry Today With Radios
Radios like Citizens? Band Radio, or otherwise known as CB Radios are used in many countries as a short distance radio communication between people on a different selection of 40 channels within the reach of 27-MHz or 11 m band. It is commonly used in the society today, even in small establishments for personal communication or operation communication. Radio devices are shared by many users like any other two-way radio services. When one station is held transmitted in a single time, the other...

?Radios To Help People From Disasters
Radios have played a great role in the lives of all humanity. It has been used since then as a medium of communication and recreation among many people. When old folks tend to remember their times back in the days during the World War II, the only thing that they could rely on for news and laughs are nothing but radios. They consider it as something as an essential instrument, not only because of the fact that it has helped them feel better in times, but because it has been there during moments...

?Two Way Radio Communications For Every Day Use
Back in the late 1970?s, the two-way radio communications industry has reaped popularity from most population as being the most state-of-the-art communication gadget for most industries. This was the time when no Internet access was freely available for most people. Almost everyone rely on television or the radio for most of their communication and information dissemination. So how come the two-way radio is still being used every day for most industries? These communication gadget seem to...

?Electronic Radios In Helping Make Life Easier
Electronics, as known by everybody, is a branch of science that often correlates controlled movement or motion of electrons through different outlets of media. The ability to control the flow of electron usually applies to data handling or device controlling. Electronics is a vast distinction of technology that caters distribution, application of power (electricity), and generation. Electronics is commonly amplified by many through the production of certain things that is popular to the eyes...

?Radio Equipment For Cutting Expenses Short
Radio equipment like that of the Citizens? band Radio or also known as CB Radios are being used by most countries in the world as a medium for short distance communication. The radios can transmit communication from different selections of 40 channels that would usually range for about 27 MHz. Satellite radio equipment are usually used in the government, in the military, in some business operations, and more. But what people do not really know as of today is that they could still be viable...

?Favorite Music Playing On A Satellite Radio
A satellite radio can be very useful in cars for owners who want to have background music while they are driving or being simply at home. Most of the time, a listener has a preference for a certain music genre. Pop, rock, classical, country and other music can be at your preferred play list but the only problem is that you cannot expect the same radio station to play just one type of genres although there are some exceptions. Your local radio channels might not have the right tracks that is...

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Dear Senator Manchin ? Climate Denial Crock of the Week

The following is a letter to ?Senator Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) from Elisa Young, a resident of southern Ohio, not far from the West Virginia state line.

Dear Senator Manchin:

I read an article in the Charleston Gazette this morning where you expressed concern about the number of jobs that would be lost if environmental protections to protect public health and safety that the EPA has approved move forward, and your vow to fight these protections:

http://sundaygazettemail.com/News/201204030140

My family has long lived on the border of Ohio and West Virginia (Meigs/Mason/Gallia Counties) where 4 of AEPs power plants are concentrated (2nd largest concentration in the United States, second only to Morgantown, WV). I have personally witnessed the lives of people in community being harmed and even shortened due to coal dependency and specifically American Electric Power?s emissions.

Ohio has consistently taken home the prize for the worst air quality in the nation, and within that ranking, our county has the highest asthma rate in the state, the highest lung cancer death rate, the shortest life expectancy, the highest uninsured rate for children and families, and rank the second highest in the state for all cancer deaths combined (second only to another rural, coal-producing county in Southern Ohio).? The air quality in our schools under the power plants was ranked as being in the top third percentile for the worst air quality in the nation (post scrubbers).

I lost one neighbor to lung cancer who never touched a cigarette in her life.? Her husband also died of respiratory illness.

I lost 6 neighbors to cancer, had cancer myself (and 2 more precancerous conditions that we have no family history of ? did I mention I don?t have health insurance?), and remember when one friend?s husband died, her sharing this story:

Both she and her best friend?s husbands were dying of cancer in the same hospital, one room apart from each other (one lived almost immediately under the power plants, the other about 2 miles out from the power plants on the Ohio side of the river ? the majority of the pollutants fall within 15).? When Sue?s husband died (an hour before Lola?s), she shared that within the next month, they would have exceeded their lifetime maximum health care benefits of $1 million.? She didn?t want her husband to go, but had no idea how they would have made it once their health insurance ended.

Another story (just to put a face on this), a friend who?s husband worked at the Gavin plant in Cheshire (a village my family helped found when they moved here in 1798 and that AEP bought and depopulated recently due to ?clean coal? experiments gone wrong), who died from cancer, told me that as he was dying, she promised to get him a black granite headstone with yellow roses.? The cemetery where he was buried was immediately behind the power plant he gave his life to.? Within a year of his death, the roses had been eaten off the granite.? When Dorothy called the company to have the granite headstone recarved, they asked her what on earth she?d done to it.? SHE hadn?t done anything.? Did I mention the cemetery is next to the school?

I remember when my best friend got cancer, I drove her to the hospital to get the pathology results from her biopsy, and then had to call her husband, who did consulting work as an engineer and was traveling, to give him the news, because she couldn?t speak except to hand me the phone and tell me to do it.? She was sitting their staring into the air on one side of me, and he was yelling at me to put his wife on the phone on the other side, while I?m trying to process that I will probably lose my best friend.

I should probably tell you that both her dogs died from cancer, too.? One died while she was receiving radiation and chemo treatments in Chicago ? I had to give she and her husband the vet report when Hoofie was diagnosed with terminal lymphoma, and was the last one to see her alive.? The other, Wheezy,? died from cancer after she moved away to New England.? Her oncologist had told her if she wanted to get healthy she would have to move away from here.? So yes, I lost my best friend.

I was dumbfounded to read, ?Those workers installed more than $1 billion worth of scrubbers and other equipment to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions by up to 90 percent, he said.?

What those scrubbers meant was worse air emission problems around John Amos (Maybe you?ve forgotten)

http://www.opinionbug.com/2379/mysterious-blue-haze-frightens-charleston-wv-residents/

http://www.google.com/search?q=John+amos+haze+charleston&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a

These were the same emissions problems caused by the scrubbers on the Ohio side of the river ? a stone?s throw away ? that lead to the purchase and depopulation of Cheshire ? a village my family founded in 1798 that AEP destroyed after the scrubbers were installed.? The scrubbers cause that blue haze you all experienced down in Charleston, same as they did here, triple the amount of solid waste, and create much more toxic waste.? Since the scrubbers were installed, the radiation levels have skyrocketed to being 1000 times higher than the EPA says is ?acceptable.?

I could send you a volume about the people I?ve know who have died here, but I?m sure you are a busy man.

I would like to hear your side of the statistics, since it bears no resemblance to the reality that exists in my community, compliments of coal.

I would like to see the actual numbers your quote is based on that states, ?Between 2006 and 2011, at AEP power plants in West Virginia, you created 27.7 million work hours on environmental construction projects,? Manchin told his audience.

Your jobs are killing us.

Sincerely,

Elisa Young
Athens, Ohio

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Thursday, April 5, 2012

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

The Celestial Goldfish


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Image of the Week #36, April 2nd, 2012:


From: How Do Artists Protect Their Work Online? by Glendon Mellow at Symbiartic.

Source: Emily S. Damstra

The Celestial Goldfish (Carassius auratus) by scientific illustrator Emily S. Damstra appeared this week in a post on Symbiartic called, How Do Artists Protect Their Work Online, along with Damstra?s thoughts about scientific illustrators respecting their own discipline. ?This fun, lively, accurate fish was created by Damstra with colored pencil. Emily Damstra is a member of the Guild of Natural Science Illustrators (GNSI), president and founder of the Southern Ontario Nature and Science Illustrators (SONSI) group. You can find her portfolio here, online shop here, and blog, News from the Studio, here.

Bora ZivkovicAbout the Author: Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

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