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Institution

Ford Motor Company

CompanyDearborn, Michigan, United States
About: Ford Motor Company is a company organization based out in Dearborn, Michigan, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Internal combustion engine & Signal. The organization has 36123 authors who have published 51450 publications receiving 855200 citations. The organization is also known as: Ford Motor & Ford Motor Corporation.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A significant neuroprotective effect of rNIF with continuous treatment for 48 hours following 2 hours of MCAO is demonstrated, correlated with a reduced number of neutrophils within the ischemic tissue.
Abstract: We tested the neuroprotective potential of neutrophil inhibitory factor (rNIF), a novel 41-kd recombinant glycoprotein derived from a hookworm, in a model of focal cerebral ischemia in the rat. Male Wistar rats were assigned to treatment with rNIF and vehicle. Middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) for 2 hours was induced by insertion of an intraluminal suture. Infusion of the drug was initiated at the onset of reperfusion. Infarct volume was determined 48 hours after reperfusion. Neutrophils were measured within the ischemic tissue by myeloperoxidase (MPO) staining. Treatment with rNIF resulted in a 48% reduction in cerebral infarction compared with control animals (p < 0.01). Neutrophil accumulation in the ischemic brains of rNIF-treated rats was reduced significantly (p < 0.01) compared with control animals. The number of neutrophils within the infarcted tissue correlated positively with the size of the area of infarction (p < 0.001, r = 0.6) within representative cerebral coronal sections. We demonstrated a significant neuroprotective effect of rNIF with continuous treatment for 48 hours following 2 hours of MCAO. The neuroprotective effect was correlated with a reduced number of neutrophils within the ischemic tissue. These results demonstrate potential therapeutic properties of rNIF in the management of stroke.

148 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a polyacrylonitrile of molecular weight 130,000 has been pyrolyzed under nitrogen, between 200° and 320°, and it was found that the nitrile groups of the polymer disappear as heating progresses, and CN linkages appear.
Abstract: Polyacrylonitrile of molecular weight 130,000 has been pyrolyzed under nitrogen, between 200° and 320°. The predominant gaseous products are hydrogen cyanide and ammonia; the rates of formation of these have been measured, and at 270° for example, after 300 minutes, only 10% of the available nitrogen is lost. A liquid distillate containing nitriles, amines, and unsaturated groups was also obtained. Using infrared absorption measurements, it was found that the nitrile groups of the polymer disappear as heating progresses, and CN linkages appear. As heating is continued, evidence for aromatization is found. These experimental facts indicate ring formation to be an important reaction; the heat-stable residues are considered to be mainly fused pyridine systems.

148 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Nine-phase SVPWM is developed and implemented on a nine-winding induction machine and compared to nine-phase sine-triangle PWM in terms of dc bus utilization.
Abstract: Pole-phase modulation adjusts the pole-phase ratio of an induction machine and requires a multileg, multiphase inverter. This paper analyzes an n-leg, n-phase inverter, and presents techniques for n-phase space vector pulse width modulation (SVPWM). In particular, nine-phase SVPWM is developed and implemented on a nine winding induction machine. The nine-phase SVPWM is compared to nine phase sine-triangle PWM in terms of DC bus utilization.

147 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most recent high-resolution estimate of global wetland area is in excess of 12.1×106km2, of which 54% is permanently inundated and 46% is temporarily inundated as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Herein we review estimates of global and regional wetland area from ‘bottom-up’ approaches of site or national wetland inventories and ‘top-down’ approaches from global mapping and remote sensing. The trend for increasing wetland extent reported in the literature over time is a consequence of improved mapping technologies and methods rather than a real increase in wetland area, because a continuing trend for natural wetland loss and conversion is documented over the same time period. The most recent high-resolution estimate of global wetland area is in excess of 12.1×106km2, of which 54% is permanently inundated and 46% is temporarily inundated. Globally, 92.8% of continental wetland area is inland and only 7.2% is coastal. Regionally, the largest wetland areas are in Asia (31.8%), North America (27.1%) and Latin America and the Caribbean (Neotropics; 15.8%), with smaller areas in Europe (12.5%), Africa (9.9%) and Oceania (2.9%). It is likely that estimates of global wetland area published to date persist in underestimating the true wetland area. The ‘grand challenge’ of a global inventory integrating all types of permanent and temporary wetlands at high spatial resolution has yet to be fully achieved.

147 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effect of solidification rate on the growth behavior of small fatigue cracks in a 319-type aluminum alloy, a common Al-Si-Cu alloy used in automotive castings.
Abstract: A study was conducted to investigate the effect of solidification rate on the growth behavior of small fatigue cracks in a 319-type aluminum alloy, a common Al-Si-Cu alloy used in automotive castings. Fatigue specimens were taken from cast material that underwent a hot isostatic pressing (HIP) process in order to eliminate shrinkage pores and to facilitate the observation of surface-initiated cracks by replication. Naturally initiated surface cracks ranging in length from 17 µm to 2 mm were measured using a replication technique. Growth rates of the small cracks were calculated as a function of the elastic stress-intensity-factor range (ΔK). Long-crack growth-rate data (10 mm≤length≤25 mm) were obtained from compact-tension (CT) specimens, and comparison to the small-crack data indicates the existence of a significant small-crack effect in this alloy. The solidification rate is shown to have a significant influence on small-crack growth behavior, with faster solidification rates resulting in slower growth rates at equivalent ΔK levels. A stress-level effect is also observed for both solidification rates, with faster growth rates occurring at higher applied-stress amplitudes at a given ΔK. A crack-growth relation proposed by Nisitani and others is modified to give reasonable correlation of small-crack growth data to different solidification rates and stress levels.

147 citations


Authors

Showing all 36140 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Anil K. Jain1831016192151
Markus Antonietti1761068127235
Christopher M. Dobson1501008105475
Jack Hirsh14673486332
Galen D. Stucky144958101796
Federico Capasso134118976957
Peter Stone130122979713
Gerald R. Crabtree12837160973
Douglas A. Lauffenburger12270555326
Abass Alavi113129856672
Mark E. Davis11356855334
Keith Beven11051461705
Naomi Breslau10725442029
Fei Wang107182453587
Jun Yang107209055257
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202237
2021766
20201,397
20192,195
20181,945
20171,995