Institution
General Electric
Company•Boston, Massachusetts, United States•
About: General Electric is a company organization based out in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Turbine & Rotor (electric). The organization has 76365 authors who have published 110557 publications receiving 1885108 citations. The organization is also known as: General Electric Company & GE.
Topics: Turbine, Rotor (electric), Signal, Combustor, Coating
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: The creation of a field-controlled variation of the index of refraction in a liquid crystal cell has been analyzed and experimentally verified and near diffraction-limited performance in terms of the optical transfer function is predicted.
Abstract: The creation of a field-controlled variation of the index of refraction in a liquid crystal cell has been analyzed and experimentally verified. To obtain a spherical lens utilizing a simple electrode structure and capable of focusing arbitrary incoming polarizations requires four flat nematic liquid crystal cells. With electrodes fabricated well within the current capability of photolithography, near diffraction-limited performance in terms of the optical transfer function is predicted. The focusing capability of a liquid crystal lens was demonstrated using a single cell with linear transparent electrodes. A plano-convex cylindrical lens for a single incoming polarization was thus created. While the cell had a crude electrode structure, it affirmed all the major qualitative predictions. The fringing along the edge of the electrodes required for eventually obtaining near diffraction-limited performance was observed.
177 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the analytical electron microscope (AEM) was used to examine the microstructure of type 316LN stainless steel alloys which had been annealed for 50 to 300 hours in the temperature range 600 to 700 °C.
Abstract: The analytical electron microscope (AEM) was used to examine the microstructure of type 316LN stainless steel alloys which had been annealed for 50 to 300 hours in the temperature range 600 to 700 °C. The M23C6 carbide chemistry and distribution are described as a function of heat treatment.X-ray spectroscopy in the AEM revealed significant chromium depletion at grain boundaries in the vicinity of carbides for samples aged at 50 and 100 hours at 650 °C and 100 and 300 hours at 700 °C, with lower grain boundary chromium values observed at 650 °C than at 700 °C. The width of the chromium depleted zone normal to the grain boundaries increased with increasing annealing time and/or temperature. Measurements of chromium concentration along the grain boundaries away from a carbide were made after aging at 700 °C for 100 hours, and the chromium level rose steadily until the bulk value was reached at a distance of ~3μm from the carbide. The width of the chromium depleted zone normal to the boundaries in the same sample was an order of magnitude less. Some molybdenum depletion was also found at the grain boundaries, and the Mo-depletion profiles were in form and extent similar to the chromium results. Simple thermodynamic models were used to calculate the equilibrium value of chromium at the carbide-matrix interface, and the chromium distribution along and normal to the grain boundaries. The results of these models agreed well with the AEM results, and the agreement can be improved by considering the effect of electron probe configuration on the AEM measurements. The calculated thermodynamic data and the AEM results were related to the corrosion behavior of the alloys. The occurrence of severe asymmetries in some concentration profiles normal to the grain boundaries, which increased with increasing annealing temperature or time, was shown to be due to boundary movement during the discontinuous precipitation of M23C6 carbides.
177 citations
••
TL;DR: Stable carbon isotopes have the potential to be a useful indicator for identification and monitoring of intrinsic bioremediation of chlorinated hydrocarbons such as TCE and more conservative isotopic values may instead be more applicable as a means of source differentiation at sites with a history of multiple spills.
177 citations
•
26 Apr 1988TL;DR: In this article, a broad area, non-coherent, continuous light source was used for photoetching of polyimides, polycarbonates, polyetherimides and other highly stable organic polymers.
Abstract: Polyimides, polycarbonates, polyetherimides and other highly stable organic polymers are photoetched through the use of deep ultraviolet light produced by a broad area, non-coherent, continuous light source. This method is effective in an oxygen-free environment, but provides slightly higher etch rates in an air ambient as a result of the oxygen in the air ambient. The apparatus in which this photoetching occurs may employ a single light source or a plurality of side-by-side lamps and may include ports which allow continuous transport of samples therethrough.
177 citations
••
TL;DR: This paper presents a control method to limit the common-mode (CM) circulating current between paralleled three-phase two-level voltage-source converters (VSCs) with discontinuous space-vector pulsewidth modulation (DPWM) and interleaved switching cycles, presenting a minimum impact on the converter thermal design.
Abstract: This paper presents a control method to limit the common-mode (CM) circulating current between paralleled three-phase two-level voltage-source converters (VSCs) with discontinuous space-vector pulsewidth modulation (DPWM) and interleaved switching cycles. This CM circulating current can be separated into two separate components based on their frequency; the high-frequency component, close to the switching frequency, can be effectively limited by means of passive components; the low-frequency component, close to the fundamental frequency, embodies the jumping CM circulating current observed in parallel VSCs. This is the main reason why it is usually recommended not to implement discontinuous and interleaving PWM together. The origin of this low-frequency circulating current is analyzed in detail, and based on this, a method to eliminate its presence is proposed by impeding the simultaneous use of different zero vectors between the converters. This control method only requires six additional switching actions per line cycle, presenting a minimum impact on the converter thermal design. The analysis and the feasibility of the control method are verified by simulation and experimental results.
177 citations
Authors
Showing all 76370 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Cornelia M. van Duijn | 183 | 1030 | 146009 |
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski | 169 | 1431 | 128585 |
Gary H. Glover | 129 | 486 | 77009 |
Mark E. Thompson | 128 | 527 | 77399 |
Ron Kikinis | 126 | 684 | 63398 |
James E. Rothman | 125 | 358 | 60655 |
Bo Wang | 119 | 2905 | 84863 |
Wei Lu | 111 | 1973 | 61911 |
Harold J. Vinegar | 108 | 379 | 30430 |
Peng Wang | 108 | 1672 | 54529 |
Hans-Joachim Freund | 106 | 962 | 46693 |
Carl R. Woese | 105 | 272 | 56448 |
William J. Koros | 104 | 550 | 38676 |
Thomas A. Lipo | 103 | 682 | 43110 |
Gene H. Golub | 100 | 342 | 57361 |