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Rectangular Tanks (rectangular + tank)
Selected AbstractsPC cluster parallel finite element analysis of sloshing problem by earthquake using different network environmentsINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, Issue 10 2002Kazuo Kashiyama Abstract This paper presents a parallel finite element method for the analysis of the sloshing problem caused by earthquakes. The incompressible Navier,Stokes equation based on Arbitrary Lagrangian,Eulerian description is used as the governing equation. The SUPG/PSPG formulation is employed to improve the numerical stability and the accuracy. Parallel implementation of the unstructured grid based formulation was carried out on a PC cluster. The present method was applied to analyse the sloshing problem of a rectangular tank and an actual reservoir. The effect of parallelization on the efficiency of the computations was examined using a number of different network environments. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Assessing the use of a dietary probiotic/prebiotic as an enhancer of spinefoot rabbitfish Siganus rivulatus survival and growthAQUACULTURE NUTRITION, Issue 6 2007A.Y. EL-DAKAR Abstract The use of prebiotics and probiotics as feed supplements that improve efficiency of intestinal bacteria is becoming de rigueur in animal husbandry in many regions worldwide. We tested the effects of a commercial probiotic (Biogen®) containing allicin, high unit hydrolytic enzyme, Bacillus subtilis spores and ginseng extracts on survival, growth, carcass composition and feed cost/benefit in rabbitfish Siganus rivulatus. Fifteen net cages (100 × 100 × 40 cm; L × W × H) were stocked with 10 juvenile rabbitfish (10.3 g per fish) each and placed in a large rectangular tank and offered feed at 4% body weight daily. Cages were offered one of five isonitrogenous and isocaloric diets containing 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4 g kg,1 probiotic at three replicates per treatment for 98 days. Fish in all cages were weighed at 2-week intervals and feed regimen was adjusted accordingly. Rabbitfish offered the control diet exhibited lower growth and feed utilization than all experimental treatments. There was no effect of probiotic inclusion level on survival but growth was better at all inclusion levels than in the control. No significant differences (P > 0.05) in growth were observed among fish groups fed various levels of the probiotic. Carcass composition was not affected by dietary probiotic inclusion. Ultimately, when all variables are considered, Biogen® inclusion to diets appears to reduce feed cost per unit growth of rabbitfish. [source] An investigation of tuned liquid dampers equipped with damping screens under 2D excitationEARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING AND STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS, Issue 7 2005M. J. Tait Abstract This paper reports on the results of a study conducted on tanks partially filled with water, representing tuned liquid dampers (TLD), subjected to both 1D and 2D horizontal excitations. The sloshing response of the water in the tank is characterized by the free surface motion, the resulting base shear force, and evaluation of the energy dissipated by the sloshing water. A 1D non-linear flow model capable of simulating a TLD equipped with damping screens is employed to model a 2D TLD. Application of this particular model requires the assumption that the response is decoupled and can be treated as the summation of two independent 1D TLDs. Results from the non-linear flow model are compared with the 2D experimental shake table test results leading to a validation of the decoupled response assumption. This attractive decoupled response property allows square and rectangular tanks to be used as 2D TLDs, which can simultaneously reduce the dynamic response of a structure in two perpendicular modes of vibration. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Hydroelastic vibrations of flexible rectangular tanks partially filled with liquidINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN ENGINEERING, Issue 2 2007Ding Zhou Abstract In this paper, the three-dimensional vibratory characteristics of flexible rectangular tanks partially filled with liquid are studied. The surface waves of the liquid are taken into account in the analysis. Both the bulging modes of the tank-wall vibration and the sloshing modes of the liquid oscillation are investigated. The vibrating modes of the liquid,tank system are divided into four distinct categories: double symmetric modes (SS); antisymmetric,symmetric modes (AS); symmetric,antisymmetric modes (SA) and double antisymmetric modes (AA). Each of these categories is separately investigated. The velocity potential of the liquid is analytically deduced by using a combination of the superposition method and the method of separation of variables. According to the liquid,tank interface conditions and the orthogonality of trigonometric functions, the coefficients in the solution of liquid velocity potential are expressed in the integral forms including the tank,wall dynamic deflection. A set of reasonable static beam functions is constructed as the admissible functions of the tank-wall vibration. The eigenfrequency equation of the liquid,tank system is derived by using a combination of the Rayleigh,Ritz method and the Galerkin method. Convergence study demonstrates the high accuracy and small computational cost of the proposed approach. Finally, some numerical results are presented for the first time. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The effect of pea cultivar and water stress on root and shoot competition between vegetative plants of maize and peaJOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2001Tzehaye Semere Summary 1Improvements in intercrop yields may be achieved through an understanding of yield advantages due to above-ground or below-ground interactions. 2Forage maize and two morphologically contrasting cultivars of pea (leafy cv. Bohatyr and semi-leafless cv. Grafila) were grown alone and in additive mixtures, under two contrasting levels of soil moisture (± water stress). 3The mechanism of competition between maize and pea was studied by separating the effects of root competition and shoot competition, using soil and aerial partitions. Plants were grown in rectangular tanks in a glasshouse. 4Leafy pea cv. Bohatyr was as competitive as maize, both below-ground and above-ground, whereas semi-leafless pea cv. Grafila was less competitive than maize or pea cv. Bohatyr. The greater competitive ability of the leafy pea, both above- and below-ground, was probably due to its greater growth rate, associated with its greater leaf area. 5The competitive ability of maize, relative to peas, was considerably reduced by water stress. Both the root and shoot competitive abilities of pea were greater under water stress, compared with those of maize. 6Relative yield total (RYT) values were significantly greater when maize and pea were subjected to shoot competition only (RYT = 1·76) than when subjected to root competition (RYT = 1·17) or when subjected to both shoot and root competition (RYT = 1·13). This reflects the fact that the effects of root competition were greater than those of shoot competition. 7Root competition decreased the shoot dry weights, plant height and leaf area of both maize and pea, whereas shoot competition had no significant effect on these attributes, indicating that soil resources, i.e. mineral nutrients and water, were more limiting than light. [source] Validation of a Feeding Stimulant Bioassay Using Fish Hydrolysates for the Pacific White Shrimp, Litopenaeus vannameiJOURNAL OF THE WORLD AQUACULTURE SOCIETY, Issue 4 2009Michael Grey A protocol for testing feeding stimulants on Pacific white shrimp, Litopenaeus vannamei, is described. Thirty-five rectangular tanks (55 L volume) served as the test system into which ten 5,6 g shrimp were stocked. Every tank contained two bowls, each of which contained either 25 feed pellets of a Reference Diet or Test Diet (consisting of the Reference Diet with one test ingredient added). After 1 h, the difference between the number of pellets consumed of the Test Diet and the Reference Diet was used as the Response. Each of the four Test Diets contained a different salmon hydrolysate made from by-products of the Alaska fish processing industry (included at 50 g/kg). A fifth commercial shrimp diet was also tested. Each Test Diet was tested against the Reference Diet over a 4-d period in seven replicate tanks. The data were subjected to a one-way ANOVA and a confidence interval for each treatment response was calculated. The confidence interval was used to assess the test ingredient as a feeding stimulant. Treatment means were compared using Tukey's test (, = 5%). All the hydrolysates tested were found to act as feeding stimulants. [source] Protein lipid ratio for the growth and survival of juvenile crayfish Procambarus acanthophorus (Hobbs 1972) reared under controlled conditionsAQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 9 2010Enrique Cervantes-Santiago Abstract The influence of dietary protein/lipid levels on growth and survival in juvenile crayfish (Procambarus acanthophorus) was evaluated during a 12-week nutritional trial. Twenty experimental diets were formulated containing different protein (200, 250, 300, 350 and 400 g kg,1) and lipid (60, 80, 100 and 120 g kg,1) levels. A bifactorial model (5 × 4) was used with three replicates and 15 crayfish (0.014±0.006 g) per replicate, in a recirculation system with 60,15 L rectangular tanks and a biological filter, the culture conditions were a photoperiod of 12:12 h L:D and temperature 24.7±1.0 °C. Total survival ranged from 66.6% to 86.6%, with no differences attributed to treatments. Dietary protein levels had a significant effect on growth gain and nutritional efficiency; in contrast, lipid levels had no effect on juvenile performance. The 250/120 (protein/lipid) treatment promoted the most efficient growth (final weight: 3.09 g, weight gain: 21 995%, specific growth rate: 3.35% day,1); the less efficient growth was observed in juveniles fed with 400 g kg,1 protein diets. The quadratic regression model indicated 279 g kg,1 as the optimal protein level for crayfish growth, while levels between 211 and 232 g kg,1 could minimize the feeding costs without affecting growth. [source] Growth and production of hatchery-reared juvenile spotted babylon Babylonia areolata Link 1807 cultured to marketable size in intensive flowthrough and semi-closed recirculating water systemsAQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 5 2000N Chaitanawisuti Hatchery-reared juvenile spotted babylon Babylonia areolata (mean initial shell length 12.8 mm) were cultured intensively to marketable size in three 3.0 × 2.5 × 0.7 m indoor canvas rectangular tanks. The duplicate treatments of flowthrough and semi-closed recirculating sea-water systems were compared at an initial stocking density of 300 individuals m,2 (2250 juveniles per tank). The animals were fed ad libitum with fresh carangid fish Selaroides leptolepis once daily. During 240 culture days, average growth rates in shell length and body weight were 3.86 mm month,1 and 1.47 g month,1 for the flowthrough system and 3.21 mm month,1 and 1.10 g month,1 for those in the semi-closed recirculating system. Survival in the flowthrough system (95.77%) was significantly higher than that in the semi-closed recirculating system (79.28%). Feed conversion ratios were 1.68 and 1.96 for flowthrough and semi-closed recirculating systems respectively. [source] |