Dimitris kontominas biography of rory gilmore
Investigation of Iso-octane Ignition and Validation of a Multizone Modeling Method in an Ignition Quality Tester
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Osecky, Eric M.; Bogin, Gregory E.; Villano, Stephanie M.; ...
2016-08-18
An ignition quality tester was used to characterize the autoignition delay times of iso-octane. The experimental data were characterized between temperatures of 653 and 996 K, pressures of 1.0 and 1.5 MPa, and global equivalence ratios of 0.7 and 1.05. A clear negative temperature coefficient behavior was seen at both pressures in the experimental data. These data were used to characterize the effectiveness of three modeling methods: a single-zone homogeneous batch reactor, a multizone engine model, and a three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model. A detailed 874 species iso-octane ignition mechanism (Mehl, M.; Curran, H. J.; Pitz, W. J.; Westbrook,more » C. K.Chemical kinetic modeling of component mixtures relevant to gasoline. Proceedings of the European Combustion Meeting; Vienna, Austria, April 14-17, 2009) was reduced to 89 species for use in these models, and the predictions of the reduced mechanism were consistent with ignition delay times predicted by the detailed chemical mechanism across a broad range of temperatures, pressures, and equivalence ratios. The CFD model was also run without chemistry to characterize the extent of mixing of fuel and air in the chamber. The calculations predicted that the main part of the combustion chamber was fairly well-mixed at longer times (> ~30 ms), suggesting that the simpler models might be applicable in this quasi-homogeneous region. The multizone predictions, where the combustion chamber was divided into 20 zones of temperature and equivalence ratio, were quite close to the coupled CFD-kinetics results, but the calculation time was ~11 times faster than the coupled CFD-kinetics model. Although the coupled CFD-kinetics model captured the observed negative temperature coefficient behavior and pressure d
Cost-effectiveness of Sick Leave Policies for Health Care Workers with Influenza-like Illness, Brazil, 2009
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ADB Briefs, 2020
KEY POINTS • Paid sick leave (PSL) can help contain the spread of infectious diseases such as COVID-19, and protect workers from loss of income due to sickness. > Modeling finds that a PSL program in the Philippines that encourages symptomatic workers to self-isolate could reduce the overall mortality from COVID-19 by as much as 50%. > Econometric analysis finds that economies that provide PSL coupled with tracing further reduce the number of infections, with 10 infected individuals infecting 2 fewer other people on average. • A new normal combining PSL with expanded contact tracing, testing, and isolation could control the COVID-19 epidemic. • The costs-financial and administrative-of a special COVID-19-related PSL program are manageable, at a fraction of a percent of gross domestic product. NO. 161 DECEMBER 2020 ADB BRIEFS Paid Sick Leave as a Tool for COVID-19 Control INTrODuCTION First introduced as a key element of the social health insurance law passed in Germany in 1883, paid sick leave (PSL) is today a feature of most countries' social protection systems, albeit with varying degrees of generosity and coverage. The core function of PSL is to protect workers' incomes during an illness, preserve their employment relationship with employers, and protect their health (OECD 2020). However, PSL also has an additional function-one that is especially relevant in the context of a contagious pandemic such as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)-as a tool for controlling the spread of infectious diseases. The effect of PSL on the spread of infectious diseases, especially respiratory diseases such as influenza, has been well demonstrated in the scientific literature (Kim 2017). Workers without PSL are more likely to report for work when contagi Listing of authors who have works in this repository as of February 23, 2025. Click the name of an author to see a listing of that person's work. For more information, see About the Repository. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ A. A. Nomer, Hazem (Docs: 1) A. Amyx, Douglas (Docs: 1) A. Dahab, Farida Elizabeth (Docs: 1) A. M. Alsallami, Shami (Docs: 1) A. Morrison, Ian (Docs: 12) A. Morrison, Ian (Docs: 1) A. S. Yasmeen, Essawy (Docs: 1) A. Wahba, Mohamed (Docs: 1) A.S. Emara, Ahmed Shukry (Docs: 1) Aabed, Amr (Docs: 1) Aadil, Muhammad (Docs: 3) Aadil, Muhammad (Docs: 1) Aadil, Muhammad (Docs: 9) Aadil, Muhammad (Docs: 12) Aal, Tarek Abdel (Docs: 1) Aardema, Matthew L. (Docs: 1) Aarseth, Tori (Docs: 1) Aazhang, Behnaam (Docs: 2) Ababsa, Myriam (Docs: 1) Abada, Hend (Docs: 1) Abada, Hend (Docs: 1) Abadi, Ashraf H. (Docs: 1) Abadir, Jane (Docs: 1) Abadir, Karim M (Docs: 1) Abadir, Karim M (Docs: 1) Abadir, Karim M. (Docs: 1) Abadir, Sandy Heshmat Shinouda (Docs: 1) Abass, Farah (Docs: 1) Abass, Nouran (Docs: 1) Abass, Wessam A. (Docs: 1) Abass, Wessam (Docs: 1) Abaunza, Carlos (Docs: 1) Abayoumi, Sherif (Docs: 1) Abaza, Imane Sadek (Docs: 1) Abaza, Jihad (Docs: 1) Abaza, Jihad (Docs: 1) Abaza, Mona (Docs: 14) Abaza, Salwa (Docs: 1) Abaza, Sherif (Docs: 1) Abaza-Stauth, Mona (Docs: 5) Abbas, A. T. (Docs: 1) Abbas, Adel T. (Docs: 2) Abbas, Adel T. (Docs: 2) Abbas, Adel Taha (Docs: 1) Abbas, Ahmed (Docs: 1) Abbas, Alaa A. (Docs: 1) Abbas, Alaa (Docs: 1) Abbas, Alaa (Docs: 1) Abbas, Aya (Docs: 1) Abbas, Ayman Magdy (Docs: 1) Abbas, Farah (Docs: 1) Abbas, Farah (Docs: 1) Abbas, Hidaya (Docs: 1) Abbas, Laila (Docs: 1) Abbas, Mahmoud (Docs: 1) Abbas, Mai Mohammad (Docs: 1) Abbas, Menatalla (Docs: 1) Abbas, Radwa O. (Docs: 1) Abbas, Radwa Ossama (Docs: 1) Abbas, Ramy (Docs: 1) Abbas, Randa Helmi (Docs: 1) Abbas, Sama (Docs: 1) Abbas, Walaa A. (Docs: 3) Abbas, Walaa A. (Docs: 1) Abbas, Walaa A. ( .Browse by Author
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