1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910463017803321

Autore

Moss Dennis R

Titolo

Pressure vessel design manual [[electronic resource] /] / Dennis R. Moss, Michael Basic

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Elsevier/Butterworth-Heinemann, 2013

ISBN

0-12-387001-1

Edizione

[4th ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (825 p.)

Altri autori (Persone)

BasicMichael

Disciplina

681/.76041

Soggetti

Pressure vessels - Design and construction

Tanks - Design and construction

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Front Cover; PRESSURE VESSEL DESIGN MANUAL; Copyright; Contents; Preface to the 4th Edition; Chapter1 - General Topics; Design Philosophy; Stress Analysis; Stress/Failure Theories; Failures in Pressure Vessels; Loadings; Stress; Thermal Stresses; Discontinuity Stresses; Fatigue Analysis for Cyclic Service; Creep; Cryogenic Applications; Service Considerations; Miscellaneous Design Considerations; Items to be Included in a User's Design Specification (UDS) for ASME VIII-2 Vessels; References; Chapter 2 - General Design; Procedure 2-1: General Vessel Formulas [1,2]

Procedure 2-2: External Pressure DesignProcedure 2-3: Properties of Stiffening Rings; Procedure 2-4: Code Case 2286 [1,8,21]; Procedure 2-5: Design of Cones; Procedure 2-6: Design of Toriconical Transitions [1,3]; Procedure 2-7: Stresses in Heads Due to Internal Pressure [2,3]; Procedure 2-8: Design of Intermediate Heads [1,3]; Procedure 2-9: Design of Flat Heads [1,2,4,5,6]; Procedure 2-10: Design of Large Openings in Flat Heads [1]; Procedure 2-11: Calculate MAP, MAWP, and Test Pressures; Procedure 2-12: Nozzle Reinforcement; Procedure 2-13 Find or Revise the Center of Gravity of a Vessel

Procedure 2-14: Minimum Design Metal Temperature (MDMT)Procedure 2-15: Buckling of Thin Wall Cylindrical Shells [21]; Procedure 2-16: Optimum Vessel Proportions [16-20]; Procedure 2-17: Estimating Weights of Vessels and Vessel Components; Procedure 2-18: Design of



Jacketed Vessels; Procedure 2-19: Forming Strains/Fiber Elongation; References; Chapter3 - Flange Design; Introduction; Procedure 3-1: Design of Flanges [1-4]; Procedure 3-2: Design of Spherically Dished Covers; Procedure 3-3: Design of Blind Flanges with Openings [1,4]; Procedure 3-4: Bolt Torque Required for Sealing Flanges [5-7]

Procedure 3-5: Design of Studding OutletsProcedure 3-6: Reinforcement for Studding Outlets; Procedure 3-7: Studding Flanges; Procedure 3-8: Design of Elliptical, Internal Manways; Procedure 3-9: Through Nozzles; References; Chapter4 - Design of Vessel Supports; Introduction: Support Structures; Procedure 4-1: Wind Design Per ASCE [1]; Procedure 4-2: Seismic Design - General; Procedure 4-3: Seismic Design for Vessels [2]; Procedure 4-4: Seismic Design - Vessel on Unbraced Legs [4-7]; Procedure 4-5: Seismic Design - Vessel on Braced Legs; Procedure 4-6: Seismic Design - Vessel on Rings [4,5,8]

Procedure 4-7: Seismic Design - Vessel on Lugs [5,8-13]Procedure 4-8: Seismic Design - Vessel on Skirt [1,2,3]; Procedure 4-9: Seismic Design - Vessel on Conical Skirt; Procedure 4-10: Design of Horizontal Vessel on Saddles [1,3,14,15]; Procedure 4-11: Design of Saddle Supports for Large Vessels [4,15-17,20]; Procedure 4-12: Design of Base Plates for Legs [20,21]; Procedure 4-13: Design of Lug Supports; Procedure 4-14: Design of Base Details for Vertical Vessels - Shifted Neutral Axis Method [4,9,13,17,18]

Procedure 4-15: Design of Base Details for Vertical Vessels - Centered Neutral Axis Method

Sommario/riassunto

Pressure vessels are closed containers designed to hold gases or liquids at a pressure substantially different from the ambient pressure. They have a variety of applications in industry, including in oil refineries, nuclear reactors, vehicle airbrake reservoirs, and more. The pressure differential with such vessels is dangerous, and due to the risk of accident and fatality around their use, the design, manufacture, operation and inspection of pressure vessels is regulated by engineering authorities and guided by legal codes and standards. Pressure Vessel Design Manual is a solutions-



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910958020603321

Autore

Dore Ronald Philip

Titolo

Education in Tokugawa Japan / / R.P. Dore

Pubbl/distr/stampa

London ; ; New York, : Routledge, 2011

ISBN

1-136-92693-3

1-136-92694-1

1-283-03852-8

9786613038524

0-203-84540-4

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (371 p.)

Collana

Routledge library editions.Japan ; ; v. 33

Disciplina

370.952

952.031

Soggetti

Education - Japan - History

Japan History Tokugawa period, 1600-1868

Japan Social conditions 1600-1868

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

First published in 1965.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

BOOK COVER; TITLE; COPYRIGHT; DEDICATION; CONTENTS; PLATES; TABLES; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; Chapter I SCHOLARSHIP AND EDUCATION: A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE PERIOD; Chapter II THE AIMS OF SAMURAI EDUCATION IN THE TOKUGAWA PERIOD; Chapter III THE FIEF SCHOOLS; Chapter IV THE TRADITIONAL CURRICULUM; Chapter V INNOVATIONS; Chapter VI TALENT, TRAINING AND THE SOCIAL ORDER; Chapter VII THE GOMMONER AND HIS MASTERS; Chapter VIII TERAKOYA; Chapter IX THE CONTENT OF TERAKOYA EDUCATION; Chapter X THE LEGACY; Appendix 1 SCHOOL ATTENDANGE AT THE END OF THE TOKUGAWA PERIOD; Appendix II A SET OF TERAKOYA PRECEPTS1

SOURCES CITEDINDEX AND GLOSSARY

Sommario/riassunto

Japanese cultural life had reached a low ebb at the beginning of the Tokugawa period. The Japanese society which emerged when Tokugawa Ieyasu had completed the process of pacifying warring baronies was neither literary, nor hardly literate. The rulers were



warriors and the people they ruled were largely illiterate. The Japan of 1868 was a very different society: practically every samurai was literate and it was a world in which books abounded. The transformation which had occurred in these two and a half centuries was an essential precondition for the success of the policy which the leaders