piling engineering - definizione. Che cos'è piling engineering
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Cosa (chi) è piling engineering - definizione

PILING UP OF PRESSURE
Pressure Piling

Piling         
  • Cutaway illustration. Deep inclined (battered) pipe piles support a precast segmented skyway where upper soil layers are weak muds.
  • 'Pile jackets' encasing old concrete piles in a saltwater environment to prevent corrosion and consequential weakening of the piles when cracks allow saltwater to contact the internal steel reinforcement rods
  • Drilling of deep piles of diameter 150 cm in bridge 423 near Nes Ziona, Israel
  • Illustration of a hand-operated pile driver in Germany after 1480
  • Sheet piles are used to restrain soft soil above the bedrock in this excavation
  • Deep foundations of [[The Marina Torch]], a skyscraper in [[Dubai]]
TYPE OF BUILDING FOUNDATION
Pile (type of foundation); Continuous flight auger; Pier and beam foundation; Micropile; Pipe piles; Pile foundation; Timber piles; Piling; Deep Foundations; Deep foundations; Drilled shafts; Foundation pile; Pile (foundation); Pier & Beam; Bored pile; Caisson (foundation); Monopile foundation; Drilled caisson; Driven caisson; Friction pile; Concrete piles; Belled caisson; Secant piled wall; Bearing cap; Bearing pile; Piling foundation; Piling foundations; Monopile; Wood piling; Pilings; Micropiles; Micro pile; Micro piles; Pile (engineering); Piling (engineering); Pile (construction); Piling (construction); Soldier pile; Soldier piles; Secant Piling
·noun The act of heaping up.
II. Piling ·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Pile.
III. Piling ·noun A series of piles; piles considered collectively; as, the piling of a bridge.
IV. Piling ·noun The process of building up, heating, and working, fagots, or piles, to form bars, ·etc.
engineering         
  • A water-powered [[mine hoist]] used for raising ore, ca. 1556
  • A drawing for a [[steam locomotive]]. Engineering is applied to [[design]], with emphasis on function and the utilization of mathematics and science.
  • fluid flow]] and the [[heat equation]]s.
  • rotor and stator]] as well as the [[steam cycle]] all need to be carefully designed and optimized.
  • Radar, [[GPS]], [[lidar]], ... are all combined to provide proper navigation and [[obstacle avoidance]] (vehicle developed for 2007 [[DARPA Urban Challenge]])
  • F}}
  • Genetically engineered mice expressing [[green fluorescent protein]], which glows green under blue light. The central mouse is [[wild-type]].
  • Relief map of the [[Citadel of Lille]], designed in 1668 by [[Vauban]], the foremost military engineer of his age.
  • Offshore platform, [[Gulf of Mexico]]
  • [[Hoover Dam]]
  • Kismet]] can produce a range of facial expressions.
  • [[Leonardo da Vinci]], seen here in a self-portrait, has been described as the epitome of the artist/engineer.<ref name="Bjerklie, David"/> He is also known for his studies on [[human anatomy]] and [[physiology]].
  • The ''[[InSight]]'' lander with solar panels deployed in a cleanroom
  • aqueducts]] to bring a steady supply of clean and fresh water to cities and towns in the empire.
  • The [[International Space Station]] is used to conduct science experiments in space
  • The application of the steam engine allowed coke to be substituted for charcoal in iron making, lowering the cost of iron, which provided engineers with a new material for building bridges.  This bridge was made of [[cast iron]], which was soon displaced by less brittle [[wrought iron]] as a structural material
  • Engineers, scientists and technicians at work on target positioner inside [[National Ignition Facility]] (NIF) target chamber
  • Graphic representation of a minute fraction of the WWW, demonstrating [[hyperlink]]s
APPLIED SCIENCE
Engineered; Engeneering; Enginering; Graduate Diploma in Engineering; Technical science; Engineerig; Engineering (profession); Engineering (practice); Engineering (skill); Enginreeing; Science and engineering; Science and Engineering; Engineering subjects; Engineering branch
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
Engineering is the work involved in designing and constructing engines and machinery, or structures such as roads and bridges. Engineering is also the subject studied by people who want to do this work.
...graduates with degrees in engineering.
N-UNCOUNT
Engineering         
  • A water-powered [[mine hoist]] used for raising ore, ca. 1556
  • A drawing for a [[steam locomotive]]. Engineering is applied to [[design]], with emphasis on function and the utilization of mathematics and science.
  • fluid flow]] and the [[heat equation]]s.
  • rotor and stator]] as well as the [[steam cycle]] all need to be carefully designed and optimized.
  • Radar, [[GPS]], [[lidar]], ... are all combined to provide proper navigation and [[obstacle avoidance]] (vehicle developed for 2007 [[DARPA Urban Challenge]])
  • F}}
  • Genetically engineered mice expressing [[green fluorescent protein]], which glows green under blue light. The central mouse is [[wild-type]].
  • Relief map of the [[Citadel of Lille]], designed in 1668 by [[Vauban]], the foremost military engineer of his age.
  • Offshore platform, [[Gulf of Mexico]]
  • [[Hoover Dam]]
  • Kismet]] can produce a range of facial expressions.
  • [[Leonardo da Vinci]], seen here in a self-portrait, has been described as the epitome of the artist/engineer.<ref name="Bjerklie, David"/> He is also known for his studies on [[human anatomy]] and [[physiology]].
  • The ''[[InSight]]'' lander with solar panels deployed in a cleanroom
  • aqueducts]] to bring a steady supply of clean and fresh water to cities and towns in the empire.
  • The [[International Space Station]] is used to conduct science experiments in space
  • The application of the steam engine allowed coke to be substituted for charcoal in iron making, lowering the cost of iron, which provided engineers with a new material for building bridges.  This bridge was made of [[cast iron]], which was soon displaced by less brittle [[wrought iron]] as a structural material
  • Engineers, scientists and technicians at work on target positioner inside [[National Ignition Facility]] (NIF) target chamber
  • Graphic representation of a minute fraction of the WWW, demonstrating [[hyperlink]]s
APPLIED SCIENCE
Engineered; Engeneering; Enginering; Graduate Diploma in Engineering; Technical science; Engineerig; Engineering (profession); Engineering (practice); Engineering (skill); Enginreeing; Science and engineering; Science and Engineering; Engineering subjects; Engineering branch
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Engineer.
II. Engineering ·noun Originally, the art of managing engines; in its modern and extended sense, the art and science by which the mechanical properties of matter are made useful to man in structures and machines; the occupation and work of an Engineer.

Wikipedia

Pressure piling

Pressure piling describes phenomena related to combustion of gases in a tube or long vessel. When a flame front propagates along a tube, the unburned gases ahead of the front are compressed, and hence heated. The amount of compression varies depending on the geometry and can range from twice to eight times the initial pressure. Where multiple vessels are connected by piping, ignition of gases in one vessel and pressure piling may result in a deflagration to detonation transition and very large explosion pressure.

In electrical equipment in hazardous areas, if two electrical enclosures are connected by a conduit, an explosion of a gas in one of the compartments travels through the conduit into the next enclosure. The pressure of the 'primary' explosion together with the pressure from the 'secondary' explosion in the other compartment produces one huge explosion that the equipment cannot handle. Heat, arcs or sparks escape from the equipment and ignite any gas or vapour that may be around.

Operators avoid this by not using conduits to join classified equipment together and by using barrier glands on cables going into the enclosure. This ensures that compartments remain separate at all times.