06/06/2012 CHEM 1411 Summer 2012 Dr. Rodriguez By: Victor Dominguez Abstract: Short description of the lab and it importance. Answer three questions a. What did you do? In this experiment we were exposed to a variety of important concepts related to quantitative experimentation‚ including the proper use of glassware‚ and analytical balances. b. How did you do it? Briefly describe the procedures in 1 sentence. We calibrate a volumetric pipet and flask. We also calibrated a beaker and
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Completion w/respect Equivalent Units Units to conversion Direct Material Conversion Work in Process‚ October 1 1‚000 40% Units Started during October 5‚000 Total Units to account for 6‚000 Units from beginning WIP‚ completed & transferred out during October 1‚000 100% 1‚000 1‚000 Units started & completed during Oct 3‚000 3‚000 3‚000 Work in Process‚ Oct 31 (20% as to con) 2‚000 20% 2‚000 400 Total Equivalent Units 6‚000 6‚000 4‚400 Q2 – Exercise
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be added in the Firing Department include: (1) costs transferred in from the Mixing Department; (2) materials costs added in the Firing Department; (3) labor costs added in the Firing Department; and (4) overhead costs added in the Firing Department. 4-7 Under the weighted-average method‚ equivalent units of production consist of units transferred to the next department (or to fin- 4-9 Under the weighted-average method‚ each unit transferred out of the department is counted as one equivalent unit—regardless
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BIOMETRICS VOTING SYSTEM by AMIT KUMAR SHARMA Table of Contents: Chapters Page No. 1 Introduction 1.1 Definition 1.2 Design 1.2.1 Summary of Design 1.3 Description of the Voting Machine 1.4 Block diagram for the whole process in brief 2 Voting System 2.1 Finger print scanner 2.1.1 Extraction of thumb impression 2.3 Feature extraction & comparison 2.3 Transfer of data to hard disk 3. Verification 3.1 Verification of
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Work in process‚ June 1—40‚000 units: Direct material: 100% complete‚ cost of Conversion: 40% complete‚ cost of Balance in work in process‚ June 1 Units started during June Units completed during June and transferred out to finishedgoods inventory Work in process‚ June 30: Direct material: 100% complete Conversion: 60% complete Costs incurred during June: Direct material Conversion costs: Direct labor Applied manufacturing overhead
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CHAPTER 18 SPOILAGE‚ REWORK‚ AND SCRAP 18-1 Managers have found that improved quality and intolerance for high spoilage have lowered overall costs and increased sales. 18-2 Spoilage—units of production that do not meet the standards required by customers for good units and that are discarded or sold at reduced prices. Rework—units of production that do not meet the specifications required by customers but which are subsequently repaired and sold as good finished units. Scrap—residual material
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that the company uses the weighted-average method. 1.Determine the equivalent units for June for the Mixing Department. Materials Conversion Completed and transferred out 450‚000 450‚000 Work in Process‚ ending 80‚000 x .75 60‚000 80‚000 x .25
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care for a patient who was transferred to a different hospital without being completely stable enough for transfer. In 1985‚ Congress passed the law of “Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act” also known as (EMTALA) to ensure public access and treatment to emergency services regardless of race‚ ability to pay‚ or legal status (U.S. Dept. of Health‚ 2010). This act states that all individuals needing emergency medical support should never be discharged or transferred until their condition is stable
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SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGICAL SCIENCES INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT Simulation Project- IE532 * Table of Contents: 1. Introduction……………………………………………………………………………………………………..2 2. Approach………………………………………………………………………………………………………….3 3. Input Analyzer………………………………………………………………………………………………….9 4. Animation……………………………………………………………………………………………………….10 5. Results…………………………………………………………………………………………………………….11 4. Discussion……………………………………………………………………………………………………….15 5. Conclusion………………………………………………………………………………………………………16
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three principles to guide us in the development of the energy concept. 1. Energy can be viewed as a substance-like quantity that can be stored in a physical system. 2. Energy can “flow” or be “transferred” from one system to another and so cause changes. 3. Energy maintains its identity after being transferred. If you are unsure what we mean by the use of a substance metaphor‚ consider how we describe information. We say that it can be stored in books‚ on computer hard drives or floppy disks
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