I'm going to be sending a care package to my husband away in school for the Navy in FloridaLast time I sent cookies and chocolate (Easter stuff mainly) and popcornBut this time I think I wanna include cupcakes :DHow would I go about packaging these so they aren't damaged too badly in the process? I'll be using a large flat rate USPS box, and there will also be a storage ziploc bag full of cookies and some more candy for himThere should be room but just so you know what it would be in there with.I'm also guessing I shouldn't do anything too fancy with the frosting, since it'll likely get a little smushed.
A little more information would be helpful, like what ceramics are you asking about, and the application being considered would help tooFor some applications, one type of ceramic might rate high compared to some other material, but in another application the same ceramic might rate low compared to the other materialAlso the properties of ceramics vary widelySo, as stated the question is very hard to answerMechanical: tend to be hard, so if hardness is needed rate high, but also tend to be brittle so if ductility is needed rate low Electrical: often are insulators, if insulator is needed rate high, if conductor is needed, rate low I could go on, but I think you get the idea.
Just enclose a can of store-bought frosting, so he can put it on himself:) I'd send firmer cake, like pound cake, or banana bread, so they don't squish I mail baked goods alot (I sell them on eBay), and the main problem seems to be that very moist things can get moldy if it's too warmYou could wrap each cupcake/muffin in saran; and then a paper towel (folded in 1/3s) around eachMaybe set them all in a disposable aluminum pan and put the popcorn peanuts in the spaces; cover that with saran or tin foil; and put the whole package of them into a plastic grocery bag and into the box.
9.7KW/s would not make experience, kW is already a costi will assume 9.7 kWYour question is a contradictionyou go with to discharge saved capability very rapidly, then you definately go with to save iti will assume you have the order reversed, you go with to save it then discharge itA capacitor can save it, and there are a number of the thank you to discharge it rapidly, together with a SCR32 kJ is lots yet acheivable, a 100000?F cap charged to 500 volts is 12 kJ, you purely want 3 of thoseTo discharge it rapidly, you want a severe modern swapHow severe? Use CVit i 0.3a hundred/1e3 30000 amps will discharge the cap by ability of a hundred volts in a million mSA economic enterprise of severe modern SCRs will do thisyou may desire to purchase guy or woman SCR over a hundred amps, and you will parallel any style of themyet decrease back on your first sentence32 kJ at a cost of 9.7 kW (that's 9.7 kJ/s) is an era of 32/9.7 330 seconds, hardly mS or ?S cases.