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电熨斗

生活中常用电熨斗来熨烫衣服.图1中甲图为常见的电熨斗图乙是电熨斗结构图.

电熨斗中有一个双金属片制成的自动开关.双金属片是由长和宽相同的铜片和铁片组成,且两金属片被紧紧地铆在一起,受热时铜片膨胀得比铁片大,双金属片便向铁片那边弯曲,温度越高,弯曲得越显著.常温时,双金属片端点的触点与弹性铜片上的触点相接触.当电熨斗与电源接通时,电热丝发热,双金属片受热弯曲,当温度升高到设定温度时,双金属片顶端的触点与弹性铜片上的触点分离,电路断开.金属底板散热,温度降低,双金属片恢复原状,电路接通.

电熨斗工作时的温度可以调节,将调温旋钮上的升降螺丝上下调节,双金属片和弹性铜片上的触点随之上下移动.双金属片弯曲程度不同,金属底板温度也就不同.由于衣服的质料不同,熨烫时所需的温度也各不相同.一般来说,棉织品比化纤衣物耐高温.

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    There was good news last week for people who struggle to get eight hours of sleep a night: they may not need so much shut-eye after all.

    Researchers from UCLA and elsewhere looked at sleep habits of remote hunter-gatherers in Tanzania, Namibia and Bolivia — groups with pre-industrial lifestyles whose sleep patterns are believed to reflect those of ancient humans. The researchers found that, on average, members of each group sleep a bit less than six and a half hours a night.

    The study, published in the academic journal Current Biology, indicates that “natural” sleep is less than eight hours a night and that modern society's numerous electronic distractions (分心) aren't necessarily to blame for people getting just six or seven hours of sleep.

    “The story that often gets out is that if you sleep for less than seven hours, you're going to die early,” he told me. “That's not true.”

    Yet Americans are addicted to getting more sleep — and on turning to medical shortcuts to help them.

    According to the Centers for Disease Control, as many as 70 million U.S. adults suffer from sleep disorders or sleeplessness. Only a third of Americans get the government's recommended seven to nine hours of sleep a night.

    About 9 million American adults use sleeping pills to help get a good night's rest, the CDC found. Siegel said the number of people relying on medicines “has gone up rather rapidly since then.”

    Industry consulting firm Global Data estimates that worldwide sales for sleeplessness medicines will run about $1.4 billion next year and reach $1.8 billion by 2023, recovering from lower sales in recent years because of cheaper generics(仿制药) hitting the market.

    Dr. Roy Artal, a sleep specialist in West Los Angeles, said it's understandable that busy people in today's go-go world would turn to medicines to speed up the sleep process. But all they're doing is building a reliance on powerful drugs for relatively little improvement.

    “There's no magic pill that makes us sleep when we want and wake up when we want,” Artal said. “The effects of sleeping pills tend to be modest.”

    He and other experts say the answer to sleeplessness isn't to be found in a pill bottle. It's in what's called “sleep hygiene (保健).”