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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Drop-in idrotten i Karlstad : En kvalitativ studie om dess upplevda klimat och betydelse / Drop-in sports in Karlstad : A qualitative study about its perceived climate and significance

Engström, Eveline, Provender Jonasson, Felicia January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
2

A new approach to modeling drop-pair collisions : predicting the outcome through a fluidic-mechanical system analogy

Van Noordt, Paul Vincent 2009 August 1900 (has links)
A theoretical study of the approach and collision of liquid-drop pairs is performed with results obtained numerically. The collision process is modeled by a squeeze-flow problem involving both planar and non-planar geometry, with attention given to the deformation of the interacting interfaces. Based on the nature of the collision process, an analogy is made between the fluidic systems of colliding liquid bodies and a mechanical mass- spring-damper system. Examination of the analogous mechanical system yields the derivation of an effective damping ratio, ζ*, which is used to predict the outcome of the drop-drop collisions. Predictions made by utilizing the effective damping ratio are then compared to experimental results presented in literature. / text
3

Drop Removal from Solid Surfaces: Shedding and Evaporation

Chini, Seyed Farshid Unknown Date
No description available.
4

Producing Small Droplets of Aqueous Solutions and Molten Metals using a Pneumatic Droplet Generator

Amirzadeh Goghari, Afsoon 14 February 2011 (has links)
A pneumatic droplet generator is described, which consists of a T-junction with a nozzle fit into one opening, the second opening is connected to a gas cylinder through a solenoid valve and the third connected to a length of steel tubing. The droplet generator is filled with liquid. Opening the valve for a preset time creates a pulse of alternating negative and positive pressure in the gas above the surface of the liquid. A jet of liquid issues far enough out of the nozzle that its tip becomes unstable, detaches and forms a droplet. Experiments were conducted using water/glycerin mixtures and molten metals including tin, zinc and zinc alloy. Droplet formation was photographed and the pressure variation inside the droplet generator recorded. The effect of various experimental parameters such as nozzle size, pressure pulse width, secondary gas flow pressure, liquid viscosity and temperature on droplet formation were investigated. An analytic model of incompressible liquid motion in the nozzle is used to explain the behavior of water/glycerin solutions inside the nozzle and droplet formation. The model demonstrates that the motion of the surface is out of phase with the exciting pressure oscillation. Experiments showed the oscillation of the liquid surface prior to droplet ejection and the time lag between the pressure oscillation and droplet ejection. The model predicts that maximum liquid velocity is attained at an intermediate value of viscosity, and experiments confirmed that the largest liquid motion was achieved with this intermediate value, which eventually leads to droplet formation. Similarly, with molten metals, a simple analytical method was used to estimate the diameter of droplets. The size of tin droplets measured from experiments was in good agreement with that obtained from the model.
5

Producing Small Droplets of Aqueous Solutions and Molten Metals using a Pneumatic Droplet Generator

Amirzadeh Goghari, Afsoon 14 February 2011 (has links)
A pneumatic droplet generator is described, which consists of a T-junction with a nozzle fit into one opening, the second opening is connected to a gas cylinder through a solenoid valve and the third connected to a length of steel tubing. The droplet generator is filled with liquid. Opening the valve for a preset time creates a pulse of alternating negative and positive pressure in the gas above the surface of the liquid. A jet of liquid issues far enough out of the nozzle that its tip becomes unstable, detaches and forms a droplet. Experiments were conducted using water/glycerin mixtures and molten metals including tin, zinc and zinc alloy. Droplet formation was photographed and the pressure variation inside the droplet generator recorded. The effect of various experimental parameters such as nozzle size, pressure pulse width, secondary gas flow pressure, liquid viscosity and temperature on droplet formation were investigated. An analytic model of incompressible liquid motion in the nozzle is used to explain the behavior of water/glycerin solutions inside the nozzle and droplet formation. The model demonstrates that the motion of the surface is out of phase with the exciting pressure oscillation. Experiments showed the oscillation of the liquid surface prior to droplet ejection and the time lag between the pressure oscillation and droplet ejection. The model predicts that maximum liquid velocity is attained at an intermediate value of viscosity, and experiments confirmed that the largest liquid motion was achieved with this intermediate value, which eventually leads to droplet formation. Similarly, with molten metals, a simple analytical method was used to estimate the diameter of droplets. The size of tin droplets measured from experiments was in good agreement with that obtained from the model.
6

Drop-on-Demand Inkjet Drop Formation and Deposition

Dong, Hongming 03 July 2006 (has links)
An imaging system was developed to visualize Drop-on-Demand (DOD) inkjet drop formation and impaction on substrate over drop sizes and impaction speeds of the magnitudes encountered in applications of inkjet printing. Using a pulsed laser, a low-speed charge-coupled-device (CCD) camera, and signal generators, the imaging system based on flash photography was used to capture sharp images with a temporal resolution of 200 ns and a spatial resolution of 0.81 micron/pixel. First, the dynamics of DOD drop formation was studied experimentally. The effects of the driving signal, which controls the piezoelectric transducer that produces the pressure pulse to drive the liquid from the reservoir through the orifice, have been examined along with those of liquid properties. The main stages of DOD drop formation, including ejection and stretching of liquid, pinch-off of liquid thread from the nozzle exit, contraction of liquid thread, breakup of liquid thread into primary drop and satellites, and recombination of primary drop and satellites, are analyzed. A necessary condition for the recombination of the primary drop and satellite and the limit for liquid thread length without breakup during contraction are proposed. Second, using the visualization system coupled with a motorized stage, micron-drop impaction on a smooth substrate was investigated over a regime of We and Oh typical for inkjet printing applications. The results indicate that scaling of micron-drop impaction from millimeter-drop impaction, based on dimensionless numbers (Oh, We and cos ), is valid. The predictions of maximum spreading ratio by six existing models agree well with experimental values for high-We impaction, but not for low-We and low-contact-angle impactions; however, the model of Park et al. predicts well for high- and low-We impaction due to its inclusion of spontaneous spreading dissipation. Fingering and splashing do not occur in the micron drop impaction on either dry solid substrates or a pre-existing liquid layer. The drying time of a micron drop deposited on a substrate is less than one second and increases as the contact angle of the drop on the substrate increases.
7

Effects of partial annealing on the tensile deformation behavior of heavily cold-rolled aluminum

Chen, Chun-hao 24 July 2007 (has links)
none
8

Droplet migration on conical glass fibers

Fournier, Clementine January 2018 (has links)
This thesis is centered on the study of spontaneous droplet migration along conical fibers. One of the key motivations for this project was to better understand the water-harvesting mechanism used by natural organisms like cacti. These desert plants exploit the conical shape of their spines to make fog condense into small droplets at the tip of theses spines. Then, droplets will spontaneously move towards the thickest end of the spines, bringing water to the main body of the plant. The key force behind drop migration on a conical fiber has been identified as the fluid surface tension by Lorenceau an Quéré in 2004. These authors also suggested and tested a model predicting the speed of drops on conical fibers. Here, we explore a larger range of relative sizes of drops compared to the fiber radius. The present document describes how an experimental set-up was designed in order to study droplet migration with conical glass fibers and silicone oil droplets. Using optical microscopy and data analysis, the droplet speed was measured as well as the other experimental parameters. Finally, a simple theoretical model has been developed to predict the droplet speed as a function of geometrical parameters and fluid characteristics. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
9

Anaphors in discourse : anaphoric subjects in brazilian portuguese / Les anaphores dans le discours : sujets anaphoriques en portugais brésilien

Correa Soares, Eduardo 15 December 2017 (has links)
La présente thèse porte sur l’utilisation et l’interprétation des sujets nuls et pronominaux en portugais brésilien. Son objectif est de comprendre les facteurs sémantiques et discursifs qui peuvent être pertinents pour le choix entre ces expressions anaphoriques et la façon dont ce choix s’articule avec la théorie générale de la résolution de l’anaphore. Le point de départ a été la recherche sur les sujets nuls et réalisés sous la perspective de la grammaire générative, en particulier la théorie paramétrique. Cette thèse démontre que l’analyse proposée dans cette perspective ne peut rendre compte des données observées. Par exemple, la généralisation sur la « pauvreté » de la morphologie verbale directement liée à l’absence, ou à la fréquence réduite, de sujets nuls est contestée avec les données expérimentales ainsi qu’avec la distribution de la fréquence relative des sujets nuls au sein des personnes discursives dans le corpus. Une explication alternative présentée dans la littérature, à savoir l’importance des caractéristiques sémantiques des antécédents – l’Animacité et le Specificité – semble mieux expliquer la distribution constatée. Cette explication n’est cependant pas suffisante pour comprendre le choix des sujets anaphoriques en brésilien, puisque le nombre relatif de sujets nuls animés et spécifiques est relativement plus élevé que dans les langues à expression obligatoire des sujets. Par conséquent, cette thèse soutient que les facteurs discursifs semblent jouer un rôle crucial dans l’utilisation des sujets nuls et réalisés en brésilien. Les principaux facteurs identifiés ici sont le statut évident de l’antécédent et le caractère contrastif de l’information d’arrière-plan et l’information nouvelle. Le premier est un facteur standard dans la littérature sur la résolution de l’anaphore (exprimé par différents termes comme l’accessibilité, la familiarité, etc.), qui permet l’hypothèse d’une relation inverse entre le degré de saillance de l’antécédent et degré explicitation nécessaire dans l’expression anaphorique : plus l’antécédent est saillant, moins l’anaphore doit être explicite. Le second facteur, le contraste, constitue la principale contribution nouvelle de cette thèse : Comme pour d’autres niveaux d’analyse linguistique et d’autres phénomènes dans le langage, le choix de l’expression anaphorique semble être orienté vers l’efficacité. Plus précisément, lorsque l’information d’arrière-plan (background) et l’information assertée (focalisée) dans un énoncé contrastent, il est plus probable qu’un sujet nul soit utilisé. Les caractéristiques d’une grammaire permettant de traiter ces diverses caractéristiques est esquissée : on propose une grammaire à plusieurs niveaux dont les contraintes sémantiques et discursives agissent en parallèle à travers un principe de correspondance probabiliste. Il est ainsi démontré que les sujets nuls sont probables dans certains contextes de co-référence discursifs, puisque dans ces contextes, leurs antécédents sont plus évidents et contrastent plus avec l’information d’arrière-plan. Une contre-preuve apparente à la proposition esquissée ici est analysée : l’interprétation générique des sujets nuls. Cependant, on montre que les mêmes contraintes sémantiques appliquées à d’autres constructions génériques dans plusieurs langues peuvent produire des sujets nuls génériques en brésilien, étant donné l’échec de la mise en arrière-plan prédite par l’approche proposée ici. Enfin, les résultats de trois expériences de mouvements oculaires en lecture, qui étudient l’utilisation et l’interprétation des sujets nuls et pronominaux, sont présentés. Ces résultats corroborent de façon convaincante l’hypothèse selon laquelle les sujets nuls et réalisés ainsi que leur interprétation peuvent être expliqués par la théorie proposée ici, qui les traite en termes de contraintes d’interprétation plutôt qu’en termes de légitimation syntaxique. / The present dissertation is concerned with the use and interpretation of null and pronominal subjects in Brazilian Portuguese. This investigation examines these phenomena in an attempt to disentangle the semantic and discursive factors that can be relevant for choice between these anaphoric expressions in Brazilian Portuguese and the way in which this choice is articulated with the general theory of anaphora resolution. The starting point of this dissertation was the research looking into null and overt subjects from the perspective of Generative Grammar, specially the Parametric Theory. Throughout the present work, however, the analyses proposed in this perspective were shown not to account for the data at stake. The generalization that poor verbal morphology is directly related to the absence or reduced frequency of null subjects, for example, is challenged through experimental data and an investigation of the relative frequency of null subjects across discourse persons in corpora. An alternative explanation presented in the previous literature, namely the importance of the antecedents’ features of Animacy and Specificity, seems to better account for the attested distribution. However, this explanation is not sufficient for understanding the choice between null and overt subjects in Brazilian Portuguese, since the number of animate and specific null subjects is still relatively higher than in languages with obligatory expression of subjects. Therefore, it is argued that discourse factors seem to play a crucial role in the use of null and overt subjects in Brazilian Portuguese. The main factors identified here are Obviousness and Contrast. The first is a standard feature in the literature about anaphora resolution (expressed by a variety of terms, such as Salience, Familiarity, Accessibility, etc.), which is part of the reverse mapping hypothesis according to which the more obvious the subject is, the less explicit the co-referential form is allowed to be. The second factor, Contrast, is the main finding of the present dissertation: as is the case for other levels of linguistic analyses and other phenomena in language, the choice of anaphoric expression in Brazilian Portuguese seems to be driven by efficiency. In the present case, this means that, when the backgrounded information and the asserted (focused) in- formation in an utterance contrast the most, it is more likely that a null subject will be used. The design of a grammar that deals with these multiple features is sketched, specifically, a multi-layered scalar probabilistic grammar is proposed, whose semantic and discourse constraints act in parallel through a probabilistic mapping. It is, thus, shown that null subjects are likely in discursive co- reference, since in these contexts their antecedents are more obvious and the focused information contrasts the most with the background. An apparent counter-example to the proposal sketched here is analyzed: the generic interpretation of null subjects. However, it is shown that the same semantic constraints cross-linguistically applied to other generic constructions can produce generic null subjects in Brazilian Portuguese, given the failure to be grounded predicted by the approach proposed here. Finally, on-line evidence for the analysis of the use and interpretation of null and pronominal subjects is provided. The results found in three eye-tracking while reading experiments provide striking evidence in favor of the proposal put forward here, according to which null and overt subjects and their interpretation can be accounted for in terms of constraints on interpretation rather than licensing.
10

System level drop-impact simulation and validation of handheld radio devices.

Barclay, Edward Andrew January 2015 (has links)
This project was concerned with the development of a finite element model capable of simulating a drop-impact event of handheld radio devices. Handheld radios call for exceptional robustness and reliability due to their deployment in critical applications. The development of a drop-impact finite element model aims to provide greater understanding of impact behaviours, this insight would ultimately be used to develop more robust and optimised handheld electronic products. Before such analysis tools can be introduced into the product development cycle an understanding of finite element methods, of setup parameters for the finite element solver and the accuracy of simulation results must be considered. Experimental results were used throughout the project to validate the finite element models developed. A drop-impact test rig was designed and constructed to control both impact orientation and velocity of the handheld radios tested. Drop-impact modelling of a handheld radio is extremely challenging because of the complex interaction of the contacting surfaces, the complex stress-strain and damping characteristics of the materials, and the excitation of the high frequency modes. For this reason, the finite element model was developed in two stages: a simplified radio was used to develop the understanding of the above complexities and then the understanding implemented in a more detailed radio model. The mesh size of the finite elements, the elastic and the damping characteristics of the materials and the contact conditions for the simplified radio model were varied to understand their influence on the simulation results. The finite element input settings and parameters were altered to give better agreement with the experimental results of the simplified radio model. The detailed radio was subsequently modelled. The lessons learnt from the simplified radio model were applied to the analysis of the detailed radio assembly. Despite general agreements, there were some differences between the finite element and experimental results which was attributed to the high complexity of the model. The project delivered a workable finite element model capable of analysing the drop-impact event of handheld radio devices. Suggestions have been provided that would further improve the quality of the model.

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