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Development of a finite element model and analysis of a rear impact scenario of a low-floor mass transit busKumbhar, Sachin Shivaji 12 1900 (has links)
Transit buses provide transportation within cities and counties. They have been involved in approximately 284,000 traffic accidents over the past five years with an average of 57,000 buses involved in accidents per year. Traffic Safety Facts reports show that rear impact is the third most common type of transit bus accident, causing deaths and a large number of injuries. Government standards are very limited for crashworthiness of transit buses, and manufacturers have done few studies on crashworthiness of transit buses. Most studies thus have concentrated on frontal impact scenarios, but very little attempt has been made to study rear impacts of transit buses. Physical testing of transit buses to study crashworthiness during rear impacts is costly, and data obtained from testing is limited, therefore, a so finite element (FE) analysis technique is used. A detailed Computer-Aided Design (CAD) model was obtained from the manufacturer for a typical 30-foot-long low-floor mass transit bus. Meshing was done for structural parts of the bus. Proper joints and connection were provided at appropriate locations. Mesh quality was kept superior so that the model could be used for multiple load cases. Material testing was done to obtain strain rate dependent material properties. The model was validated for front and rear bumper slowspeed tests by comparing FE simulation results with physical tests done by the manufacturer according to Standard Bus Procurement Guidelines (SBPG). Also a highspeed side impact simulation was done and validated. The interior of the bus was modeled in detail and then used to carry out a series of FE simulations for different impact velocities. They were found stable. / Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering.
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Voltage control with shunt capacitance on radial distribution line with high R/X factorVu, Hong-Tuan Nguyen 12 1900 (has links)
As a previous study showed, the voltage on a distribution line with high R/X ratio will actually decrease as shunt capacitance is added. This thesis develops a new distribution feeder model and confirms this unexpected result. Then the IEEE radial test feeders are modeled to further study the effect and provide additional insight into voltage control on feeders with high R/X ratio. / Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering / "December 2005."
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A new class of carbamoylating agents based on the cyclosulfamide scaffoldYang, Qingliang 12 1900 (has links)
The neutrophil-derived serine proteases human leukocyte elastase (HLE) and proteinase 3 (PR3) have been implicated in various inflammatory diseases such as pulmonary emphysema, chronic bronchitis, asthma, cystic fibrosis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, and others. Poor regulation of the activity of these enzymes by their endogenous protein inhibitors is believed to result in the degradation of the major components of intracellular matrix. Agents that function as potent and selective inhibitors of these enzymes are of potential therapeutic value. The research described herein was an attempt to design and synthesize a class of non-covalent inhibitors of HLE and PR3 based on the cyclosulfamide scaffold. However during the course of these studies a new class of covalent inhibitors of HLE was discovered. / Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Chemistry. / "December 2006." / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 34-37)
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Characterization of CFRP and GFRP composite materials at high strain rate tensile loadingDeshpande, Anand B. 12 1900 (has links)
High strength-to-weight ratio, directional strength and stiffness are the significant factors, forcing polymer composites into the aerospace, marine and automotive industries. Due to these major factors fuel efficiency and crashworthiness properties are the significant outcomes from use of these advanced materials. This present thesis work deals with experimental study of the in-plane tensile properties of polymer matrix composite materials reinforced by high modulus fibers under Quasi-Static and Hiagh Strain Rate tensile tests. Behavior of Glass fiber-reinforced (GFRP) and Carbon fiber reinforced (CFRP) composite materials is studied. The test coupons are balanced and symmetric in fiber orientation with respect to the test direction. The related experiments are performed with a MTS 810 high rate test machine to determine the mechanical properties of tension test coupons. The specimens were tested separately under quasistatic and high-speed conditions with stroke rates of up to 500 in/s. All specimens were tested to failure in order to characterize the effect of high strain rate on failure strength of the material. In this work, a new method to obtain stress-strain curves for the tensile tests is proposed. The strain rate nature of composite laminates in tensile loadings clearly show that unlike in metals these materials do not exhibit the constant strain rate behavior in case of high strain rate tests. Throughout the test, the strain rate values change due to the dynamics of the system and directional stiffness of the composite laminates. In case of 0° fiber oriented specimens, the fiber properties dominate the matrix properties as fiber strength is much higher than that of matrix materials. For different fiber orientations of the laminates the strain rate varies for the same stroke rate tests as the matrix material starts playing role in case of higher fiber angles. The results show that high strain rates have a significant effect on the properties of the composites coupons. The increment of the ultimate strength with high strain rate is proportional to the strain rate. In the future developments the stress-strain curves obtained from these various tensile tests can be used to insert in a finite element code to develop a material model for computational simulations. / Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering / Includes bibliographic references (leaves 52-56)
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The effect of dynamic voice codec selection for active calls on voice qualityAst, Jered Daniel 05 1900 (has links)
Converged IP networks seek to incorporate voice, data, and video on the same infrastructure. However, the integration of all types of traffic onto a single IP network has several advantages as well as disadvantages. While reducing cost and increasing mobility and functionality, VoIP may lead to reliability concerns, degraded voice quality, incompatibility, and end-user complaints due to changing network characteristics. Voice quality degrades considerably due to low bandwidth, high packet loss rates, high jitter, or if total end-to-end delay is greater than the ITU-T suggested 150ms. In order to ensure these strict requirements are met, the underlying network must deploy various schemes to ensure resource availability.
This research proposes an adaptive codec selection mechanism which changes the voice encoding scheme in the middle of an active call based on the network conditions. The mechanism is mainly proposed for H.323 based systems and is intended to cause little to no effect on voice quality. The proposed mechanism involves establishing a three-way handshake process in mid-call to renegotiate station capabilities, making the switch at a determined sequence number in an RTP packet. The proposed mechanism ensures the voice continuity while switching codecs by filling the play out buffers appropriately. The effect of these changes on voice quality is determined using the objective E-model. / Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
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Chaucer's mounted menagerie: an intertextual examination of horse and rider archetypes in the Canterbury TalesBurkhardt, Stephanie D. 05 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of English
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Abundance of nifH genes in urban, agricultural, and pristine prairie streams exposed to different levels of nitrogen loadingSantos-Caton, Ingrid R. 05 1900 (has links)
Ecosystem processes drive biogeochemical cycles that influence input and losses of nutrients in the biosphere. Through human activities the environment has been highly enriched with nutrients, especially nitrogen. In most ecosystems, nitrogen availability should be limited, but soils and aquatic ecosystems have been anthropogenically impacted. In streams, availability of nutrients, geochemical characteristics, hydrodynamics, and human activities influence the metabolic activities and structure of microbial communities. The aim of the current study is to contrast gene abundance and metabolic responses of N2-fixing guilds exposed to chronic nitrogen loading in three different types of Kansas prairie streams: urban, agricultural, and pristine. Nitrogen-fixation activity was expected to be negatively correlated to the level of fixed nitrogen, while nifH (nitrogenase gene) abundance would be unchanged. A combination of process-level and molecular techniques were applied to study nitrogen fixation in these small prairie streams. Nitrogen fixation activity was measured with acetylene reduction assays. Rates of acetylene reduction for urban, agricultural, and pristine prairie streams were 1.5 to 93.5, 2.1 to 112.8, and 2.9 to 81.9 fmol N2/g soil/h, respectively. The highest rates were found in leaf litter, sediments and algal bio films. Samples of sediments and leaf litter were field-frozen for molecular analyses of the nitrogen-fixing microbial guild. Direct DNA extracts were examined by SYBR real-time PCR to determine the abundance of nifH, given a detection limit of 2 x 102 nifH gene copies/g sample. The abundance of bacterial 16S rRNA was between 1.0 x 106 to 1.0 x 1012 gene copies per gram to 1.0 x 10gene copies per gram sample. The abundance of nifH genes ranged between 1.0 x 10to 1.0 x 10gene copies per gram in all streams. The assay was quantitative over at least 8 orders of magnitude, from 1 ng to 0.1 pg of nifH target. This study provides a link between the abundance of nifH genes and nitrogen-fixation activity. An understanding of the effects of nitrogen pollution on nitrogen cycling guilds in small streams will increase our ability to overcome the challenges of nutrient pollution. This work was supported by Kansas NSF EPSCoR Ecological Genomics. / Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Biological Sciences
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Parametric study of energy absorption characteristics of a rectangular aluminum tube wrapped with e-glass/epoxyChathbai, Ashokanand 05 1900 (has links)
Analysis of crashworthy structures has been a primary area of interest for many researchers for quite a few years now. The quest for a better energy absorbing structure ora better crashworthy structure has led researchers to carry out various analysis procedures experimentally and also by simulating the characteristics. E-glass fiber reinforced epoxy wrapped over aluminum tube has proven to possess better energy absorbing capabilities. This study attempts to analyze certain characteristics of such hybrid structures. This thesis examines the properties with respect to energy absorption of the abovementioned tubes when certain parameters such as ply orientation, angle of impact, speed of impact for different aspect ratios, are varied. The axial crushing behavior and the energy absorption capability of aluminum composite hybrid tube under quasi-static loading is studied using LS-Dyna finite element solver. A aluminum tube, externally wrapped with E-glass epoxy composite material with two layers and ply orientation of +/- 30o, +/- 45o and 0/90o, are used for finite element analysis. The speeds considered are 8mph, 15mph and 30mph. The angles of impact considered are 0o, 15o, and 30o. The analysis is carried out for various permutations and combinations of the above mentioned Parameters, and the results obtained are studied and aims at optimum set of parameters for making the energy absorption of such hybrid structures. / Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering.
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Evaluation of energy absorbing pliers underride guards for rear and side of large trucksBodapati, Venkata Kiran Kumar 12 1900 (has links)
Accidents with heavy vehicles, especially in underride crashes, be it rear, side or frontal, are responsible for thousands of deaths all over the world. In many cases, these tragedies are consequences of not having effective underride guards mounted to the rear, side and front of the heavy vehicles. Lack of effective underride guards brings less compatibility making heavy vehicles more aggressive on roads. Several designs have been designed for energy absorbing underride guards. A new underride guard is developed based on the mechanical principle of simple pliers tool was conceived by Louis Otto Faber Schmutzler, SAE BRAZIL 1995. This research work describes nature of underrides, the design and analysis of two new guards for rear and side, vehicle behavior at different speeds and prevention of passenger compartment intrusion. With the advance in computer simulations, full finite element validated vehicle models are being analyzed for different impact scenarios. The main purpose of building the simulation models is to reduce the real time tests which are associated with significant cost.
In this thesis, two new guards for rear and side are modeled using MSC-Patran and the performance of the guard in preventing passenger compartment intrusion is analyzed using LS- Dyna. A zero passenger compartment intrusion is achieved with the employment of the newly designed underride guards for rear and side of the trucks. The newly designed guard models are validated using FMVSS 223/224 regulations. The results are in good correlation with the experimental data for rear and the passenger compartment intrusions are reduced in the case of rear and side underride. The performance of the guard is studied at 30, 40 and 50 miles per hour. / "December 2006."
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Exprimental study of the effect of a contact conditioner on sliding electric contactChandurkar, Dhananjay 12 1900 (has links)
This thesis is aimed at studying the tribology of sliding contacts subject to high current densities. A flat-ended Copper tip sliding on a flat Copper plate was the test configuration and current densities of the order of 10, 500 and 1000 A/mm2 were used. The friction coefficient, contact resistance and material transfer were studied for clean metal-to-metal contacts and compared with those for the case where a solid lubricant interface conditioner (SLIC) was used. Three types of tests were carried out. Static tests were done with and without pre-application of conditioner to evaluate the repeatability of contact resistance measurement and to study the effect of applied load and conditioner on the conductivity of the interface. It was found that pre-application of a thick layer of SLIC increases the contact resistance by 20 %. Circular tests, with the pin repeatedly traversing a circle, were done to evaluate the effect of sliding distance on the frictional coefficient and contact resistance with and without pre-application of solid conditioner. It was found that the conditioner reduces the friction coefficient in half and increases the time to failure many-fold. However, there was a small increase in contact resistance with conditioner. The wear rate of the tip increased with increase in contact pressure and current density. Spiral tests, where the tip was moved outward from the center of the plate, were done to study the transfer of material between the pin and the plate and the effect of change in surface velocity. / Thesis (M.S.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering / "December 2006."
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