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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.
21

An investigation into the effects of load modeling of transient stability and analysis of voltage collapse

Khumalo, Joseph January 1992 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 187-193. / The aim of this thesis is to investigate the effects of load modeling on transient stability studies and to analyze the phenomenon of voltage collapse. In addition, the different generator models are compared and the effects of voltage dips on induction motor performance are investigated. The modeling of loads dates back to the late forties when network analyzers were still in use. The prohibitive computational requirements resulted in many approximations being made to the load models. In turn, this resulted in the use of simple models which did not provide sufficient information about the dynamic behavior of loads. With the advent of digital computers, more accurate load models could be used in dynamic simulations. Despite this improvement in computational tools, the problem of load modeling for stability studies is still very complex. The load composition changes with the time of the day, the consumer's lifestyle, weather, state of the economy and other factors. The accurate load model would include amongst other things, the effects of the abovementioned factors. Since these factors are unpredictable, accurate load modeling becomes very complex indeed. It is mainly for these reasons that the approximate are still widely in use. Ideally, the response of these approximate models should be compared to the actual loads under similar disturbances. A further concern of the thesis is the study of voltage stability. The voltage stability problem has become a matter of growing concern amongst bulk transmission utilities worldwide over the last decade. For long, the stability of a power system was related exclusively to the synchronous stability of the generators.
22

Controller design via H[infinity] optimal control, quantitative feedback theory and fuzzy logic control : an application to load frequency control

Boesak, C D January 2000 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 104-112. / This thesis describes the application of robust controller design techniques namely H[infinity] optimal control, fuzzy logic control and quantitative feedback theory to the load frequency control problem of power systems. It thus forms a comparative study of these design methods. Load frequency control is the closed loop control of electrical generating units to regulate the system frequency at its nominal value in the presence of load disturbances. Load frequency control also includes the regulation of the tie-line interchange powers.
23

Multivariable control of a flotation plant simulator

Fisher, I P January 1989 (has links)
Includes bibliography. / This dissertation describes the application of two multivariable frequency domain techniques in order to design controllers for a “flotation plant”. A flotation plant simulator was designed and constructed at the University of Cape Town. The design of the multivariable controllers was based on a linear time invariant model (in s-domain) developed for the simulator. The two frequency domain techniques, Characteristic Loci (CL) and Inverse Nyquist Array (INA), were implemented in the form of CAD packages. The INA CAD package had already been written at the university but the CL CAD package had to be developed before the design of the controllers could proceed.
24

The study of an adaptive bit rate modem for meteor scatter communications

Meyerowitz, Graham John January 1990 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references.
25

The investigation of the characterisation of flotation froths and design of a machine vision system for monitoring the operation of a flotation cell ore concentration

Symonds, Paul James January 1992 (has links)
Electrical and Electronic Engineering / This dissertation investigates the application of digital image processing techniques in the development of a machine vision system that is capable of characterising the froth structures prevalent on the surface of industrial flotation cells. At present, there is no instrument available that has the ability to measure the size and shape of the bubbles that constitute the surface froth. For this reason, research into a vision based system for surface froth characterisation has been undertaken. Being able to measure bubble size and shape would have far reaching consequences, not only in enhancing the understanding of the flotation process but also in the control and optimization of flotation cells.
26

Particle ejection system : target particle recovery using a transient water jet

Mortimer, Bruce John Peter January 1991 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references. / Industry often requires the sorting of one material from another. Although the detection of desired (or undesired) elements is well advanced, the mechanical ejection or removal of particles is fairly underdeveloped. Agriculture and mining applications have used air jets and water jets to eject particles ranging in weight from a few grams to several hundred. With the current trends in mechanization leading towards higher processing speeds, these traditional methods have been found to be unsuitable: they have slow turn-on and turn-off response times, leading to a high volume of material being ejected with the target. Higher processing speeds will lead to even greater amounts of waste material being ejected thus producing even lower yield concentrations. Thus the need for a quick response time, repetitive, impulse ejection mechanism in the sorting industry is apparent. A kinematic analysis of the required ejection mechanism blast strength shows that the required force depends on the target mass, the required deflection angle the force application angle and the force duration. Acoustical techniques in air are unsuitable as ejection force mechanisms. A water jet is proposed to meets these requirements. This water jet is caused by an electrical discharge in a liquid cavity. This produces a weak shock wave which is focused by the cavity to a nozzle where a slug of water is emitted. The cavity is an elliptical cavity of height h, with the electrodes mounted end on at the first focus and a reflecting cone and nozzle at the second focus. The propagation of weak shock waves in the elliptical cavity is studied theoretically and numerically - using a finite difference simulation program. The reflected converging wave is shown to depend on the cavity eccentricity and the wall admittance. The resulting converging shock wave has an asymmetrical pressure distribution. This analysis is used in the design of a prototype water jet generator. The electrical discharge circuit used for the production of shock waves in the cavity is analysed and the physical discharge process of electrical to shock energy conversion reviewed. Conditions for the maximisation of this transfer correspond to large water gap resistances, high voltages and low circuit inductances. Experiments on the prototype generator show that the transient water jet slug energy is relatively low. High speed photographic techniques reveal that the jet velocity is of the order of 30 m/s. Published results show much higher jets speeds are possible. The operation of the electrical discharge circuit is found to critically influence the water jet performance - electrical measurements show that the circuit is a sub-optimum, underdamped RLC circuit. The cone / nozzle operation is also shown to have a marked effect on performance. The nozzle in particular requires optimisation. The prototype in its present form is not suitable for use in an ejection system. Although the pulse length, rise time and channel spread of the device are suitable, the blast strength is not sufficient for deflection of the heaviest range of particles. Optimisation of the electrical circuit and increased energies will increase the blast strength.
27

Supply-friendly single phase uninteruptible power supply

Mills, Carlo Juan January 1998 (has links)
Includes bibliography. / Uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) maintain a constant supply of power to a critical load. The distinguishing features are a fixed voltage and frequency, low harmonic content and the ability to supply the load for a period of time after the incoming supply has failed. The document begins by identifying the typical power-line disturbances and their effect on various types of equipment. Together with the power conditioners used to suppress these disturbances, various UPS standby, line-interactive and on-line configurations are introduced. Next, the possibility of modifying a locally manufactured UPS to meet the design specifications is investigated. The performance of the system under load is evaluated, and forms the basis for the following decision. Due to the large number of modifications required and the inflexibility of local UPS topology, an alternative topology is adopted. In the new topology a power factor corrector, constructed around a DC to DC boost converter, interfaces with the incoming AC line. It delivers a half sinusoidal current into the DC bus. An IGBT inverter using sinusoidal unipolar pulse-width modulation regenerates the AC load voltage after filtering through a LC-filter. The DC bus voltage ripple is reduced by synchronising the inverter load and power factor corrector current while the battery pack maintains the DC bus during a power failure. The power factor corrector employs a dedicated analogue controller chip while a MCS-51 microcontroller generates the inverter PWM, provides the remote monitoring facilities, battery charging and performs general support tasks. The total harmonic distortion of the input current is measured at less than 4% while the power factor remained above 0.99 over the entire load range. The ripple regulator reduced the DC bus voltage ripple without any noticeable effect on the load. Under maximum load, the steady state output voltage is maintained during the -20%, +10% variation in the incoming line voltage. However, the transient response fails to meet the 5% design specification. A 0-100% load step results in a 7% drop in the output voltage while the loss of the load results 10% jump in voltage. System efficiency is measured at 85%. It is the lack of processing power, precluding the use of floating point or an optimal control algorithm, which ultimately compromises the performance of the system. It is recommended that the microcontroller be replaced with a 16-bit processor or digital signal processor to provide the extra computational power needed to optimise the UPS response. To improve the voltage regulation, it is recommended that the control include an inner current loop while the switching frequency should be increased to reduce the energy storage in the output filter. Further adjustments and refinements to the topology are suggested in the final chapter.
28

An investigation into the application of artificial neural networks and cluster analysis in long-term load forecasting

Bougaardt, G January 2002 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 105-108. / This thesis investigates the problem of electric long-tenn load forecasting based on weather conditions (specifically temperature) and also investigates load forecasting by segmenting customers according to their pattern of use using clustering techniques in order to produce an effective long-tenn load forecast.
29

An automated monitoring system for the production and measurement of metal fatigue

Upton, David Mark January 1988 (has links)
Includes bibliography. / New equipment for producing and following the fatigue process, in metals, has been developed. The specimens, which must be in the shape of tuning forks, are resonated at high amplitudes. This is achieved by attaching small, powerful, samarium-cobalt magnets to the ends of the tynes, enabling them to be driven efficiently by a "U"-core electromagnet. A small, piezoceramic strain gauge provides a method of picking up the vibrations. To maintain resonance, the signal is used in a positive feedback loop, which incorporates an analogue multiplier to provide AGC. This also keeps the amplitude constant at any desired level, throughout the duration of an experiment.
30

Design of a low pressure system to determine the acoustic nonlinearity parameter B/A for small volumes of sample liquids

Prenzlow, Bjorn January 2003 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references. / This thesis aimed to design a measurement system to obtain B/A readings for different liquids using the isentropic phase method. The resulting system uses a sinusoidal wave source that operates on less than 20kPa to pressurize a sample liquid of less than 0.2 ml. The advantage of the system is that it can obtain measurements using relatively few parameters of the liquid, requiring only density and sound speed, and that it can obtain a result in a relatively short amount of time (less than 15 minutes after system has reached thermal equilibrium).

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