• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 32
  • 5
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 55
  • 55
  • 11
  • 8
  • 7
  • 7
  • 7
  • 7
  • 7
  • 6
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 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.
31

Time-domain simulation of electromagnetic band-gap structures using the TLM method /

Romo Luévano, Gerardo, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Carleton University, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 237-249). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
32

Quantifying the effects of transmitter-receiver geometry variations on the capabilities of airborne electromagnetic survey systems to detect targets of high conductance /

Hefford, Shane W. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.) - Carleton University, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 128-134). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
33

Geometry optimization and computational electromagnetics methods and applications /

Wildman, Raymond A. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Delaware, 2007. / Principal faculty advisor: Daniel S. Weile, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Includes bibliographical references.
34

Signal analysis for multiple target materials through wavelet transforms

Pashine, Rajat, January 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--Missouri University of Science and Technology, 2010. / Vita. The entire thesis text is included in file. Title from title screen of thesis/dissertation PDF file (viewed April 8, 2010) Includes bibliographical references (p. 46-47).
35

Effects of Electromagnetic Hydrolysis on Dissolved Oxygen in Small Ponds

Unknown Date (has links)
This pilot study was conducted to determine if an Electron Magnetics Oxygen and Hydrogen (EMOH) device can increase the dissolved oxygen (DO) concentration of a residential surface water. By using EMOH, DO concentration will increase and allow bacteria to remove the substrate that creates blue-green algae for which the City of Boynton Beach (City) receives complaints. Those complaints center on odors and the visual appearance of the ponds. The study was conducted in-situ at the INCA Pond system in the City of Boynton Beach, Florida with data collection taking place bi-weekly, using surface aeration techniques. Water sampling was conducted in the INCA Pond system via a handheld water sensor. Primary variable monitored included: water temperature, barometric pressure, DO concentration, and DO saturation (DOSAT). Biomass of dead algae at the bottom of the pond was also monitored to determine if increased DO concentration aided the biological digestion of the organic matter. Data analysis shows that exposure to EMOH treatment allowed the relationship between DO and temperature to change from a negative correlation (the expected relationship) to a positive trend. Furthermore, pressure and DOSAT became less correlated after exposure to EMOH effluent. In all, EMOH was shown to be an effective means of treating hypoxic pond water. The optimal EMOH effluent discharge is determined to be deep in the subject pond. Backed by research on the surface-air water and bubble-water oxygen transfer coefficients, DO concentration in the subject pond was 110% higher when effluent was directed down toward the floor of the pond. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.S.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2019. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
36

Prediction of electromagnetic launcher behavior with lubricant injection through armature-rail interface modeling

Swope, Kory A. 26 March 2010 (has links)
Electromagnetic launchers are currently being developed for their use as military weapons. These devices launch a projectile to extremely high speeds using very large electric currents. One obstacle facing the development of electromagnetic launchers is damage to the rails and armature during launch. The damage occurs due to current arcing in the armature-rail interface and is denoted as a transition. One solution is to use a lubricant injection system contained inside the armature to provide a conductive lubricant to the interface. The lubricant will ensure good electrical contact, prevent solid-solid contact, and cool the interface to prevent a launch from transitioning. Various different armature designs are currently under development. Each design must be analyzed through armature-rail interface modeling in order to predict the physical behavior and identify causes of transitions. There have been many studies on the physical behavior of sliding contacts. Some of which are directly applied to electromagnetic launch. In particular the magneto-elastothermohydrodynamic model is the most comprehensive model found for use in simulating electromagnetic launch. It includes calculation of the electromagnetic field, elastic deformation of the armature, calculation of the armature temperature history, and a hydrodynamic study of the lubricant both in the injection system and the armature-rail interface. The magneto-elastothermohydrodynamic model has been applied to only one armature design with limited success due to the assumptions used. The magneto-elastothermohydrodynamic model is applied to six different armature designs each requiring modifications to be made in order to predict the distinct behavior of each launcher. Modifications to the model include consideration of turbulent flow in the injection conduit, unique injection configurations, dry-out of the armature-rail interface, two dimensional pressure fields, and analyses of cylindrical bore launcher designs. The results show the model is effective in predicting when a transition will occur and what physical event leads to a transition when compared to experimental launch data. Additionally, experimental observations are used to affirm the simulation of other physical characteristics. It is found by the simulation that the base case armature is successful in preventing a transition of the shot, which is consistent with the experimental results. The simulation of NRL shot 223 reveals that such a small amount of lubricant is supplied by the reservoirs that the armature-rail interface partially dries out making a transition likely at a time of 4.7 ms; agreeing with the experimentally observed transition at a time of 4.5 ms. It is determined that the transition of NRL shot 406 is not due to a lack of lubricant inside the interface and that the amount of lubricant which leaks from the joint is negligible. IAP shot 7 did not transition in the experiment, however, after a time of about 3.5 ms the muzzle voltage began to rise. The simulation presents a possible explanation, showing that the armature-rail interface is beginning to empty out after 4.2 ms. The simulation of the GTL-2-4C armature shows that the experimentally observed transition is caused by the reservoirs emptying out at about 2.1 ms. The exploratory simulation of a modified GTL-2-4C armature determines that the absence of the slit in the armature trailing edges will not prevent the transition nor extend the successful portion of the shot.
37

Gas gun studies of armature-rail interface wear effects

Jackson, Tyler Andrew 18 November 2010 (has links)
The objective of this work has been to investigate the applicability of the gas gun to study the armature-rail interface wear characteristics relevant to rail gun operations. The approach involved developing constitutive models for armature materials (aluminum 6061) as well as oxygen-free high-thermal conductivity copper as the rail material. Taylor rod-on-anvil impact experiments were performed to validate the accuracy of constitutive strength models by correlating predictions of dynamic simulations in ANSYS AUTODYN with experimental observations. An optical comparator was used to discretize the cross sectional deformation profile of each rod-shaped sample. Parameters of the Johnson-Cook strength model were adjusted for each material to match deformation profiles obtained from simulations with profiles obtained from impact experiments. The fitted Johnson-Cook model parameters for each material were able to give overall deformed length and diameter values within 2% of the experimentally observed data. Additional simulations were then used with the validated strength model parameters to design the geometry involving cylindrical rods of armature material accelerated through a concentric cylindrical extrusion die made of copper, to emulate the interface wear effects produced in a rail gun operation. Experiments were conducted using this geometry and employing both the 7.62mm and 80mm diameter gas guns. Microstructural analysis was conducted on interfaces of the recovered samples from both designs. Hardness measurements were also performed along the interface layer to evaluate the structure formation due to solid-state wear or melt formation. The stress and strain conditions resulting in the observed microstructural effects were correlated with predictions from numerical simulations performed using the validated material models. The overall results illustrate that the stress-strain conditions produced during acceleration of Al through hollow concentric copper extrusion die, result in interface deformation and wear characteristics that are influenced by velocity. At velocities (less than 800m/s), interface wear leads to formation of layer dominated by solid-state alloying of Cu and Al, while higher velocities produce a melted and re-solidified aluminum layer. Hence, use of different armature (Al-based) and rail (Cu-based) materials can be evaluated with the gas-gun set-up employed in the current work to study the effects of interface wear ranging from formation melt layer to solid-state alloying as a function of material properties and velocity.
38

Modeling of the armature-rail interface in an electromagnetic launcher with lubricant injection

Wang, Lei 17 November 2008 (has links)
In electromagnetic launcher (EML) systems, the behavior of the materials and forces at the armature-rail interface involves fluid mechanics, electromagnetics, thermal effects, contact mechanics and deformation mechanics. These factors must interact successfully in order for a launch to be successful. A lubricant film either deposited on the rails prior to launch or injected from the armature during launch has been suggested as a means of improving the electrical conductivity of the rail-armature interface and of avoiding the occurrence of arcing. The fluid pressure generated by such film, together with the magnetic force, the contact force and the uneven temperature field in the armature, deforms the armature and changes the interface gap shape. An analytical model to study the interfacial behavior under these influences is necessary in order to predict the performance of a potential EML design and to provide optimization information. Studies of this interfacial behavior have been done by a number of researchers. However, many critical factors were not included, such as surface roughness, cavitation, injection, magnetic lateral force, interface deformation and thermal effects. The three models presented in this study investigate the influence of those factors on the EML interface problem. The magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) model establishes a description of the lubrication process under electromagnetic stress but neglects interface deformation. The magneto-elastohydrodynamic (MEHD) model extends the MHD model by considering the lateral magnetic force, interface contact force and elastic deformation. Finally, the magneto-elastothermohydrodynamic (METHD) model adds the thermal effects to the deformation analysis. A coupled analysis of the interface behavior with the METHD model is developed and the history of a typical launch is studied. Detailed injection, lubrication and launch processes are revealed and the performance is predicted. A failed launch is simulated and the cause of failure is identified to be debris left on the rails. Several operation and design parameters, such as rail surface profile, electric current pattern, reservoir load, lubrication length, pocket size and geometry, injection conduit diameter, are analyzed and a recommended injection design procedure is developed. A scaling study is performed by doubling the dimensions to predict the scaling effects. In the end, the base case configuration and scaled configuration are optimized using the technique developed in this study.
39

Effects of magnetic field models on control of electromagnetic actuators

Son, Hungsun 14 November 2007 (has links)
Many applications such as automobiles, gyroscopes, machine tools, and transfer systems require orientation control of a rotating shaft. Demands for multi-degree of freedom (DOF) actuators in modern industries have motivated this research to develop a ball-joint-like, brushless, direct-drive spherical wheel motor (SWM) that offers a means to control the orientation of its rotating shaft. This thesis presents a general method for deriving a closed-form magnetic field solution for precise torque calculation. The method, referred here as distributed multi pole (DMP) modeling, inherits many advantages of the dipole model originally conceptualized in the context of physics, but provides an effective means to account for the shape and magnetization of the physical magnet. The DMP modeling method has been validated by comparing simulated fields and calculated forces against data obtained experimentally and numerically; the comparisons show excellent agreement. The DMP models provide a basis to develop a non-contact magnetic sensor for orientation sensing and control of a rotating shaft. Three controllers have been designed and experimentally implemented for the SWM; open-loop and PD with/without an observer. The OL control system, which decouples the spin from the shaft inclination, provides the fundamental design structure for the SWM and serves as a basis for designing feedback controllers with/without an observer. While the observer and controller designs have been developed in the context of a spherical wheel motor, these techniques along with the models and analysis tools developed in this research can be applied to design, analysis and control of most electromagnetic devices. We expect that the analytical method along with the orientation sensor and spherical wheel motor will have broad spectrum of applications.
40

Compensação de desequilíbrios em redes trifásicas a quatro fios utilizando dispositivos híbridos /

Nunes de Oliveira, Rodrigo Alessandro January 2017 (has links)
Orientador: Luis Carlos Origa de Oliveira / Resumo: Em sistemas trifásicos de potência as tensões entregues pela fonte são senoidais, iguais em magnitude e com defasamento angular de 120° entre fases. Contudo, as tensões resultantes nos pontos de utilização podem ser desbalanceadas por diversas razões. A natureza do desbalanceamento inclui magnitudes, e/ou diferentes defasagens angulares, entre fases das tensões. Nos sistemas de distribuição de energia elétrica são encontradas as maiores causas para geração de desequilíbrios de tensão, devido à distribuição irregular de cargas por fase, as quais variam constantemente devido à inserção e/ou retirada das mesmas. Visando a implantação de dispositivos de compensação de desequilíbrios que utilizem o menor número de componentes eletrônicos, apresentem mecanismos de controle simplificados e que sejam menos sensíveis a distúrbios na rede elétrica, apresenta-se um arranjo topológico como contribuição original deste trabalho. Destaca-se que o arranjo proposto atende às prerrogativas preconizadas e nestas condições, vislumbra-se um desempenho operacional robusto e a custo reduzido quando comparado às demais estruturas de compensação em utilização. / Doutor

Page generated in 0.0512 seconds