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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

Implementation of second-order finite elements in the GIFTS structural analysis program

Hunten, Keith Atherton January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
22

Microcomputer based truck dispatching system: overall system management

Rakshit, Ananda January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
23

MICROCOMPUTER BASED TRUCK DISPATCHING SYSTEM - OVERALL SYSTEM MANAGEMENT

Rakshit, Ananda January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
24

Transient behavior of stochastic networks : application to production planning with load-dependent lead times

Riaño, Germán 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
25

Computer software for the control of potato storage environment

Landry, Jacques-André January 1994 (has links)
Much research has proven that computer controlled vegetable storage can achieve better storage conditions than traditional control systems. During the last 10 years, the use of microcomputer-based environmental control systems has become commonplace. However, to take full advantage of this computerization of the control process, it is not enough only to program the control functions that are performed by normal analog equipment. New and better control strategies must be developed. Recent advances in computer technology have made possible the development of expert systems; a branch of artificial intelligence. One of the advantages of developing such a system is that it provides a reasoning tool which approaches the level of proficiency human experts exhibit in that field. The application of new control methods using expert systems has been extensively demonstrated for greenhouse environments. However, the application of expert systems for the control of vegetable storage is still to be investigated. In the first phase of this project, the development and implementation of a sophisticated control software, using a conventional algorithm-based programming language, were achieved. Throughout the three years of experimentation in an industrial potato storage, the software proved to be appropriate for the control of storage environmental parameters (temperature and relative humidity). During the second phase, the application of an expert system for the on-line control of potato storage was explored. The development of a rule-based expert system, that could replace the conventional algorithm-based control routines was achieved. The integration of the expert system into the control software will result in a highly efficient control software, which can easily be maintained and improved as new knowledge emerges. The use of an expert system will also render possible the representation of heuristic knowledge in the form of rules, which was not possible with the use of conven
26

A computer-based design history tool

Chen, Ai-hua 01 July 1991 (has links)
In current practice, design documentation often fails to support the activities of design understanding, communication, and redesign. A Design History Tool has been developed to improve current design documentation. This tool is a computerized design history that represents and plays back important information generated during the process of designing a mechanical system. This tool not only documents the final design results, but also documents the constraints developed and decisions made in the evolution of a product from initial specifications to final detailed design. This tool supports design understanding, communication, and redesign. It allows designers, manufacturing engineers, and management personnel to review and examine an existing design. For playback, the Design History Tool provides four major browsing capabilities: a} browsing design artifacts from isometric drawing, design hierarchy, to details of a product; b) browsing design evolution from the initial specifications to the final detailed design; c) browsing design rationales and alternatives behind each design decision; and d) browsing constraint dependencies. To enhance the browsing capabilities, different interfaces have been developed to allow the users to efficiently retrieve and easily understand the design information. / Graduation date: 1992
27

Particle swarms in sizing and global optimization

Schutte, Jaco Francois 13 August 2007 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the section 00front of this document / Dissertation (MEng (Mechanical Engineering))--University of Pretoria, 2007. / Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering / MEng / unrestricted
28

Moment-curvature-thrust relationships in hybrid members

Fiala, Douglas Wrenn 01 July 1972 (has links)
In order to overcome the difficulties encountered in closed form solutions, moment-curvature-thrust relationships are developed for hybrid and nonhybrid cross sections utilizing an open form method. The use of horizontal sectors permits the inclusion of residual stresses and/or nonbilinear stress-strain relationships, if desired. Theoretical and experimental data are compared. Applications to circular tubes and other cross sections are discussed. Results indicate that open form solutions are feasible for calculating moment-curvature-thrust data. Hybrid cross sections are easily treated by open form solutions.
29

Computer software for the control of potato storage environment

Landry, Jacques-André January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
30

Optimal initial fuel distribution in a thermal reactor for maximum energy production

Moran-Lopez, Juan Manuel January 1983 (has links)
Using the fuel burnup as objective function, it is desired to determine the initial distribution of the fuel in a reactor in order to obtain the maximum energy possible, for which, without changing a fixed initial fuel mass, the results for different initial fuel and control poison configurations are analyzed and the corresponding running times compared. One-dimensional, two energy-group theory is applied to a reflected cylindrical reactor using U-235 as fuel and light water as moderator and reflector. Fissions in both fast and thermal groups are considered. The reactor is divided into several annular regions, and the constant flux approximation in each depletion step is then used to solve the fuel and fission-product poisons differential equations in each region. The computer code OPTIME was developed to determine the time variation of core properties during the fuel cycle. At each depletion step, OPTIME calls ODMUG, [12] a criticality search program, from which the spatially-averaged neutron fluxes and control poison cross sections are obtained. A uniform initial fuel distribution was chosen as a benchmark and the results for several different fuel configurations were analyzed. Two different initial control poison distributions were investigated for each fuel configuration: a uniform and a fuel proportional distribution. Using an iterative approach fuel was moved from the low burnup regions toward the high burnup regions; reactor running times were in this way increased from 9000 to 11,500 hours in the fuel proportional control poison distribution case and from 9000 to 11,000 hours in the uniform control poison distribution case. Beyond this point not only did the running time not increase, but no criticality was reached. / Ph. D.

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