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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.
91

A Radio Assay for the Study of Radio Frequency Tag Antenna Performance

Griffin, Joshua David 17 May 2005 (has links)
In recent years, passive radio frequency (RF) tags that communicate using modulated backscatter radiation have shown great potential for use in inventory management, parcel and postal tracking, for use as remote sensors, and in a host of other Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) applications. However, for the widespread use of these tags to become reality, much basic research is needed to reduce the cost, increase the range, and increase the reliability of the RF tag. This research seeks to enhance the performance of passive RF tags by developing a series of tests, or radio assay, to measure the following: the performance of RF tag antennas as a function of antenna material and manufacturing technique and the antenna performance when attached to various materials. The radio assay experiments are designed for RF tag antennas that operate in the far field of the tag reader and communicate using modulated backscatter radiation at 915 MHz. Three flexible, folded dipoles, printed on plastic substrates, were measured in the radio assay experiments. The results of the experiments include the following: the antenna gain penalty (relative to a baseline antenna) for each antenna material and manufacturing technique, the antenna gain penalty (relative to the free space antenna gain) due to material losses when the tag antenna is attached to an object, and the benefits (in terms of antenna gain) of tuning each tag antenna to the material to which it is attached. The results are presented in a form to aid RF engineers in the design of RF tag system link budgets.
92

The impact of carbon footprint label marking to purchase intention of bottled drinks

Hsieh, Tung-sheng 28 July 2011 (has links)
Since the Industrial Revolution, human beings have emitted huge amounts of greenhouse gases for economic growth, and greenhouse gases may influence climate. To slow down climate change, everyone has to take action. Recently, the carbon footprint (CF) labeling on products offers consumers an opportunity to do so in daily shopping. However, so far a CF label reveals only the amount of CO2 emitted during the product's life cycle, but not the product's relative CO2 emission level (i.e., whether the product emitted more or less CO2 than similar products). This study thus hypothesized that the mere presentation of a CF label would not affect consumers' buying intent. To test this and other related hypotheses, this study ran an experiment with 3 independent variables. The variables are amount of CO2 emitted (400gm or 750gm), CO2-saving signal (given or not given) and price (20 NTD or 30 NTD) of the product, which was a tetra-packed tea. In the CO2-saving signal given condition, the experimenter told the participants either that a green CF label denoted low CO2 emissions (in the 400gm condition) or that a green CF label denoted high CO2 emissions (in the 750gm condition). The label shown, in fact, was always green. In the CO2-saving signal not given condition, the experimenter did not explain the meaning of the label color.A convenient sample of 240 adults joined the experiment. They were randomly assigned to the experiment conditions. Each participant saw a picture of a tetra-packed tea with a CF label and listed price. Results showed that when CO2-saving signal was given, the low-CO2-high-price tea could induce higher buying intent than the high-CO2-low-price tea. When CO2-saving signal was not given, the two conditions did not differ in buying intent. Furthermore, participants' environmental attitude¡Xas measured a scale adapted from Dunlap and van Liere's (1978) New Environmental Paradigm Scale¡Xdid not qualify the above results. These findings suggest that CF label can neither help nor encourage people to choose low-CO2 products, unless it is complemented with a clear CO2-saving signal.
93

Energy use and carbon footprint from lawn management : A case study in the Uppsala region of Sweden

Wesström, Therese January 2015 (has links)
Atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gas emissions are now higher than ever before, with severe implications for both humans and ecosystems around the world. To mitigate climate change, large and sustained reductions of greenhouse gas emissions are required. The management of lawns entail frequent maintenance activities, such as mowing, irrigation and fertilisation, which require energy and cause greenhouse gas emissions. Lawns cover a significant part of urban areas worldwide, with functions such as air quality improvement, flood mitigation and the potential to sequester carbon and consequently reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere. The existing knowledge about the environmental impact from lawn management is limited and more research is needed to determine related climate effects. The objective of the study was to evaluate energy use and carbon footprint from urban lawn systems with different intensities through a life cycle perspective. The lawns included in the study consisted of utility lawns and meadow lawns, with management under responsibility of Uppsala municipality, and the two golf courses Upsala GK and Sigtuna GK, divided into the lawn types greens, tees, fairways and roughs. The energy use and carbon footprint was determined by an inventory of the existing lawn management practices through interviews with greenkeepers at the golf courses, stakeholder at Uppsala municipality and lawn caretakers. Additional information for the inventory was received from literature and databases. Based on the inventory, calculations of the energy use and carbon footprint throughout the life cycle was made. The results showed that greens had the largest carbon footprint and energy use per hectare followed by tees, fairways, roughs, utility lawns and meadow lawns. The energy use was the highest for the golf courses, with 16.5 GJ ha-1 year-1 for Upsala GK and 13.0 GJ ha-1 year-1 for Sigtuna GK. Lower energy use was determined for the utility lawns and meadow lawns, where 3.0 and 0.5 GJ ha-1 year-1 were required for the lawn management, respectively. The carbon footprint of the golf courses was 1.33 Mg CO2- equivalents (CO2e) ha-1year-1 for Upsala GK and 0.94 Mg CO2e ha-1 year-1 for Sigtuna GK, which was larger compared to the utility lawns of 0.2 Mg CO2e ha-1 year-1 and meadow lawns of 0.03 Mg CO2e ha-1 year-1. Mowing, irrigation and manufacturing of fertiliser were the management activities consuming most energy. The activities with largest carbon footprint were mowing, manufacturing of fertiliser and soil emissions from application of fertilisers. This study was a part of a multidisciplinary research programme, where the results will be used to determine the net emission balance when the carbon sequestration potential of the lawns has been concluded. Suggested improvements at the golf courses were to reduce the applied amounts of nitrogen fertiliser and improve the documentation of used resources. Increasing the usage of hybrid and electrical mowers was recommended for both the municipality as well as the golf courses to reduce the energy use and the carbon footprint. / Halterna av växthusgaser i atmosfären är högre än någonsin, vilket medför stora konsekvenser för både människor och ekosystem runt om i världen. För att motverka klimatförändringar måste åtgärder för att minska växthusgaserna i atmosfären genomföras. Gräsytor kräver kontinuerlig skötsel, såsom klippning, bevattning och gödsling, vilket är energikrävande och ger upphov till utsläpp av växthusgaser. En stor del av världens städer består av gräsytor som bidrar med positiva effekter till samhället genom att bland annat förbättra luftkvaliteten, dämpa översvämningar och lagra in kol i marken och på så sätt reducera atmosfärens koldioxidhalt. Den nuvarande kunskapen om miljöpåverkan från gräsyteskötsel är bristfällig och fler studier behövs för att bestämma ytornas klimatpåverkan. Syftet med studien var att bestämma energianvändning och klimatavtryck ur ett livscykelperspektiv för gräsytor med varierande skötselintensitet. De valda ytorna var bruksgräsmattor och slåttermarker som sköts av Uppsala kommun samt de två golfklubbarna Upsala GK och Sigtuna GK, vars ytor delades upp i green, tee, fairway och ruff. Energianvändningen och klimatavtrycket bestämdes genom en inventering av nuvarande skötselåtgärder. Detta gjordes genom intervjuer med greenkeepers på golfklubbarna, ansvariga på Uppsala kommun samt ansvariga för gräsyteskötsel på entreprenadföretag upphandlade av kommunen. Dessutom inhämtades information från litteraturen och databaser. Baserat på inventeringen utfördes beräkningar på energianvändning och klimatavtryck ur ett livscykelperspektiv. Resultatet visade att greener hade den högsta energianvändningen och det största klimatavtrycket, som i fallande storleksordning följdes av tee, fairway, ruff, bruksgräsmattor och slåttermarker. Greenerna bidrog med 20 % av golfbanornas totala klimatavtryck, trots att de bara utgör 3 % av golfbanans totala area. Den totala energianvändningen var störst för golfbanorna, med 16.5 GJ ha-1 år-1 för Upsala GK och 13.0 GJ ha-1 år-1 för Sigtuna GK. Den lägsta energianvändningen resulterade från bruksgräsmattor och slåttermarker där 3.0 och 0.5 GJ ha-1 år-1 krävdes för respektive gräsyta. Även för klimatavtrycket så var det större för golfbanorna med 1.33 Mg CO2- ekvivalenter (CO2e) ha-1 år-1 för Upsala GK och 0.94 Mg CO2e ha-1 år-1 för Sigtuna GK, jämfört med bruksgräsmattorna vars klimatavtryck var 0.2 Mg CO2e ha-1 år-1 och slåttermarkerna med 0.03 Mg CO2e ha-1 år-1. Klippning, bevattning och produktion av gödningsmedel var de skötselåtgärder som hade högst energiförbrukning. De skötselåtgärder med det största klimatavtrycket var klippning, produktion av gödningsmedel samt de emissioner som uppstod till följd av gödslingen. Detta projekt var en del av ett multidisciplinärt forskningsprogram där resultaten kommer att användas för att bestämma nettoutsläppsbalanser för gräsytorna när potentialen att lagra kol i marken har bestämts. Förslagna åtgärder för golfbanorna var att reducera gödselgivorna av kväve och öka dokumentationen av använda resurser. Det rekommenderades att öka användandet av hybrider och elektriska maskiner både inom kommunens gräsyteskötsel och på golfbanorna.
94

Responsibility and practice in notions of corporate social responsibility

Kleinrichert, Denise 01 June 2007 (has links)
This treatise presents a transcendental argument for corporate social responsibility. The argument is that corporate social responsibility, or CSR, is best understood as a collective moral practice that is a precondition for sustainable business. There are a number of theories and definitions of CSR in the contemporary business literature. These theories include considerations of economic, legal, social, and environmental notions of what a corporation ought to take responsibility for based on either motives or concerns of accountability for corporate acts. This work focuses on economic theories. I analyze the distinction between the technical terms "responsibility" and "accountability" found in these theories. This enables me to explicate the meaning of corporate responsibility as it relates to the conditions of sustainable business activity. These conditions necessarily include moral content. In other words, this is an applied ethics project. First, I inquire into the intellectual history of the broader sense of corporate responsibility and review various contemporary notions of corporate social responsibility. My concern is whether these notions presuppose broader forms of moral responsibility to others as an obligation, moral responsibility for acts, or to be held morally responsible (i.e., accountable) based on moral tendencies, particular motives, or resulting outcomes. This concern forms the basis of my consideration of the notions of individual and collective responsibility. The following work includes an analysis of the notion of human choice as a collective endeavor of institutional relationships and practice in the economic market system. I argue that corporate motives for moral interrelationships are necessarily implicit in biosocioeconomic multinational market enterprise. I conclude that an analysis of corporate community involvement may be found in a case study of Starbucks Coffee Company's efforts to practice CSR in particular coffee bean farming communities in developing countries.
95

A memory profiler for 3D graphics application using ninary instrumentation

Deo, Mrinal 25 July 2011 (has links)
This report describes the architecture and implementation of a memory profiler for 3D graphics applications. The memory profiling is done for parts of the program which runs on the graphics processor and is responsible for rendering the image. The shaders are parsed and every memory instruction is instrumented with additional instruction for profiling. The results are then transferred from the video memory to CPU memory. Profiling is done for a frame and completes in less than three minutes. The report also describes various analyses that can be done using the results obtained from this profiler. The report discusses the design of an analytical cache model that can be used to identify candidate memory buffers suitable for caching among all the buffers used by an application. The profiler can segregate results for reads and writes separately, can handle all formats of texture access instructions and predicated instructions. / text
96

Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world

Kissinger, Meidad 11 1900 (has links)
In a globalizing world, trade has become essential to supporting the needs and wants of billions of people. Virtually everyone now consumes resource commodities and manufactured products traded all over the world; the ecological footprints of nations are now scattered across the globe. The spatial separation of material production (resource exploitation) from consumption eliminates negative feedbacks from supporting eco-systems. Most consumers remain unaware of the impacts that their trade dependence imposes on distant ecosystems (out of sight out of mind). I take the first steps in developing a conceptual and practical framework for an ‘interregional ecology’ approach to exploring and analyzing sustainability in an increasingly interconnected world. Such an approach accounts for some of the ‘externalities’ of globalization and international trade. It underscores the increasing dependence and impact of almost any country on resources originating from others and recognizes that the sustainability of any specified region may be increasingly linked to the ecological sustainability of distant supporting regions. I empirically describe and quantify some of the interregional material linkages between selected countries. I document the flows of renewable resources into the U.S. and quantify the U.S. external material footprint (EF) on specific countries. I then document the physical inputs involved in production of most agricultural export products from Costa Rica and Canada. Finally, I focus on major export products such as bananas, coffee and beef in Costa Rica and agricultural activities in the Canadian Prairies and document some of the ecological consequences (loss of habitat, soil degradation, water contamination and biodiversity loss) of that production. My research findings show increasing U.S. imports, increasing reliance on external sources and growing external ecological footprints. They also show how production activities mostly for overseas consumption led to changes in ecological structure and function in the studied export countries. This dissertation adds a missing trans-national dimension to the sustainability debate effectively integrating the policy and planning domain for sustainability in one region with that in others. While my research focuses mainly on documenting the nature and magnitude of interregional connections I also consider some of the implications of the interregional approach for sustainability planning.
97

Rethinking Economics: Accounting for Environmental Impact at a Local Level

Wilson, Jeffrey 11 April 2013 (has links)
The quality of the human experience depends on a dramatic change in how we think about economics and, more specifically, about the relationship between human economic activity and the natural world. The continued pursuit of a growth agenda threatens the health and stability of global ecological systems, jeopardizes the wellbeing of many people, and undermines opportunities for future generations. In an era of sustainability challenges, we must measure the impacts of economic activity and use that information toward designing more sustainable human systems. This dissertation supports an ecological economic worldview by extending biophysical based measures to local scale applications to improve understanding of environmental impact at the urban and sub-regional scale. To account for environmental impact, I test two calculation approaches: one to estimate municipal ecological footprint values and one to measure environmental impact at a neighbourhood level. The novel calculation approaches account for environmental impact at finer scales of resolution than has traditionally been applied. I also explore drivers of environmental impact using Halifax Regional Municipality as a case study. I examine the relationship between direct GHG emissions and socio-economic and wellbeing variables using a multivariate model. Those reporting to be married, young, low income, and living in households with more people have correspondingly lower direct GHG emissions than other categories in respective groupings. Respondents with lifestyles that generate higher GHG emissions did not report to be healthier, happier or more connected to their communities, suggesting that individuals can experience similar degrees of wellbeing largely independent of their GHG emissions. I explored whether where we live influences direct GHG emissions. Findings indicate that individuals living in the suburbs generate similar GHG emissions to those living in the inner city, challenging a widely held assumption that living in the inner city is better for sustainability. These results underscore the importance of understanding the spatial distribution of GHG emissions at the sub-regional scale. The research offers new insights to measure and understand environmental impact at the local level toward supporting ecologically informed decision-making.
98

Greening our working lives : the environmental impacts of changing patterns of paid work in the UK and the Netherlands, and implications for working time policy

Pullinger, Martin Iain January 2012 (has links)
Paid working patterns are currently regulated by governments around the world for a range of social and economic reasons: to increase labour supply and skills; to provide a strong tax base to support an ageing population; to help people reconcile work and family life over increasingly diversified life courses; and to be in line with the general principle of the activating, employment led welfare state. Environmental considerations rarely feature in the design or evaluation of working time policy. Nevertheless, various authors working on policies for sustainable development argue that reductions in average paid working time could lead to environmental benefits: as people work less, they in turn earn less, and so consume less, resulting in lower environmental impacts from lower levels of production of products. This thesis takes this argument as its starting point, and synthesises these distinct perspectives on working time and its regulation to address two key questions: what level of environmental benefits could arise from such reductions in paid working time?; and what are the implications for the design of working time policy? The research addresses these questions, taking the case of greenhouse gas emissions, and the UK and the Netherlands in the early 2000s as case studies. Using household expenditure survey data and data on product emissions intensities, the relationship between paid working time and emissions is analysed at both the household and national levels. At the household level, statistically and substantively significant correlations are found between higher levels of paid work and higher levels of consumption and so greenhouse gas emissions. The effects on emissions of hypothetical changes in the working patterns of the national populations are then modelled. The research estimates that meeting current national objectives to increase labour market participation rates would increase national greenhouse gas emissions by 0.6-0.7%, a cost that might be considered acceptable if it also achieves its aims of reducing income poverty, benefit dependency, and social exclusion. Meanwhile, widespread reductions in average working hours and increased use of career breaks, with corresponding reductions in income, would reduce national emissions. The scenarios modelled (a 20% reduction in the working hours of full time workers, and increasing use of 3 month career breaks) lead to reductions of 3-4.5% in national emissions, with the corresponding increases in “leisure” time, reductions in income inequality, and reduced gender imbalances in the distribution of paid work potentially also improving wellbeing, social cohesion, and gender equality in work and care. The results indicate that environmental factors warrant consideration in the design and evaluation of working time policy, and that challenging but achievable levels of working time reduction could contribute a small but significant share to meeting greenhouse gas emissions targets. Policy instruments would need to address a range of values, attitudes and norms around employment and consumption, as well as employer and situational factors, if substantial working time reduction were to be achieved. Reconciling diverse environmental, social and economic goals also requires careful policy design, particularly for certain demographic groups such as the low income, who would need financial and other support to turn rights to reduce working time into functional freedoms that they could utilise.
99

Economic Optimization and Precision Agriculture: A Carbon Footprint Story

Brown, Rachael M. 01 January 2013 (has links)
This thesis examines the economic and environmental impacts that precision agriculture technologies (PATs) can have on the carbon footprint of a grain farm. An analysis is offered using two manuscripts. The first examines the impacts of three PATs and compares the findings to a conventional farming method. It was found that all three PATs investigated showed a potential Pareto improvement over conventional farming. The second manuscript expanded the model used previously to in order to develop a process to construct a carbon efficient frontier (CEF). The model employed examined uniform and variable rate technologies. In addition to the CEF, a marginal abatement cost curve was constructed. Using these curves in a complementary fashion, more accurate information on the adaptive behavior of farmer technology adoption can be gleaned. the information gleaned for the two manuscripts can give both producers and policy makers the analytical tools needed to make more information decisions with regard to economic and environmental feasibility of PATs.
100

Evaluation of EDA tools for electronic development and a study of PLM for future development businesses

Tang, Dennis January 2013 (has links)
Electronic Design Automation (EDA) tools are today very capable computer programs supporting electronic engineers with the design of printed circuit board (PCB). All tools have their strengths and weaknesses; when choosing the right tool many factors needs to be taken into consideration aside from the tools themselves. Companies need to focus on the product and revenues for a business to be viable. Depending on the knowledge and strengths of the company, the choice of tools varies. The decision should be based on the efficiency of the tools and the functions necessity for the company rather than the price tags. The quality and availability of support for the tools, training costs, how long will it take to put the tool in operation and present or future collaboration partners is equally important factors when deciding the right tool. The absence of experience and knowledge of the current tool within a company is a factor which could affect important operation; therefore it is important to provide training and education on how to use the tool to increase its efficiency. Providing training and education can be a large expense, but avoids changes within and makes the business competitive. The choice of EDA tool should be based on the employed engineer’s current knowledge and experience of the preferred tool. If the employed engineer’s knowledge and experience varies too much, it might be preferable to make a transition to one of the tool by training and education. Product lifecycle management (PLM) is a data management system and business activity management system which focuses on the lifecycle of a product. To manage the lifecycle of a product it is necessary to split the lifecycle into stages and phases for a more manageable and transparent workflow. By overseeing a product’s entire lifecycle there are benefits which affects many areas. PLM greatest benefits for EDA are collaboration across separate groups and companies by working together through a PLM platform, companies can forge strong design chains that combine their best capabilities to deliver the product to the customers. This report is a study on evaluating which EDA suits the company with consideration of the employed engineer’s demands, requests and competence. The interests in PLM made the company suggest a short theory study on PLM and EDA benefits.

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