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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.
1

Development of a Damage Indicator Based on Detection of High-Frequency Transients Monitored in Bridge Piers During Earthquake Ground Shaking

Zhelyazkov, Aleksandar 05 August 2020 (has links)
Real-time structural health monitoring is a well established tool for post-earthquake damage estimation. A key component in the monitoring campaign is the approach used for processing the data from the structural health monitoring system. There is a large body of literature on signal processing approaches aimed at identifying ground-motion induced damage in civil engineering structures. This dissertation expands on a specific subgroup of processing approaches dealing with the identification of damage induced high-frequency transients in the monitoring data. The underlying intuition guiding the current research can be formulated in the following hypothesis - the time difference between the occurrence of a high-frequency transient and the closest deformation extremum forward in time is proportional to the degree of damage. A mathematical deduction is provided in support of the above hypothesis followed by a set of shaking table tests. For the purposes of this research two shaking table tests of reinforced concrete bridge piers were performed. Data from a shaking table test performed by another research group was also analyzed. The cases in which the proposed procedure could find a practical application are examined along with the present limitations.
2

Caractérisation des propriétés mécaniques du tissu cutané par élastographie impulsionnelle haute fréquence : applications en dermatologie et en cosmétique / Characterization of the mechanical properties of skin tissue by high frequency impulse elastography : applications in dermatology and cosmetics

Chartier, Caroline 22 June 2017 (has links)
L’exploration du tissu cutané est aujourd’hui limitée par le peu de méthodes dites quantitatives permettant de décrire objectivement les propriétés mécaniques du tissu cutané. L’élastographie permet une exploration locale d’un milieu et offre la possibilité pour certaines méthodes d’estimer quantitativement le module d’élasticité (module d’Young). Nous avons mis au point une technique d’élastographie ultrasonore impulsionnelle haute fréquence 1D (HF-TE) et haute résolution permettant une description micrométrique des propriétés mécaniques du tissu cutané pour des applications en cosmétique et en dermatologie. / Nowadays, exploration of cutaneous tissue is limited by the few number of available approaches, known as quantitative methods, allowing an objective description of the mechanical properties of skin tissue. Elastography allows a local exploration of a medium and offers the possibility for some strategies to quantitatively estimate the modulus of elasticity (Young’s modulus). A 1-D high-frequency ultrasonic transient elastography method (HF-TE) allowing a micrometric description of the mechanical properties of skin tissue has been designed for cosmetic and dermatological applications. An experimental system of high-frequency transient elastography has been developed : software, hardware and measurement methodology. The HF-TE technique has been validated using simulation and measurements in monolayer and bilayer calibrated phantoms developed in the laboratory. The Young’s modulus values measured in monolayer media were then compared with those measured by two others dynamic techniques.

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