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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

The Use Of The Ucf Driving Simiulator To Test The Contribution Of Larger Size Vehicles (lsvs) In Rear-end Collisions And Red Light Running On Intersections.

Harb, Rami Charles 01 January 2005 (has links)
Driving safety has been an issue of great concern in the United States throughout the years. According to the National Center for Statistics and Analysis (NCSA), in 2003 alone, there were 6,267,000 crashes in the U.S. from which 1,915,000 were injury crashes, including 38,764 fatal crashes and 43,220 human casualties. The U.S. Department of Transportation spends millions of dollars every year on research that aims to improve roadway safety and decrease the number of traffic collisions. In spring 2002, the Center for Advanced Traffic System Simulation (CATSS), at the University of Central Florida, acquired a sophisticated reconfigurable driving simulator. This simulator, which consists of a late model truck cab, or passenger vehicle cab, mounted on a motion base capable of operation with six degrees of freedom, is a great tool for traffic studies. Two applications of the simulator are to study the contribution of Light Truck Vehicles (LTVs) to potential rear-end collisions, the most common type of crashes, which account for about a third of the U.S. traffic crashes, and the involvement of Larger Size Vehicles (LSVs) in red light running. LTVs can obstruct horizontal visibility for the following car driver and has been a major issue, especially at unsignalized intersections. The sudden stop of an LTV, in the shadow of the blindness of the succeeding car driver, may deprive the following vehicle of a sufficient response time, leading to high probability of a rear-end collision. As for LSVs, they can obstruct the vertical visibility of the traffic light for the succeeding car driver on signalized intersection producing a potential red light running for the latter. Two sub-scenarios were developed in the UCF driving simulator for each the vertical and horizontal visibility blockage scenarios. The first sub-scenario is the base sub-scenario for both scenarios, where the simulator car follows a passenger car, and the second sub-scenario is the test sub-scenario, where the simulator car follows an LTV for the horizontal visibility blockage scenario and an LSV for the vertical visibility blockage scenario. A suggested solution for the vertical visibility blockage of the traffic light problem that consisted of adding a traffic signal pole on the right side of the road was also designed in the driving simulator. The results showed that LTVs produce more rear-end collisions at unsignalized intersections due to the horizontal visibility blockage and following car drivers' behavior. The results also showed that LSVs contribute significantly to red light running on signalized intersections and that the addition of a traffic signal pole on the right side of the road reduces the red light running probability.
2

Energy Production from Coal Syngas Containing H2S via Solid Oxide Fuel Cells Utilizing Lanthanum Strontium Vanadate Anodes

Cooper, Matthew E. 25 September 2008 (has links)
No description available.
3

Mécanismes de vieillissement de l'Assemblage-Membrane-Électrodes dans une pile à combustible de type PEM par approche expérimentale / Mechanisms of Membrane-Electrode-Assembly aging in PEMFC by experimental approach

Huang, Botao 17 July 2012 (has links)
Cette thèse a permis de mettre en évidence les mécanismes de vieillissement de la pile à combustible de type PEM lors de cyclages d'humidité de l'air et suite à la perforation de l'AME (Assemblage Membrane Electrodes). Premièrement, les mécanismes connus de dégradation des divers composants (membrane, catalyseur, support du catalyseur, GDL, plaques bipolaires et joints d'étanchéité) ont été présentés. Ensuite, les outils de diagnostic en-ligne (chronopotentiométrie, spectroscopie d'impédance, gestion de l'eau et analyse chimique de l'eau) et ceux hors-ligne (CV et LSV) ainsi que des analyses post-mortem (RMN, MET, MEB et DRX) ont été décrits. Expérimentalement, le cyclage en humidité de l'air a été effectué en mono-cellule de 25 cm2: le cyclage à forte humidité entraîne une perte significative de la surface électroactive du catalyseur; le cyclage à faible humidité favorise la perméation de l'hydrogène à travers la membrane. Le cyclage à faible humidité réalisé sur une pile de 100 cm2 a montré un mécanisme de dégradation différent de celui de la pile de 25 cm2: la perméation de l'hydrogène reste faible alors que la tension de la pile était de plus en plus fluctuante certainement du fait de la présence de volumes morts et de la rétention d'eau liquide dans la pile. L'effet de la perforation de l'AME a été étudié sur une pile de 100 cm2: la perforation par une punaise de 0,7 mm de diamètre ne génère qu'une légère augmentation de la perméation de l'hydrogène; la perforation par une punaise de 1,2 mm de diamètre entraîne une chute de tension et l'augmentation significative de la résistance de diffusion de l'oxygène due à la perméation importante de l'hydrogène / This thesis highlights the aging mechanisms of PEM Fuel Cell submitted to two main aging conditions: air relative humidity (RH) cycling, and MEA (Membrane Electrode Assembly) pinhole test of operation. First, the aging mechanisms of PEMFC main components (membrane, catalyst, carbon support, GDL, bipolar plates and gaskets), have been reviewed from the literature. Then the on-line diagnostic tools (chronopotentiometry, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, water management and water analysis), off-line ones (cyclic voltammetry and linear sweep voltammetry) and post-mortem analyses (nuclear magnetic resonance, transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction) have been described. Experimentally, the high and low air RH cycling runs have been carried out with a 25 cm2 single cell: the high air RH cycling run promoted serious loss of the ElectroChemical Surface Area (ECSA); the low air RH cycling run caused significant increase in hydrogen crossover. The low air RH cycling has been also performed with a 100 cm2 single cell and the aging mechanism was different from that of 25 cm2 cell: the hydrogen crossover remained very low but the fuel cell voltage exhibited strong fluctuations at the end of the run: this was attributed to the presence of dead volumes and liquid water retention within the cell. Finally, MEA pinhole effect has been investigated with a 100 cm2 single cell: the perforation by a 0.7 mm diameter pin promoted slight increase in the hydrogen crossover; the perforation by a 1.2 mm diameter pin caused significant cell voltage losses and serious increase in the cathode diffusion resistance due to significant hydrogen crossover
4

Courants de spin et l'effet Hall de spin dans des nanostructures latérales / Spin currents and spin Hall effect in lateral nano-structures

Laczkowski, Piotr 05 October 2012 (has links)
Cette thèse porte sur l’étude des courants de spin et de l’effet Hall de spin dans des nanostructureslatérales. Des vannes de spin latérales Py/Al, Py/Cu et Py/Au, ont été fabriquées parlithographie électronique, puis optimisées et caractérisées par des mesures de magnéto-transport.Des mesures non locales, de GMR, et d’effet Hanle ont ainsi été enregistrées à 300K et 77K. De l’optimisation des vannes de spin latérales a découlé l’observation de fortes amplitudes designal de spin. De plus, les effets du confinement latéral et vertical de l‘accumulation de spin,par utilisation d’un canal non-magnétique confiné ou de barrières tunnel AlOx, ont été mis enévidence expérimentalement et décrits théoriquement. Des simulations par éléments finis et desanalyses basées sur les modèles de diffusion 1D ont été développées, permettant l’extraction de lapolarisation effective Peff et de la longueur de diffusion de spin lNsf des données expérimentales.Enfin, l’effet Hall de spin dans des matériaux à fort angles de Hall (Pt, aliage d’Au) a étéétudié dans des hétérostructures latérales et par pompage de spin à la résonance ferromagnétique. / This PhD thesis focus on the study of spin currents and of the spin Hall effect in lateralnano-structures. Lateral spin-valves based on Py/Al, Py/Cu and Py/Au, fabricated by meansof electron-beam lithography, have been optimized and characterized using magneto-resistancemeasurements. Non-local, GMR and Hanle effect measurements have been recorded at 300K and77K. The optimization of these lateral spin-valves allowed the observation of high spin signalamplitudes. Lateral and vertical confinement effects on the spin accumulation, by using confinednon-magnetic channel and AlOx tunnel barriers, were evidenced experimentally and describedtheoretically. Finite Elements Method simulations and analyses based on a 1D diffusion modelhave been developed, allowing the extraction from our experimental data of the effective spinpolarization Peff and of the spin diffusion length lNsf .Finally, the spin Hall effect of materials with high spin Hall angles (Pt, Au alloys) has beenstudied using both hybrid lateral nano-structures and spin pumping ferro-magnetic resonance.

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