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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

Die Nutzung von Geschäftsmieten für die Überprüfung und Verdichtung von Bodenrichtwerten in der Landeshauptstadt Dresden Anwendung des Mietlageverfahrens in Innenstadtgeschäftslage

Fieder, Paul January 2006 (has links)
Zugl.: Dresden, Techn. Univ., Diplomarbeit, 2006
2

Development of a fast simulation method for particle-laden fluid interfaces and selected applications to problems involving drops

Gu, Chuan January 2018 (has links)
Solid particles tend to adhere to fluid interfaces under the action of capillary force. This adsorption process is robust and has been exploited in lots of applications from stabilisation of emulsions to micro fluidic fabrications. The resulting particle laden fluid interfaces can manifest solid-like behaviours. The modifi cation of the surface tension and the emergence of surface shear elasticity of a particle-covered drops are attributed to the particle-induced surface stress. This stress represents at the continuum level the microscopic effect of particle-particle interactions. Understanding the link between the surface stress and the particle arrangement are crucial for creating novel soft materials in the future. A challenge remains when carrying out numerical simulations of particle-laden fluid interfaces: the large separation of scales makes the direct numerical simulations extraordinary expensive. Physical features present in the system come from both the liquid meniscus on the surface of each particle and the fluid interfaces containing thousands of particles. Motivated by the need for a fast simulation method to study problems involving particle-laden fluid interface, this thesis presents a new numerical formulation named Fast Interface Particle Interaction (FIPI) that can be used to simulate a large number of solid particles absorbed on fluid interfaces at a moderate computational cost. The outstanding performance of this new method is attributed to the fact that particle-level phenomena are modelled with analytical or semi-empirical expressions while hydrodynamics and fluid interface morphology at larger scales are fully resolved. Two important studies of particle-covered drops have been carried out with FIPI. In the first one a particle-covered pendant drop is simulated. The result reveals that the FIPI can successfully capture the modulation of surface tension made by absorbed particles. Moreover, the information of anisotropic surface stress is now directly available on the fluid interfaces. This capability has not been achieved previously in both experiments and simulations. The anisotropic stress emerged on the surface of a pendant drop is caused by anisotropic arrangement of the particles on the interface which in turn is induced by stretching of the interface due to gravity. Once the surface tension of the fluid interface is reduced below zero, the Laplace pressure inside the drop becomes negative and the drop can buckle like a thin solid elastic shell under compression. In the second study, the behaviours of a particle covered spherical drop under compression have been explored. The simulation results indicate the possibilities of particle desorption as well as fluid interface buckling. The onset of desorption is highly correlated to small-scale monolayer undulations which can greatly amplify the normal forces pushing particles out of the interface. The behaviours of a particle-covered drop under compression depend on the combination of several parameters related to the properties of the particle and the surface pressure created by the monolayer.
3

A Study on Civicness-laden Public Management in Association with Non-profit Organization

Huang, Wei-Min 05 July 2000 (has links)
ABSTRACT This study is focused on the analysis to establish civicness-laden public management in association with non-profit organizations. Through the efforts to build the model structure, we can study the main dimension which is required to pay more attention in order to strengthen the process of civicness-laden public management, and investigate into the problem to improve the public administration capability of the government under cooperation between the public sectors (government) and the private sectors (non-profit organizations). Speaking in details, the targets of this study include: (1) To investigate the theoretic meaning of the establishment of civicness-laden public management from documentary references. (2) To study the problems in connection with the establishment of civicness-laden public management. (3) To state the parameters of cause and result under the role and function played by non-profit organizations in civicness-laden public management. (4) To establish a theoretic structure for the study of civicness-laden public management in association with non-profit organizations. (5) To describe in details the main dimension and guideline for each parameter and also to provide the methods and strategy for fulfillment. We expect that this study of public management will enable people to recognize, internalize and vitalize again the issues such as the quality of citizens and cooperation between the public sectors and private sectors, and will also open an new realm and area for public management. In this study, we also hope that the government can adjust the traditional role as a provider to a role to implement criteria or reinforcement gradually, especially to exert the function of ¡§good governance¡¨ so that the private sectors may have more opportunity to offer and participate in social services in a wider range. As to the non-profit organizations, they can make full play of their role function, for example, they will be more active and positive to play the role function of expansion and innovation, the role function of improvement and promotion, and the role function of extensive social participation. In the meantime, it is also required to promote character and re-socialized education for people as well as to maintain the ideas of democratic society and various positive value judgments through the cooperation and interaction between the government and non-profit organizations. In this way, both can supplement each other to build a cooperative network and create a value-added and everlasting administration model so that the government and private sectors may produce ¡§integrated advantages¡¨ to achieve the success of civicness-laden public management. Key words: civicness-laden public management, non-profit organizations.
4

Shock Dynamics in Particle-Laden Thin Films

Dupuy, B., Bertozzi, A.L., Hosoi, A.E. 22 April 2005 (has links)
We present theory and experiments for thin film particle-laden flow on an incline. At higher particle concentration and inclination angle, a new phenomenon is observed in which a large particle-rich ridge forms at the contact line. We derive a lubrication theory for this system which is qualitatively compared to preliminary experimental data. The ridge formation arises from the creation of two shocks due to the differential transport rates of fluid and particles. This parallels recent findings of double shocks in thermal-gravity driven flow [A. L. Bertozzi et. al., PRL, 81, 5169 (1998), J. Sur et. al., PRL 90, 126105 (2003), A. M¨unch, PRL 91, 016105 (2003)]. However, here the emergence of the shocks arises from a new mechanism involving the settling rates of the species. / PRL 94(11) March 25, 2005 117803 / NSF
5

Smart Store Applications in Fashion Retail / IoT-Lösungen für Smart Stores

Hauser, Matthias January 2020 (has links) (PDF)
Traditional fashion retailers are increasingly hard-pressed to keep up with their digital competitors. In this context, the re-invention of brick-and-mortar stores as smart retail environments is being touted as a crucial step towards regaining a competitive edge. This thesis describes a design-oriented research project that deals with automated product tracking on the sales floor and presents three smart fashion store applications that are tied to such localization information: (i) an electronic article surveillance (EAS) system that distinguishes between theft and non-theft events, (ii) an automated checkout system that detects customers’ purchases when they are leaving the store and associates them with individual shopping baskets to automatically initiate payment processes, and (iii) a smart fitting room that detects the items customers bring into individual cabins and identifies the items they are currently most interested in to offer additional customer services (e.g., product recommendations or omnichannel services). The implementation of such cyberphysical systems in established retail environments is challenging, as architectural constraints, well-established customer processes, and customer expectations regarding privacy and convenience pose challenges to system design. To overcome these challenges, this thesis leverages Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology and machine learning techniques to address the different detection tasks. To optimally configure the systems and draw robust conclusions regarding their economic value contribution, beyond technological performance criteria, this thesis furthermore introduces a service operations model that allows mapping the systems’ technical detection characteristics to business relevant metrics such as service quality and profitability. This analytical model reveals that the same system component for the detection of object transitions is well suited for the EAS application but does not have the necessary high detection accuracy to be used as a component of an automated checkout system. / Das fortschreitende Wachstum des Online-Handels setzt traditionelle Modehändler zunehmend unter Druck. Als entscheidender Schritt zur Rückgewinnung von Kunden wird die Transformation traditioneller Ladengeschäfte hin zu intelligenten Ladenumgebungen gesehen. Die vorliegende gestaltungsorientierte Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der automatischen Verfolgung von Produkten auf der Verkaufsfläche und stellt drei intelligente Anwendungen vor, die auf derartige Informationen angewiesen sind: (i) ein Diebstahlsicherungssystem, (ii) ein System zur Automatisierung des Kassiervorgangs und (iii) eine intelligente Umkleidekabine. Das erste System erkennt Produkte mit denen Kunden die Verkaufsfläche verlassen; das zweite System ordnet diese zusätzlich den richtigen Warenkörben zu. Das dritte System erkennt die Produkte, die ein Kunde in eine Umkleidekabine bringt und identifiziert, basierend auf der Interaktion des Kunden mit den Produkten, an welchem Produkt er aktuell am meisten Interesse hat. Zu diesem sollen anschließend maßgeschneiderte Dienste angeboten werden (z.B. Produktempfehlungen). Die Einbettung derartiger cyber-physischer Systeme in bestehende Einzelhandelsumgebungen ist aufgrund architektonischer Einschränkungen, etablierten Kundenprozessen und Kundenerwartungen hinsichtlich Datenschutz und Einkaufskomfort mit zahlreichen Herausforderungen verbunden. Zur Lösung der einzelnen Erkennungsaufgaben untersucht die Arbeit den Einsatz von RFID-Technologie und maschinellen Lernverfahren. Um die Systeme zudem optimal zu konfigurieren und belastbare Aussagen über den Wertbeitrag dieser zu treffen, wird zudem ein analytisches Modell vorgestellt, welches es ermöglicht die technischen Erkennungsmerkmale der Systeme auf geschäftsrelevante Kennzahlen wie Servicequalität und Rentabilität abzubilden. Die Bewertung der Systeme mit diesem Modell zeigt, dass die gleiche Systemkomponente zur Erkennung von Objektübergängen als Komponente eines Diebstahlsicherungssystems geeignet ist, jedoch nicht die erforderliche Erkennungsgenauigkeit aufweist, um als Komponente eines Systems zu Automatisierung des Kassiervorgangs verwendet werden zu können.
6

An experimental study of particle-laden jet interactions with cocurrent flows

Chinnapalaniandi, Periasamy January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
7

Turbulence Modulation of Polydisperse Particles in a Square Particle-Laden Jet: Numerical Investigation

Gray, Sandria Lutrica 06 June 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to numerically investigate the turbulence modulation of polydisperse particles in a square particle-laden jet. Turbulence modulation describes the effects of fluctuating velocity and intensity when the particles and continuous fluid interact in a turbulent flow field. The rate at which turbulence modulation is altered is dependent upon parameters such as particle size, mass loading, Stokes number, coupling, volume fraction and mechanisms of turbulence modulation. This study modifies the analytical model developed by Yarin and Hetsroni (1993) to account for the transitional drag regime for coarse polydisperse particles. The particles under study are dilute, inert and spherical, with relatively high Stokes numbers, and classified as having two-way coupling with the fluid. The new analytical model is compared to numerical results using the Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) software FLUENT (ANSYS, Inc.). The turbulence model employed is the standard k-ε model. This study will analyze the effects of varying mass content and particle ratios to investigate how turbulence modulation is influenced. The new model and the CFD results show good agreement in the cases where the mass contents of each particle size are equal. This study will also look into the effects of polydispersion, and the concentration distribution, for indoor air applications. It was found that, in certain cases, the monodisperse assumption slightly over-predicts the concentration distribution in the enclosed region. / Master of Science
8

Geometry and composition of ice banks in a macrotidal channel

Black, CarolAnne 17 May 2013 (has links)
Large ice blocks containing enough sediment to be denser than sea water form in the Minas Basin of the Bay of Fundy. The timing of ice block formation and ice block composition were monitored to improve understanding of the potential threat to tidal power generators posed by collision with ice blocks. Large blocks are produced from ice cliffs that form when anchored ice obstructs tidal channels and decreases flow speed. Decreased flow causes the channel cross-sectional area to decrease. In 2012, the Kennetcook River cross- sectional area decreased by 21% due to the formation of ice cliffs. Large ice blocks separated from the walls during the two spring tides following a 20-day time lag of the minimum air temperature. Ten percent of sampled ice blocks were denser than freshwater. Four of twelve ice cores collected from the ice cliffs along the Kennetcook River contained enough sediment to become denser than seawater.
9

Italian and Canadian Cultural Differences as Mirrors of History and Society

Borchiellini, Valerio Unknown Date
No description available.
10

Al Qaeda as a charismatic phenomenon

Singh, Dushyant. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Defense Analysis)--Naval Postgraduate School, June 2009. / Thesis Advisor(s): Roberts, Nancy. "June 2009." Description based on title screen as viewed on 13 July 2009. Author(s) subject terms: Al Qaeda, Osama bin Laden, charisma, charismatic, radicalism, terrorism, insurgencies, radical social movements, cohesion, power structure, flux, control, communion, stability, Islam, Islamic. Includes bibliographical references (p. 139-145). Also available in print.

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