• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 213
  • 69
  • 42
  • 33
  • 23
  • 13
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 449
  • 449
  • 89
  • 88
  • 67
  • 63
  • 63
  • 46
  • 43
  • 40
  • 35
  • 31
  • 30
  • 29
  • 28
  • 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.
331

Environmentálně vyspělý domov důchodců / Environmentally advanced retirement home

Voves, Martin January 2022 (has links)
The subject of my master's thesis is the design of an energy-efficient house for the elderly. The building has three floors. The construction system is made of ceramic blocks filled with glass wool. The building is covered with a flat vegetation roof. The retirement home has 15 apartments, a doctor's office, a common dining area, a common room and offices for administration. A technical concept for the building environment was designed for the building. The dining room, office, lounge and doctor's rooms are forcibly ventilated. The premises are divided into three zones and each zone has its own air handling unit. Heating is provided by two condensing gas boilers and the whole building is heated by radiators. An assessment was made for the design of photovoltaic panels. In the third part, an assessment and research of sources for heating and hot water was prepared.
332

Bluetooth audio codecs in a real-time interactive context

Johansson, Gustav, Adevåg, Mattias, Milton, Jacob January 2023 (has links)
The emergence of Bluetooth Low Energy in combination with optimized coders has made it possible to transfer digital audio at very low bitrates, paving the way for small devices with longlasting batteries. The aim of this study is to compare the audio codecs LC3 and aptX, as well as peoples’ attitude towards audio quality in different contexts. Two open source implementations of the codecs are evaluated in terms of time for execution. Furthermore, the perceived audio quality of low bitrates are subjectively compared in a listening test in combination with a questionnaire regarding peoples’ attitude towards audio quality. The results show that LC3 is capable of delivering satisfying audio quality at very low bitrates, whilst also outperforming aptX. It will be interesting to see how LC3 will affect transmission latency, battery life and overall QoS once it is established in everyday products
333

Implementation and performance analysis of multiple concurrent WPAN protocols on a system-on-chip

Hag, Juni January 2022 (has links)
The development of new energy efficient Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN) protocols is a big factor for the increased interest in Internet of Things (IoT). However, the many protocols with overlapping applications have led to competing standards and sensor networks using different protocols, even to perform the same tasks. If different sensors in IoT uses different protocols in the same area, a single gateway connecting to all of them must support all their protocols simultaneously. This thesis studies latency, average sending time and range for Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), 802.15.4 and Zigbee in multiprotocol mode on the nRF52840 System on Chip (SoC). In addition, an 802.15.4-based protocol synchronizing with the BLE frames using Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) techniques was designed and implemented. This protocol could be used in sensor networks using both the BLE and 802.15.4 protocols to assure the 802.15.4-based devices will not try to transmit during the periods the gateway is busy with other communications. / <p>Examensarbetet är utfört vid Institutionen för teknik och naturvetenskap (ITN) vid Tekniska fakulteten, Linköpings universitet</p>
334

Domaren 8: Passivhus i en mindre stad : Projektering av ett passivhus i Bollnäs / Domaren 8: A passive house in a smaller city : Projection of a passive house in Bollnäs

Engström, Johanna, Lyppert Thomsson, Liza January 2018 (has links)
The prevailing housing shortage and the developed considerations of environmental issues are todaytwo current topics. Bollnäs county is an example of a county that works to maintain and actualize itsenvironmental goals, especially in new constructions. Passive houses are a way to buildenvironmental friendly and it is a concept that is becoming more and more common. The concept isabout maximizing heat gains and minimizing heat losses. This is achieved through an air-tightenvelope, certified building components, exhaust and supply air ventilation where heat is regainedfrom the extract air and buildings with low U-values. This project presents a change of an existingdetailed development plan from general purpose to housing. The aim of the project is that thehouse, with a restaurant on the bottom floor, must meet the requirements for passive houses andharmonize with the surrounding environment.The project initiates with a literature study followed by an analytical study with the aim to gatherknowledge about both passive houses as well as the surrounding area of the property. Conformationand calculation are two essential parts of the project. The shape of the house, the design and wherethe house is located in the property are adjusted to both the requirements of passive houses and thecultural history of Bollnäs.The calculations performed in PHPP indicate that the requirements for passive houses are met on thebasis of the conditions in this project. Drawings such as site plan, general plans, facades, sections anddetails are presented together with illustrations of the finished house.The main problem regarding the projection of passive houses lies in the absence of its actualmeaning. The concept is about compensations and that every house, regardless of building systemand conformation, has the possibility to be certified as a passive house.
335

Functional Design Employing Miniaturized Electronics with Wireless Signal Provision to a Smartphone for a Strain-Based Measuring System for Ski Poles

Hentschel, Uwe, Steinbild, Philip Johannes, Dannemann, Martin, Schwaar, Andree, Modler, Niels, Schürer, Axel 03 May 2023 (has links)
The individual monitoring of cross-country skiers’ technique-related parameters is crucial to identifying possible athlete-individual deficits that need to be corrected in order to optimize the athlete’s performance in competition. To be able to record relevant biomechanical parameters during training in the field, the development of measuring systems exploiting the athlete’s full potential is the key. Known mobile monitoring systems for measuring forces on ski poles use comparably heavy uniaxial load cells mounted on the pole with a data logger also attached to the pole or carried by the athlete. Measurements that are more accurate can be acquired using wire-based systems. However, wire-based systems are highly immobile and only usable when the athletes undergo a stationary test, e.g., on a treadmill. This paper focuses on the functional design of a measuring system using specialized, miniaturized electronics for acquiring data from strain sensors. These data are then used to determine the technique-related parameters pole force and angle of bend. The functional design is also capable of transmitting the acquired data wirelessly via Bluetooth to a smartphone that runs a proprietary app. This approach is advantageous regarding mass, dynamic behavior, analyzing functionality, and signal processing compared to the state of the art.
336

Measurement of the Breakup Cross Section of the D(d,n) Reaction at 6.94 MeV for the Active Interrogation of Hidden Fissile Materials

Richard, Andrea L. 11 June 2014 (has links)
No description available.
337

Follow up to Recreational Female Runner Study: Further Analysis of Diet and Energy Availability

Oakley, Hannah B. 28 May 2015 (has links)
No description available.
338

Topics In Effective Field Theories for the Strong Interaction

Thapaliya, Arbin 23 September 2016 (has links)
No description available.
339

Finding and exploiting structure in complex systems via geometric and statistical methods

Grover, Piyush 06 July 2010 (has links)
The dynamics of a complex system can be understood by analyzing the phase space structure of that system. We apply geometric and statistical techniques to two Hamiltonian systems to find and exploit structure in the phase space that helps us get qualitative and quantitative results about the phase space transport. While the structure can be revealed by the study of invariant manifolds of fixed points and periodic orbits in the first system, there do not exist any fixed points (and hence invariant manifolds) in the second system. The use of statistical (or measure theoretic) and topological methods reveals the phase space structure even in the absence of fixed points or stable and unstable invariant manifolds. The first problem we study is the four-body problem in the context of a spacecraft in the presence of a planet and two of its moons, where we exploit the phase space structure of the problem to devise an intelligent control strategy to achieve mission objectives. We use a family of analytically derived controlled Keplerian Maps in the Patched-Three-Body framework to design fuel efficient trajectories with realistic flight times. These maps approximate the dynamics of the Planar Circular Restricted Three Body Problem (PCR3BP) and we patch solutions in two different PCR3BPs to form the desired trajectories in the four body system. The second problem we study concerns phase space mixing in a two-dimensional time dependent Stokes flow system. Topological analysis of the braiding of periodic points has been recently used to find lower bounds on the complexity of the flow via the Thurston-Nielsen classification theorem (TNCT). We extend this framework by demonstrating that in a perturbed system with no apparent periodic points, the almost-invariant sets computed using a transfer operator approach are the natural objects on which to pin the TNCT. / Ph. D.
340

Interaction of Na, O₂, CO₂ and water on MnO(100): Modeling a complex mixed oxide system for thermochemical water splitting

Feng, Xu 14 October 2015 (has links)
A catalytic route to hydrogen production via thermochemical water splitting is highly desirable because it directly converts thermal energy into stored chemical energy in the form of hydrogen and oxygen. Recently, the Davis group at Caltech reported an innovative low-temperature (max 850°C) catalytic cycle for thermochemical water splitting based on sodium and manganese oxides (Xu, Bhawe and Davis, PNAS, 2012). The key steps are thought to be hydrogen evolution from a Na₂CO₃/MnO mixture, and oxygen evolution by thermal reduction of solids formed by Na⁺ extraction from NaMnO₂. Our work is aimed at understanding the fundamental chemical processes involved in the catalytic cycle, especially the hydrogen evolution from water. In this project, efforts are made to understand the interactions between the key components (Na, O₂, CO₂, and water) in the hydrogen evolution steps on a well-defined MnO(100) single crystal surface, utilizing x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and temperature programmed desorption (TPD). While some of the behavior of the catalytic system is observed with the model system developed in this work, hydrogen is only produced from water in the presence of metallic sodium, in contrast to the proposal of Xu et al. that water splitting occurs from the reaction of water with a mixture of Na₂CO₃ and MnO. These differences are discussed in light of the different operating conditions for the catalytic system and the surface science model developed in this work. / Ph. D.

Page generated in 0.0427 seconds