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Heat Transfer Modelling and Thermal Imaging Experiments in Laser Transmission Welding of ThermoplasticsMayboudi, LAYLA S. 09 October 2008 (has links)
This thesis presents a comprehensive study on the thermal modelling aspects of laser transmission welding of thermoplastics (LTW), a technology for joining of plastic parts. In the LTW technique, a laser beam passes through the laser-transmitting part and is absorbed within a thin layer in the laser-absorbing part. The heat generated at the interface of the two parts melts a thin layer of the plastic and, with applying appropriate clamping pressure, joining occurs. Transient thermal models for the LTW process were developed and solved by the finite element method (FEM). Input to the models included temperature-dependent thermo-physical properties that were adopted from well-known sources, material suppliers, or obtained by conducting experiments. In addition, experimental and theoretical studies were conducted to estimate the optical properties of the materials such as the absorption coefficient of the laser-absorbing part and light scattering by the laser-transmitting part. Lap-joint geometry was modelled for semi crystalline (polyamide - PA6) and amorphous (polycarbonate - PC) materials.
The thermal models addressed the heating and cooling stages in a laser welding process with a stationary and moving laser beam. An automated ANSYS® script and MATLAB® codes made it possible to input a three-dimensional (3D), time-varying volumetric heat-generation term to model the absorption of a moving diode-laser beam. The result was a 3D time-transient, model of the laser transmission welding process implemented in the ANSYS® FEM environment.
In the thermal imaging experiments, a stationary or moving laser beam was located in the proximity of the side surface of the two parts being joined in a lap-joint configuration. The side surface was then observed by the thermal imaging camera. For the case of the stationary beam, the laser was activated for 10 s while operating at a low power setting. For the case of the moving beam, the beam was translated parallel to the surface observed by the camera. The temperature distribution of a lap joint geometry exposed to a stationary and moving diode-laser beam, obtained from 3D thermal modelling was then compared with the thermal imaging observations. The predicted temperature distribution on the surface of the laser-absorbing part observed by the thermal camera agreed within 3C with that of the experimental results. Predicted temperatures on the laser-transmitting part surface were generally higher by 15C to 20C. This was attributed to absorption coefficient being set too high in the model for this part. Thermal imaging of the soot-coated laser-transmitting part surface indicated that significantly more scattering and less absorption takes place in this part than originally assumed. For the moving laser beam, good model match with the experiments (peak temperatures predicted within 1C) was obtained for some of the process conditions modelled for PA6 parts. In addition, a novel methodology was developed to extract the scattered laser beam power distribution from the thermal imaging observations of the moving laser beam. / Thesis (Ph.D, Mechanical and Materials Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2008-10-08 10:39:30.952
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On the design of fast and efficient wavelet image coders with reduced memory usageOliver Gil, José Salvador 06 May 2008 (has links)
Image compression is of great importance in multimedia systems and
applications because it drastically reduces bandwidth requirements for
transmission and memory requirements for storage. Although earlier
standards for image compression were based on the Discrete Cosine
Transform (DCT), a recently developed mathematical technique, called
Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT), has been found to be more efficient
for image coding.
Despite improvements in compression efficiency, wavelet image coders
significantly increase memory usage and complexity when compared with
DCT-based coders. A major reason for the high memory requirements is
that the usual algorithm to compute the wavelet transform requires the
entire image to be in memory. Although some proposals reduce the memory
usage, they present problems that hinder their implementation. In
addition, some wavelet image coders, like SPIHT (which has become a
benchmark for wavelet coding), always need to hold the entire image in
memory.
Regarding the complexity of the coders, SPIHT can be considered quite
complex because it performs bit-plane coding with multiple image scans.
The wavelet-based JPEG 2000 standard is still more complex because it
improves coding efficiency through time-consuming methods, such as an
iterative optimization algorithm based on the Lagrange multiplier
method, and high-order context modeling.
In this thesis, we aim to reduce memory usage and complexity in
wavelet-based image coding, while preserving compression efficiency. To
this end, a run-length encoder and a tree-based wavelet encoder are
proposed. In addition, a new algorithm to efficiently compute the
wavelet transform is presented. This algorithm achieves low memory
consumption using line-by-line processing, and it employs recursion to
automatically place the order in which the wavelet transform is
computed, solving some synchronization problems that have not been
tackled by previous proposals. The proposed encode / Oliver Gil, JS. (2006). On the design of fast and efficient wavelet image coders with reduced memory usage [Tesis doctoral]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/1826
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