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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

A non-destructive technical and stylistic comparative analysis of selected metal artefacts from the Ditsong National Museum of Cultural History

Harcombe, Aletta Maria 15 November 2018 (has links)
The destructive nature of conventional analytical techniques, coupled with the finite nature of ancient/historical artefacts, has long restricted technical examinations of museum collections, mainly due to ethical constraints. However, over the past few decades, the application of Non-Destructive Evaluation (NDE) techniques has become increasingly popular within the fields of archaeology and cultural heritage diagnostics. The application of such techniques has facilitated the examination of objects that have long remained uninvestigated. However, this positive development also held a slight drawback, in that researchers tend to now focus on technical analyses alone, while excluding more traditional means of analyses, such as comparative stylistic analysis and surface investigation. By employing a combination of stylistic analysis, visual surface investigation (by means of SLR photography and digital microscopy) and nuclear imaging (by means of Microfocus X-Ray Computed Tomography), the thesis sets out to justify the application of mixed methodologies as part of a more holistic integrated authentication approach. Thus stated, the thesis presents a mixed-methodological approach towards the analysis of selected metal objects from the Ditsong National Museum of Cultural History in Pretoria, South Africa. The objects under investigation include a small collection of ancient Egyptian bronze statuettes, a Samurai helmet (kabuto) and mask (menpó), a European gauntlet, and an Arabian dagger (jambiya/khanjar). While all the objects are curated as part of the museum’s archaeology and military history collections, the exact production dates, manufacturing techniques and areas of origin remain a mystery. By using a combination of techniques, the thesis aims to identify diagnostic features that can be used to shed light on their relative age, culturo-chronological framework and, by extension, their authenticity. / Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies
2

Microscopic Characteristics of Partially Saturated Soil and their Link to Macroscopic Responses / 不飽和土の微視的特性とそれらの巨視的応答へのリンク

Kido, Ryunosuke 25 March 2019 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(工学) / 甲第21737号 / 工博第4554号 / 新制||工||1710(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院工学研究科社会基盤工学専攻 / (主査)教授 木村 亮, 准教授 肥後 陽介, 准教授 木元 小百合 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Philosophy (Engineering) / Kyoto University / DFAM
3

Experimental analysis of mass transfer of Taylor bubble flow in small channels

Haghnegahdar, Mohammadreza 14 February 2019 (has links)
Multiphase flows in chemical reactors with micro- and millimeter-size channel structures such as monolith froth reactors, compact heat exchangers and fuel cells have received great attention in the last years. They are considered as a promising alternative to conventional reactors, such as fixed bed reactors and bubble columns which are mainly used for gas absorption, catalytic hydrogenation and biochemical conversions. Slug or Taylor bubble flow is a desired operating state for this type of contactors due to the frequent change of efficient gas-liquid contacting in the film around the bubbles and the enhanced mixing in the liquid slugs behind the bubbles. Consequently, capillary Taylor flow is currently a target of intensive investigations. However, a full understanding of design parameters and optimum operating conditions are still lacking. For milli- and microreactors mass transfer between gas and liquid phases depends upon various parameters such as bubble shape, relative velocity between the two phases, degree of liquid contamination and many more. To further advance the fundamental understanding of micro- and milli-channel reactors with Taylor flow, main design parameters and operating conditions were investigated, which include (a) the effect of bubble size, channel diameter and cross sectional shape of channel on the mass transfer coefficient of dissolving bubbles, (b) the influence of the presence of surface active agents on the bubble shape, velocity and also on the mass transfer rate of bubbles and (c) the intensification effect of oscillation of channels on the mass transfer performance of Taylor bubbles. For the study of gas-liquid mass transfer high-resolution X-ray radiography and tomography were used as measurement techniques. The X-ray imaging methods were chosen as their accuracy is less affected by changes in the refractive index, as it is the case for conventional optical methods. The mass transfer was calculated by measuring the changes in the size of the bubbles at constant pressure. The utilization of X-ray visualization enabled the acquisition of a series of radiographic images of bubbles. The images gave the volume, interfacial area and length of the bubble with high accuracy as a function of time and were used to evaluate the mass transfer coefficient using the mass conservation equations. In case of circular channels, the results show that Sherwood numbers have a large dependency on the bubble length and also equivalent diameter which is in accordance with previous results for larger channel diameters. However, the values of measured Sherwood numbers could not be predicted by available correlations which are valid only for larger pipes. As a result, a new mass transfer correlation in the form of Sherwood number as a function of Peclet number as well as bubble size ratio was derived. The proposed correlation is applicable for a large range of bubble sizes with high accuracy. The comparison of the results for the square and circular channels showed that despite the fact that the rise velocity of bubbles in the square channel is about three times higher than in the circular channel, the mass transfer coefficient is about the same. Furthermore, the results show that in square channels the dissolution curves are relatively even, while the dissolution curves of circular channels exhibit some distinguishable change in the slope. In addition, the results show that the calculated mass transfer coefficient based on the measured data show good agreement with the data predicted by the penetration theory. Regarding the influence of surfactants on the mass transfer in small channels with Taylor flow, it was shown that a small amount of surfactant reduces the mass transfer and its impact is more pronounced on small bubbles. Furthermore, it was demonstrated that the presence of surfactants causes the change of the bubble shape and leads to a slight increase of the liquid film thickness around the bubble and as a result the elongation of contaminated bubbles. Intensification of mass transfer in small channels with Taylor bubbles was investigated by measuring the motion, shape and dissolution rate of individual elongated Taylor bubbles of air and CO2 in water. The comparison of the results for the stationary and oscillating channel showed that mechanical vibration of the channel is able to enhance the mass transfer coefficient from 80% to 186%. Moreover, the mass transfer rate positively correlates with frequency and amplitude of oscillation, which is more pronounced at higher amplitudes. In addition, it was shown that the intensification of mass transfer with increase of amplitude/frequency of vibration is mainly attributed to the increase of bubble surface wave oscillations that causes an enlargement of contact area between the phases and also a reduction of mass transfer resistance in the liquid-side boundary layer.
4

A non-destructive technical and stylistic comparative analysis of selected metal artefacts from the Ditsong national museum of cultural history

Harcombe, Aletta Maria 15 November 2018 (has links)
Text in English / The destructive nature of conventional analytical techniques, coupled with the finite nature of ancient/historical artefacts, has long restricted technical examinations of museum collections, mainly due to ethical constraints. However, over the past few decades, the application of Non-Destructive Evaluation (NDE) techniques has become increasingly popular within the fields of archaeology and cultural heritage diagnostics. The application of such techniques has facilitated the examination of objects that have long remained uninvestigated. However, this positive development also held a slight drawback, in that researchers tend to now focus on technical analyses alone, while excluding more traditional means of analyses, such as comparative stylistic analysis and surface investigation. By employing a combination of stylistic analysis, visual surface investigation (by means of SLR photography and digital microscopy) and nuclear imaging (by means of Microfocus X-Ray Computed Tomography), the thesis sets out to justify the application of mixed methodologies as part of a more holistic integrated authentication approach. Thus stated, the thesis presents a mixed-methodological approach towards the analysis of selected metal objects from the Ditsong National Museum of Cultural History in Pretoria, South Africa. The objects under investigation include a small collection of ancient Egyptian bronze statuettes, a Samurai helmet (kabuto) and mask (menpó), a European gauntlet, and an Arabian dagger (jambiya/khanjar). While all the objects are curated as part of the museum‘s archaeology and military history collections, the exact production dates, manufacturing techniques and areas of origin remain a mystery. By using a combination of techniques, the thesis aims to identify diagnostic features that can be used to shed light on their relative age, culturo-chronological framework and, by extension, their authenticity. / Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies / D. Litt. et Phil.(Ancient Near Eastern Studies)

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