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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

Design and optimization of chalcogenide waveguides for supercontinuum generation

Karim, Mohammad January 2015 (has links)
This research work presents numerical simulations of supercontinuum (SC) generation in optical waveguides based on Ge11.5As24Se64.5 chalcogenide (ChG) material. Rigorous numerical simulations were performed using finite-element and split-step Fourier methods in order to optimize the waveguides for wideband SC generation. Through dispersion engineering and by varying dimensions of the 1.8-cm-long ChG nanowires, we have investigated dispersion curves for a number of nanowire geometries and identified a promising one which can be used for generating a SC with 1300 nm bandwidth pumped at 1550 nm with a low peak power of 25 W. It was observed through successive inclusion of higher-order dispersion coefficients during SC simulations that there is a possibility of obtaining spurious results if the adequate number of dispersion coefficients is not considered. We then investigate MIR SC in dispersion-tailored, air-clad, ChG channel waveguide employing either Ge11.5As24S64.5 or MgF2 glass and ChG rib waveguide employing MgF2 glass for their lower claddings. We study the effect of waveguide parameters on the bandwidth of the SC at the output of 1-cm-long waveguides. Our results show that output can vary over a wide range depending on their design and the pump wavelength employed. At the pump wavelength of 2 μm the SC never extended beyond 4.5 μm for any of our designs. However, SC could be extended to beyond 5 μmfor a pump wavelength of 3.1 μm. A broadband SC spanning from 2 to 6 μm and extending over 1.5 octave could be generated with a moderate peak power of 500 W at a pump wavelength of 3.1 μm using an air-clad, all-ChG, channel waveguide. We show that SC can be extended even further covering the wavelength ranges 1.8-7.7 μm and 1.8-8 μm (> 2 octaves) when MgF2 glass is used for the lower claddings of ChG channel waveguide and rib waveguide, respectively. By employing the same pump source, we show that SC spectra can cover a wavelength range of 1.8-11 μm (> 2.5 octaves) in a channel waveguide and 1.8-10 μm in a rib waveguide employing MgF2 glass for their lower claddings with a moderate peak power of 3 kW. Finally we present microstrucured fibre based design made with same glass to generate SC spectra in the MIR region. Numerical simulations show that such a 1-cm-long fibre can produce a spectrum extending from 1.3 μm to beyond 11 μm (> 3 octaves) with the same pump and peak power applied before. We consider three fibre structures with microstrucured air-holes in their cladding and find their optimum designs through dispersion engineering. Among these, equiangular-spiral microstrucured fibre is found to be the most promising candidate for generating ultrawide SC in the MIR region.
2

Growth and remodelling of the left ventricle post myocardial infarction

Zhuan, Xin January 2018 (has links)
Living organs in human bodies continuously interact with the in vivo bio-environment, while reshaping and rearranging their constituents, responding to external or internal stimuli through life cycles. For instance, living tissues adjust the growth (or turnover) rates of their constituents to develop (volumetric and mass) changes as the tissues adapt to the pathological or physiological changes in bio-environment. From the perspective of biomechanics, changes in the bio-environment will induce the growth and remodelling (G\&R) process and reset the mechanical environment. Consequently, the mechanical cues will feed back to G\&R processes. In the long run, the interaction between G\&R and the mechanical response of living organs plays an important role in regulating the organ formulation or pathological growth. To understand the interaction between the mechanical response and the G\&R process, an important ingredient in evaluating the involved mechanics is knowledge of the solid mechanical properties of the soft tissues. Residual stress, resulting from G\&R of soft tissues, is important in modelling the mechanics of soft tissues, which still presents a modelling challenge for including residual stress in cardiovascular applications. For G\&R of living organs, changes of tissue structure and volume are also important determinants for organ development. This raises academic challenges for the understanding of the evolution of material properties and mechanical response of living tissues within a dynamic environment. To investigate the stress states (residual strain or residual stress) of living organs, the experimental results showed that the arterial slices would spring open after cutting along the radial directions, which indicates the residual strain in organs estimated by the opening angle. The residual strain, which is the elastic strain between zero-stress and no-load states, indicates the existence of residual stress after removal of the external loads. The residual stress is considered to modulate the growth and remodelling process in living organs. The evolution of residual stress could relieve the information about the history of growth, which could help to better the understanding of the formation of organs and the development of diseases. Besides the residual stress, G\&R processes are regulated by other factors, while the principles governing those mechanism are still not fully understood. Obviously, improving knowledge in this particular field will give huge potential for the design and optimization of clinical treatments to efficiently save more lives. From a general mechanics perspective to investigate the G\&R process in living tissues, the questions are: How does the residual stress influence the fibre remodelling and the material properties of entire organs? How to determine the combined effects of growth (in the stressed configuration) and remodelling on the fibre structure? How to develop a framework for investigating G\&R processes occurring in the stressed configuration? For arteries, multiple layer models are developed to analytically study residual stress in living organs. For the heart, due to its complex structure and geometry, most previous studies used the unloaded configuration or one-cut configuration as the stress-free configuration to estimate the stress state. However, both experimental and theoretical studies have suggested that: 1) residual stress will significantly influence the stress distribution in the heart. 2) a simple (or single) cut does not release all the residual stress in the heart. We build a multi-cut model and show that multiple cuts are required to release the residual stresses in the left ventricle. Our results show that with the 2-cut and 4-cut models (one radial cut followed by circumferential cuts), agreement with the measured opening angles and radii can be greatly improved. This suggests that a multi-cut model should be used to predict the residual stresses in the left ventricle, at least in the middle wall region. We further show that tissue heterogeneity plays a significant role in the model results, and that an inhomogeneous model with combined radial and circumferential cuts should be used to estimate the correct order of magnitude of the residual stress in the heart. Understanding the healing and remodelling processes induced by myocardial infarction (MI) of the heart is important and the mechanical properties of the myocardium post-MI can be indicative for effective treatments aimed at avoiding eventual heart failure. MI remodelling is a multiscale feedback process between the mechanical loading and cellular adaptation. In this thesis, we use an agent-based model to describe collagen remodelling by fibroblasts regulated by chemical and mechanical cues after acute MI, and upscale into a finite element (FE) 3D left ventricular model. This enables us to study the scar healing (collagen deposition, degradation and reorientation) of a rat heart post-MI. Our results, in terms of collagen accumulation and alignment, compare well to published experimental data. In addition, we show that different shapes of the MI region can affect the collagen remodelling, and in particular, the mechanical cue plays an important role in the healing process. For volumetric growth, recently, when the idea of growth is applied to study the evolution of organ formations, it's usually assumed that growth always occurs in the natural (reference) configuration. In some researches, it is assumed that the growth could release all the residual stress, and that further growth will start from the updated but stress-free configuration. However, living organs are actually exposed to external loading all the time, while the growth should occur from the residually-stressed current configuration. In this thesis, A theoretical framework is developed to calculate the mechanical behaviour of soft tissue after introducing inhomogeneous growth in a residually-stressed current configuration, which avoids assuming that the growth occurs in a `virtual' reference configuration. Moreover, the theoretical framework is introduced to couple the growth and fibre remodelling process to describe the mechanical behaviour of living tissues.
3

Free surface flow and application to the filling and solidification of liquid metals into vessels of arbitrary shape

Chan, Andrew Koon Sang January 1994 (has links)
The research work presented herein addresses the problem of the mathematical modelling of the mould filling processes as encountered in the foundry industry. The quality of castings, especially aerospace components, is primarily pre-determined at the stage of mould filling within the entire casting process. The entrapment of oxide films, air voids and other impurities into the cast, caused by waves and the breaking of the molten metal surface during filling must be avoided. Otherwise, substandard casting products will result which cost the foundry industry millions of pounds in lost revenue. A three-dimensional control-volume, free surface flow technique known as the Scalar Equation Algorithm (SEA) has been developed as an attachment to the PHOENICS and Harwell-FLOW3D CFD codes for this study. The SEA technique uses a conserved scalar variable to represent the liquid, with an adaptation of the van Leer TVD scheme to define the instantaneous position of the interface. It is similar to the approach used by the well known Volume Of Fluid (VOF) method. However, the SEA technique deals with both air and liquid explicitly, whereas the VOF method does not. A technique has also been developed to allow the liquid temperature to be determined from a conserved `mixture' enthalpy. The liquid temperature is subsequently used in a solidification algorithm to simulate the effect of phase change. The filling model without heat transfer and solidification has been validated against experimental data in both water experiments and actual mould filling experiments. The capability of the SEA method in capturing convoluted waves and air voids has been successfully demonstrated in an example of filling part of a mould running system. It has also been compared against the predictions from the SOLution Algorithm-Volume Of Fluid (SOLA-VOF) and Marker And Cell (MAC) methods. Examples of the developed filling model coupled with heat transfer and solidification are also given. (DX182,921)
4

Vertex-based discretisation methods for thermo-fluid flow in a finite volume-unstructured mesh context

McBride, Diane January 2003 (has links)
The main aim of this research project is to investigate techniques to improve the resolution of flow variables on unstructured skewed meshes whilst working within a Finite Volume (FV) context. A three-dimensional vertex-based FV algorithm for the solution of thermo- fluid flow problems has been developed and integrated within a multi-physics FV framework PHYSICA. Currently PHYSICA employs a cell-centred discretisation technique for fluid mechanics problems and a vertex-based discretisation technique for solid mechanics problems. The vertex-based discretisation approach is validated for a variety of heat transfer problems and comparisons are made with cell-centred solutions. A coupled thermo-mechanical problem, including solidification and radiation, is simulated using vertex-based and cell-centred techniques. Results, run-time and memory requirements are compared. Hybrid vertex-based/cell-centred discretisation of the hydrodynamic variables is also investigated. The components of velocity are solved vertex-based with pressure cell-centred or conversely pressure is solved vertex-based with velocity cell-centred. The methods are applied to flow in a lid-driven cavity and solutions are obtained on a number of distorted meshes. Comparisons are made with the benchmark solutions. The hybrid discretisation enables solutions on distorted meshes where purely cell-centred techniques fail. The hybrid methods produce final solutions containing errors due to mesh distortion. The co-located vertex-based flow solutions obtained on the distorted meshes are comparable to solutions obtained on a uniform Cartesian mesh. Having a good resolution of the flow field on distorted meshes enables the solution of other transported variables using cell-centred techniques. Finally, this hybrid vertex-based/cell-centred technique is applied to thermally driven flow, turbulent flow, and three-dimensional flow over an aircraft wing.
5

Methods of likelihood based inference for constructing stochastic climate models

Peavoy, Daniel January 2012 (has links)
This thesis is about the construction of low dimensional diffusion models of climate variables. It assesses the predictive skill of models derived from a principled averaging procedure and a purely empirical approach. The averaging procedure starts from the equations for the original system then approximates the \weather" variables by a stochastic process. They are then averaged with respect to their invariant measure. This assumes that they equilibriate much faster than the climate variables. The empirical approach argues for a very general model form, then parameters are estimated using likelihood based inference for Stochastic Differential Equations. This is computationally demanding and relies upon Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods. A large part of this thesis is focused upon techniques to improve the efficiency of these algorithms. The empirical approach works well on simple one dimensional models but performs poorly on multivariate problems due to the rapid increase in unknown parameters. The averaging procedure is skillful in multivariate problems but is sensitive to lack of complete time scale separation in the system. In conclusion, the averaging procedure is better and can be improved by estimating parameters in a principled way based on the likelihood function and by including a latent noise process in the model.
6

Zonal flow generation through four wave interaction in reduced models of fusion plasma turbulence

Gallagher, Stephen J. January 2013 (has links)
In tokamaks, turbulence is a key contributor to cross field transport. However, it is also responsible for the spontaneous generation of large scale structures such as zonal ows. These are of relevance to fusion plasmas as they can create transport barriers which aid plasma confinement. The interaction between drift waves and zonal ows can be investigated using reduced models such as the Hasegawa- Mima and Hasegawa-Wakatani equations. A four-wave truncated model is developed for the Extended-Hasegawa-Mima (EHM) equation. This produces a set of four ordinary differential equations (ODEs) that are used to investigate the modulational instability (MI), a mechanism by which drift waves can produce a zonal ow. These equations are linearised to produce a dispersion relation for the MI which is used to produce a set of maps of the linear growth rate of the MI. These show how additional modes become unstable as the gyroradius is increased. The truncated model and dispersion relation are then compared to measurements taken from simulations of the full EHM partial differential equation (PDE) which has been seeded with an appropriate initial condition. Good agreement is found when the pump wave has no component in the direction of the density gradient. A similar truncated model is derived for the Extended-Hasegawa-Wakatani (EHW) equations. As the EHW system has separate equations for density and potential this leads to a set of eight ODEs. The linearisation technique used for the EHM system cannot be applied here. Instead, approximations based on the built in EHW instability are made to calculate a linear growth rate for the zonal ow using the ODEs describing it. These analytical predictions are then compared to a full PDE simulation of the system, which is initialised using random noise. It is found that for particular sets of waves the ODEs provide a good prediction of the linear growth rate. A driving term is added to the EHM equation to reproduce the effect of the built in instability of the EHW equations. This causes a drift wave spectrum to grow when full EHW PDE simulations are seeded with random noise. The four-wave ODE model is updated to include this driving. The ODE model again produces good predictions for the growth rate of the zonal flow.
7

Almost sharp fronts : limit equations for a two-dimensional model with fractional derivatives

Atkins, Zoe January 2012 (has links)
We consider the evolution of sharp fronts and almost-sharp fronts for the ↵-equation, where for an active scalar q the corresponding velocity is defined by u = r?(−#)−(2 − ↵)/2q for 0 < ↵ < 1. This system is introduced as a model interpolating between the two-dimensional Euler equation (↵ = 0) and the surface quasi-geostrophic (SQG) equation (↵ = 1). The study of such fronts for the SQG equation was introduced as a natural extension when searching for potential singularities for the three-dimensional Euler equation due to similarities between these two systems, with sharp-fronts corresponding to vortex-lines in the Euler case (Constantin et al., 1994b). Almost-sharp fronts were introduced in C´ordoba et al. (2004) as a regularisation of a sharp front with thickness $, with interest in the study of such solutions as $ ! 0, in particular those that maintain their structure up to a time independent of $. The construction of almost-sharp front solutions to the SQG equation is the subject of current work (Fe↵erman and Rodrigo, 2012). The existence of exact solutions remains an open problem. For the ↵-equation we prove analogues of several known theorems for the SQG equations and extend these to investigate the construction of almost-sharp front solutions. Using a version of the Abstract Cauchy Kovalevskaya theorem (Safonov, 1995) we show for fixed 0 < ↵ < 1, under analytic assumptions, the existence and uniqueness of approximate solutions and exact solutions for short-time independent of $; such solutions take a form asymptotic to almost-sharp fronts. Finally, we obtain the existence and uniqueness of analytic almost-sharp front solutions.
8

On the structure of the Yang-Mills-Higgs equations on R³

Dostoglou, Stamatis A. January 1989 (has links)
The Yang-Mills-Higgs theory has its origins in Physics. It describes particles with masses via the Higgs mechanism and predicts magnetic monopoles. We study here the mathematical aspects of the theory following an analytical and geometric approach. Our motivation comes from physics and we work all the time with the full Lagrangian of the theory. At the same time, we are interested in it from the variational point of view, as a functional on an infinite dimensional space and as a system of non-linear equations on a non-compact manifold with finite energy as the only constraint. We are concerned mainly with the configuration space of the theory, the existence of solutions and their behaviour at infinity.
9

Solitons of geometric flows and their applications

Helmensdorfer, Sebastian January 2012 (has links)
In this thesis we construct solitons of geometric flows with applications in three different settings. The first setting is related to nonuniqueness for geometric heat flows. We show that certain double cones in Euclidean space have several self-expanding evolutions under mean curvature flow. The construction of the associated self-expanding solitons leads to an application in fluid dynamics. We present a new model for the behaviour of oppositely charged droplets of fluid, based on the mean curvature flow of double cones. If two oppositely charged droplets of fluid are close to each other, they start attracting each other and touch eventually. Surprisingly, experiments have shown, that if the strength of the charges is high enough, then the droplets are repelled from each other, after making short contact. The constructed self-expanders can be used to correctly predict the experimental results, using our theoretical model. Secondly we employ space-time solitons of the mean curvature flow to give a geometric proof of Hamilton's Harnack estimate for the mean curvature flow. This proof is based on the observation that the associated Harnack quantity is the second fundamental form of a space-time self-expander. Moreover the self-expander is asymptotic to a cone over the convex initial hypersurface. Hence the self-expander can be seen as the mean curvature evolution of a convex cone, which we exploit to show that preservation of convexity directly implies the Harnack estimate. In the last chapter we study solutions of the mean curvature flow in a Ricci flow backgound. We show that the space-time track of such a solution can be seen as a soliton. Moreover the second fundamental form of this soliton matches the evolution of a functional, which is the analogue of G. Perelman's F-functional for the Ricci flow on a manifold with boundary and which also has relations to quantum gravity. Furthermore our construction provides a link between the Harnack estimate for the mean curvature flow and the Harnack estimate for the Ricci flow.
10

Ionisation effects for laser-plasma interactions by particle-in-cell code

Lawrence-Douglas, Alistair January 2013 (has links)
The particle-in-cell code EPOCH was extended to include field and collisional ionisation for use in simulating initially neutral or partially-ionised targets in laser-plasma inter- actions. The means by which particles ionise in the the field of an intense laser was described and physical models were included to determine the instantaneous ionisa- tion rate at particles within the simulation domain for multiphoton, tunnelling, barrier- suppression and electron-impact ionisation. The algorithms used to implement these models were presented and demonstrated to produce the correct ionisation statistics. A scheme allowing for modelling small amounts of ionisation for an arbitrarily low number of superparticles was also presented for comparison and it was shown that for sufficient simulation time the two schemes converge. The three major mechanisms of ionisation in laser-plasma interactions were described as being ionisation-induced defocussing, fast shuttering and ionisation injection. Simulations for these three effects were presented and shown to be in good agreement with theory and experiment. For fast-shuttering, plasma mirrors were simulated using the pulse profile for the Astra Gemini laser at the Central Laser Facility. Rapid switch-on and the theoretical maximum for contrast ratio was observed. For ionisation injection, simulations for laser wakefield acceleration in a helium gas were performed and the accelerated electron population was shown to be greatly increased through use of a 1% nitrogen dopant consistent with the experimental results of McGuffey et al. A study of the laser filamentation instability due to SRS backscatter at the relativistically corrected quarter critical surface (RCQCS) was per- formed in collaboration with C.S. Brady and T.D. Arber at the University of Warwick [1]. It was found that for hydrogen and plastic the instability was unaffected by the in- clusion of ionisation. Further study with argon revealed a attening of the RCQCS and it was demonstrated that for a material with multiple ionisation levels ionising strongly near the self-focussed intensities at the RCQCS, rapid ionisation caused an inversion of the RCQCS that suppressed the filamentation instability.

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