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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.
101

Robust Channel Estimation for Cooperative Communication Systems in the Presence of Relay Misbehaviors

Chou, Po-Yen 17 July 2012 (has links)
In this thesis, we investigate the problem of channel estimation in the amplify-and-forward cooperative communication systems when the networks could be in the presence of selfish relays. The information received at the destination will be detected and then used to estimate the channel. In previous studies, the relays will deliver the information under the prerequisite for cooperation and the destination can receive the information sent from the source without any possible selfish relay. Therefore, the channel will be estimated under this over idealistic assumption. Unfortunately, the assumption does not make sense in real applications. Currently, we don¡¦t have a mechanism to guarantee the relays will always be cooperative. The performance of channel estimation will be significantly degraded when the selfish relays present in the network. Therefore, this thesis considers an amplify-and-forward cooperative communication system with direct transmission and proposes a detection mechanism to overcome the misbehaving relay problem. The detection mechanism employed estimation is based on likelihood ratio test using both direct transmission and relayed information. The detection result will then be used to reconstruct the codeword used for estimating product channel gain of the source-to-relay and relay- to-destination links. The mathematical derivation for the considered problem is developed and numerical simulations for illustration is also carried out in the thesis. The numerical simulation results verify that the proposed method is indeed able to achieve robust channel estimation.
102

Studies in Bioinorganic Chemistry: Synthesis and Reactivity of Nickel and Vanadyl NxSy Complexes

Jenkins, Roxanne Michelle 2010 May 1900 (has links)
As inspired by the coordination environment of nickel in NikR and NiSOD, imidazole ligands were incorporated into N2SNiII square planar complexes in order to investigate the electronic and structural features of NiII species containing both imidazole and thiolate ligation. Rare examples of nickel complexes containing such ligand sets in continuous tetradentate (N2N'S) and discontinuous (N2S---N') coordination were synthesized and characterized. A significant finding in these studies is that the plane of the imidazole ligand is oriented perpendicular to the N2SNi plane. Further investigations addressed the orientational preference and stereodynamic nature of flat monodentate ligands (L = imidazoles, pyridine and an N-heterocyclic carbene) bound to planar N2SNi moieties. The solid state molecular structures of planar [N2SNiL]n+ complexes accessed through bridge-splitting reactions of dimeric, thiolate-S bridged [N2SNi]2 complexes, reveal that the plane of the added monodentate ligand orients largely orthogonal to the N2SNiL square plane. Variable temperature 1H NMR characterization of dynamic processes and ground state isomeric ratios of imidazole complexes in their stopped exchange limiting spectra, readily correlate with DFT-guided interpretation of Ni-L rotational activation barriers. Full DFT characterization relates the orientation mainly to steric hindrance derived both from ligand and binding pocket. In the case of the imidazole ligands a minor electronic contribution derives from intramolecular electrostatic interactions (imidazole C-2 C-H[superscript delta]+- - S[superscript delta]- interaction). Our group has firmly established the versatility of the (bme-daco)2-, (bme-dach)2-, and (ema)[left arrow]- ligands to accommodate a number of metals (M = Ni, Zn, Cu, and Fe ), and have demonstrated reactivity of such N2S2M complexes occurs predominately at the S-thiolate sites. As vanadium is of interest for its biological, pharmacological and spectroscopic/analytical probe abilities, vanadyl analogues were explored as mimics of possible chelates formed from Cys-X-Cys binding sites in vivo. The structural and electronic changes from the incorporation of V=O2+ in such dianionic and tetraanionic N2S2 binding pockets is investigated and compared to Ni2+ and Zn2+ in similar N2S2 environments. The nucleophilicity of the S-thiolate in these systems is explored with alkylating agents and W(CO)x. Furthermore, the vanadyl interaction with the CGC peptide, the biological analogue of the tetraanionic N2S2 ligand, was produced and characterized by EPR; its W(CO)x adducts were indentified by ?(CO) infrared spectroscopy.
103

Simulating the Effect of Water on the Fracture System of Shale Gas Wells

Hamam, Hassan Hasan H. 2010 August 1900 (has links)
It was observed that many hydraulically fractured horizontal shale gas wells exhibit transient linear flow behavior. A half-slope on a type curve represents this transient linear flow behavior. Shale gas wells show a significant skin effect which is uncommon in tight gas wells and masks early time linear behavior. Usually 70-85 percent of frac water is lost in the formation after the hydraulic fracturing job. In this research, a shale gas well was studied and simulated post hydraulic fracturing was modeled to relate the effect of frac water to the early significant skin effect observed in shale gas wells. The hydraulically fractured horizontal shale gas well was described in this work by a linear dual porosity model. The reservoir in this study consisted of a bounded rectangular reservoir with slab matrix blocks draining into neighboring hydraulic fractures and then the hydraulic fractures feed into the horizontal well that fully penetrates the entire rectangular reservoir. Numerical and analytical solutions were acquired before building a 3D 19x19x10 simulation model to verify accuracy. Many tests were conducted on the 3D model to match field water production since initial gas production was matching the analytical solutions before building the 3D simulation model. While some of the scenarios tested were artificial, they were conducted in order to reach a better conceptual understanding of the field. Increasing the water saturation in the formation resulted in increasing water production while lowering gas production. Adding a fractured bottom water layer that leaked into the hydraulic fracture allowed the model to have a good match of water and gas production rates. Modeling trapped frac water around the fracture produced approximately the same amount of water produced by field data, but the gas production was lower. Totally surrounding the fracture with frac water blocked all gas production until some of the water was produced and gas was able to pass through. Finally, trapped frac water around the fracture as combined with bottom water showed the best results match. It was shown that frac water could invade the formation surrounding the hydraulic fracture and could cause formation damage by blocking gas flow. It was also demonstrated that frac water could partially block off gas flow from the reservoir to the wellbore and thus lower the efficiency of the hydraulic fracturing job. It was also demonstrated that frac water affects the square root of time plot. It was proven by simulation that the huge skin at early time could be caused by frac water that invades and gets trapped near the hydraulic fractures due to capillary pressure.
104

Fabrication and characterization of gold ultramicro-nanoelectrode ensembles.

Lee, Shern-long 17 August 2005 (has links)
none
105

Low Voltage Low Power Square-Root-Domain Filter

Lo, Wan-Chen 03 July 2006 (has links)
In this thesis, a brand new first-order low pass square root domain filter (SRD filter) based on operational transconductors amplifiers (OTAs) is presented. The SRD filter consists of a translinear filter and two OTAs. We improve Cruz¡¦s SRD filter [15], reduce the number of transconductors from 3 to 2, and replace Class-AB linear transconductors with OTAs. The circuit has the least number of transistors up to date, therefore, the least power consumption and least chip area. The circuit has been fabricated with 0.35£gm CMOS technology. It operates with a supply voltage 1.5V and the biasing current varies from 0.05uA to 15uA. Measurement results show that the cutoff frequency of the filter can be tuned from 250 Hz to 29 kHz when the external capacitance C is 1nF and the cutoff frequency can be tuned from 1.8 kHz to 237kHz when the external capacitance C is 100pF. The total harmonic distortion is 1.03% and 1.01% when the external capacitance C is 1nF and 100pF and the power consumption is 116£gW.
106

On the invertibility of linear sums of two idempotents and of two square zero operators

Wang, Chih-jen 09 July 2007 (has links)
Let P and Q be two idempotents, we review the results about the equivalence between the invertibility of a linear combination aP +bQ and that of P +Q, where a and b are any nonzero complex numbers with a + b eq 0. It is possible to extend the results to the case P and Q are square-zero elements. However, we will show that these extensions are impossible in general for P and Q being partial isometries or n-potents with n geq 3. We will show in case P and Q are square-zero elements, the invertibility of P +Q is equivalent to that of aP +bQ for nonzero a, b.
107

Explicit Formulas and Asymptotic Expansions for Certain Mean Square of Hurwitz Zeta-Functions: III

MATSUMOTO, KOHJI, KATSURADA, MASANORI 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
108

A Square Root Domain Filter with Translinear Principle

Chang, Shih-Hao 07 August 2008 (has links)
In this thesis, a first order low pass square root domain filter (SRD filter) based on the novel operational transconductor amplifiers (OTAs) is presented. The SRD filter consists of a translinear filter and two OTAs. Because the conventional OTA has small input voltage swings, which violates the large signal operation of a SRD filter. We propose the novel OTA which is based on the large signal behaviors of MOSFETs, and the OTA also has large signal operation. We improve Cruz¡¦s SRD filter [22], reduce the number of the transconductors from 3 to 2, and replace Class-AB linear transconductors with the proposed OTAs. The MOSFET count of whole circuit can be reduced. Therefore, the OTAs have many advantages: wider input voltage swing, low supply voltage, low power consumption, and small chip area. The circuit has been fabricated with 0.35£gm CMOS technology. It operates with a supply voltage 1.5V and the bias current varies from 0.3£gA to 15£gA. Measurement results show that the cutoff frequency can be tuned from 1.1kHz to 35.2kHz when the external capacitance C is 1nF and the cutoff frequency can be tuned from 8.7kHz to 310.4kHz when the external capacitance C is 100pF. The total harmonic distortions are 0.93% and 0.91% when the external capacitances C are 1nF and 100pF, and the power consumption is 152.29£gW.
109

Before the Storm: Evacuation Intention and Audience Segmentation

Rice, Homer J. 19 November 2010 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to describe the predictors of evacuation intention among coastal residents in the State of Florida and to determine if there are meaningful segments of the population who intend to evacuate when told to do so by governmental officials because of a major hurricane. In the America’s and the Caribbean, 75,000 deaths have been attributed to hurricanes in the 20 th century. A well planned evacuation can reduce injury and death, yet many people do not have an evacuation plan and do not intend to evacuate when told to do so. The study used secondary data from the Harvard School of Public Health, Hurricane in High Risk Areas study, a random sample of 5,046 non-institutionalized persons age 18 and older in coastal counties of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida. Surveys for the State of Florida were segregated and used in this analysis, resulting in a study sample of 1,006 surveys from 42 counties. When asked if they would evacuate in the future if told to by government officials, 59.1% of Floridians surveyed said they would leave, 35.2% said they would not leave and 5.6% said it would depend. In Florida, 65.7% of the population had been threatened or hit by a major hurricane in the last three years and 26.6% of those had left their homes because of the hurricane. Of those whose communities were threatened by a hurricane, 83.3% of the communities were damaged and 33.8% experienced major flooding associated with the hurricane. Bivariate statistics and logistic regression were used to explore the interactions of predictors and evacuation intention. The best predictor of evacuation intention was prior evacuation from a hurricane (chi-square= 45.48, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.266). Significant relationships were also demonstrated between evacuation intention and worry a future hurricane would hit the community (chi-square = 22.75, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.11), the presence of pets (chi-square = 6.57, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.084), concern the home would be damaged (chi-square = 19.41, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.10), belief the home would withstand a major hurricane (chi-square = 19.55, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.10), length of time in the community (chi-square = 26.59, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.12), having children in the household (chi-square = 11.13, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.11), having a generator (chi-square = 17.12, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.13), age (chi-square = 24, p < .01, Cramer’s V = 0.16) and race (chi-square = 12.21, p = .02, Cramer’s V = 0.12). Logistic regression of the predictors of evacuation intention resulted in significant relationships with previous evacuation experience (OR = 4.99, p < .001), age 30 to 49 compared to age over 65 (OR = 2.776, p < .01), the presence of a generator (OR = .447, p < .01), having a home not very likely to be damaged compared to a home very likely to be damaged (OR =.444, p = .018), and experiencing poor prior government and voluntary agency response to previous hurricanes compared to excellent response (OR = .386, p < .027). Chi-squared Automatic Interaction Detection (CHAID) was used to identify segments of the population most likely and least likely to evacuate when told to do so. Those most likely to evacuate had evacuated due to a previous hurricane. Those least likely to evacuate when told to do so had not evacuated in a previous storm, do not own a generator and are over the age of 65. Information from this study can be used in planning for evacuation response by governmental entities. Available demographic information can be used to determine numbers of persons likely to evacuate before a storm. The results of this study can be used to inform a marketing strategy by government officials to encourage evacuation among those who say they would not evacuate when told to do so. Further research is needed to determine additional characteristics of the populations who say they will and will not evacuate when told to do so.
110

Sunny Square : from script to the big screen

Rizvi, Hammad Qamar 16 December 2013 (has links)
This report dives into the process and journey of Hammad Rizvi's thesis film Sunny Square at the University of Texas' RTF program. It explores the various stages of getting the film from an initial idea to a finished product, including but not limited to the screenwriting process, production, post-production, and overall thought process. / text

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