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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.
11

Diagnostika impulzů Ti:Sa laseru pro generaci plazmatu / Diagnostics of Ti:Sa laser pulses for plasma generation

Weiss, Jiří January 2015 (has links)
This diploma thesis is focused on investigation of temporal characteristics of laser pulses generated by oscillator with Ti:Sapphire active laser medium. In terms of properties of laserinduced plasmas the beam quality is crucial, in particular laser pulse contrast ratio. A new prototype of third order autocorrelator was designed. Pulse contrast ratio measurement is based on sum frequency generation between pulse of fundamental wavelength and its frequency doubled replica. Dynamic range of presented autocorrelator is estimated to be up to 8×10^12 which is more than currently available commercial devices can offer.
12

Implementation of Third Order Plate Theory for use in Existing Finite Element Software

Portier, Sarah 11 July 2006 (has links)
Sandwich plates and layered composites are common in many structural applications because of their combination of high stiffness and low weight. These plates combine top and bottom layers of high Young's modulus with intermediate layers of material carrying predominantly shear loads. Finite elements developed for the analysis of sandwich plates need to accurately model transverse shear stresses through the plate thickness. This study was inspired by an Office of Naval Research project to investigate the suitability of steel sandwich plates as ship hulls. A finite element implementation based on a third-order shear deformation element was used in a standard finite element program to model transverse shear stresses in a simply supported plate. Four elements based on third-order theory are developed and tested. Using static condensation to reduce the number of degrees of freedom required by a third-order plate element does not preserve the element's accuracy in either displacements or stresses, and stresses do not converge with refinement of the mesh. For the thin isotropic plate case, some condensed elements give reasonable displacement and stress results, but only for certain choices of mesh and the element is less versatile than one based on first order plate theory. None of the condensed elements give good results for composite plates of any thickness. / Master of Science
13

Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Multi-Scale Habitat Selection in an Invasive Generalist

Paolini, Kelsey Elizabeth 04 May 2018 (has links)
Spatiotemporal dynamics of resource availability can produce markedly different patterns of landscape utilization which necessitates studying habitat selection across biologically relevant extents. Feral pigs (Sus scrofa) are a prolifically expanding, generalist species and researchers have yet to understand fundamental drivers of space use in agricultural landscapes within the United States. To study multi-scale habitat selection patterns, I deployed 13 GPS collars on feral pigs within the Mississippi Alluvial Valley. I estimated resource selection using mixed-effects models to determine how feral pigs responded to changes in forage availability and incorporated those results with autocorrelated kernel density home range estimates. My results indicated season-specific habitat functional responses to changes in agricultural phenology and illustrated the interdependencies of landscape composition, hierarchical habitat selection, and habitat functional responses. These results indicate fundamental drivers of feral pig spatial distributions in an agricultural landscape which I used to predict habitat use to direct feral pig management.
14

Establising a high-frequency standard reference sequence stratigraphy, sea-level curve, and biostratigraphy for Morrowan strata of the Lower Absaroka I time slice based upon the Bird Spring Formation, Arrow Canyon, Nevada

Briggs, Kristen Phelps 21 April 2005 (has links) (PDF)
For the same reasons which prompted its ratification in 1990 as the Global Stratotype Section and Point for the Mid-Carboniferous boundary, namely, section completeness, abundant fossils, and excellent exposure, the Morrowan Arrow Canyon Bird Spring strata is recommended as a candidate standard sequence stratigraphic reference for the Morrowan portion of the Lower Absaroka I supersequence. The stratigraphic architecture of Morrowan strata in Arrow Canyon was largely controlled by high-amplitude (100-m), high-frequency sea-level changes. Outcrop data and facies stacking patterns define 59 fifth-order fundamental cycles. These fundamental cycles stack into ten third-order sequences with an average duration of 320 ka. Changes in both cycle thickness and fundamental cycle type indicate that the second-order sea-level curve of Golonka and Keissling for the Lower Absaroka Ia supersequence should be modified to reflect rising sea-level from the Mid-Carboniferous boundary with maximum flooding conditions ~120 to 135 meters above the Mid-Carboniferous boundary, followed by falling sea-level to ~6 meters below the Morrowan-Atokan boundary in Arrow Canyon. Additionally, cycle diagnostic conodonts and foraminifera permit correlation of selected third-order sequences to basins containing time-equivalent strata.
15

Self-Preservation of Turbulence Statistics in the Wall-Wake Flow of a Bed-Mounted Horizontal Pipe

Devi, K., Hanmaiahgari, P.R., Balachandar, R., Pu, Jaan H. 23 March 2022 (has links)
Yes / This research article analyzed the self-preserving behaviour of wall-wake region of a circular pipe mounted horizontally over a flat rigid sand bed in a shallow flow in terms of mean velocity, RSS, and turbulence intensities. The study aims to investigate self-preservation using appropriate length and velocity scales.in addition to that wall-normal distributions of the third-order correlations along the streamwise direction in the wake region are analyzed. An ADV probe was used to record the three-dimensional instantaneous velocities for four different hydraulic and physical conditions corresponding to four cylinder Reynolds numbers. The results revealed that the streamwise velocity deficits, RSS deficits, and turbulence intensities deficits distributions displayed good collapse on a narrow band when they were non-dimensionalized by their respective maximum deficits. The wall-normal distance was non-dimensionalized by the half velocity profile width for velocity distributions, while the half RSS profile width was used in the case of the RSS deficits and turbulence intensities deficits distributions. The results indicate the self-preserving nature of streamwise velocity, RSS, and turbulence intensities in the wall-wake region of the pipe. The third-order correlations distributions indicate that sweep is the dominant bursting event in the near-bed zone. At the same time, ejection is the dominant bursting event in the region above the cylinder height.
16

Optimization Of The Oxidation Of Sulphur Dioxide In An Existing Multi-Bed Adiabatic Reactor

Chartrand, Gilles 04 1900 (has links)
<p> The sulphur dioxide converter of the contact sulphuric acid plant ~f the Hamilton Works of Canadian Industries Ltd., is optimized using the so2 conversion as the objective function to be maximized. The simulation model used is fitted to the plant data. The number of beds, the inlet temperatures, the catalyst bed depths and the air addition are the variables considered in this work. The effect due to the imposition of a constraint on the system is also examined. </p> <p> Four integration techniques are studied to solve the set of nonlinear ordinary differential equations that simulates the transformation in a bed. The Runge-Kutta third-order is found to be the most efficient. </p> <p> Four optimization techniques, namely, dynamic programming, gradient search, direct search of Hooke and Jeeves and discrete maximum principle, are used. Their applicability and efficiency are compared. </p> <p> A very flat response (conversion) surface is found in the neighbourhood of the optimum. </p> <p> The optimal operating conditions are compared with the simulation of the C.I.L. operation. The reachability of these optimal conditions in the plant is also considered. </p> / Thesis / Master of Engineering (ME)
17

Optimization and construction of passive shim coils for human brain at high field MRI

Jayatilake, Mohan L. 23 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.
18

Thermodynamics-based design of stirling engines for low-temperature heat sources.

Hoegel, Benedikt January 2014 (has links)
Large amounts of energy from heat sources such as waste-eat and geothermal energy are available worldwide but their potential for useful power-generation is largely untapped. This is because they are relatively low temperature difference (LTD) sources, in the range from 100 to 200 °C, and it is thermodynamically diffcult, for theoretical and practical reasons, to extract useful work at these temperatures. This work explores the suitability of a Stirling engine (SE) to exploit these heat sources. Elsewhere much work has been done to optimise Stirling engines for high temperature heat sources, but little is known about suitable engine layouts, and their optimal design and operational aspects at lower temperature differences. With the reduced temperature difference, changes from conventional engine designs become necessary and robust solutions for this novel application have to be identified. This has been achieved in four major steps: identification of a suitable engine type; thermodynamic optimisation of operating and engine parameters; optimisation of mechanical efficiency; and the development of conceptual designs for the engine and its components informed by the preceding analysis. For the optimisation of engine and operating parameters a model was set up in the commercial Stirling software package, Sage, which also has been validated in this thesis; suitable parameter combinations have been identified. This work makes key contributions in several areas. This first is the identification of methods for better simulating the thermodynamic behaviour of these engines. At low temperature differences the performance of Stirling engines is very sensitive to losses by fluid friction (and thus frequency), adiabatic temperature rise during compression, and the heat transfer from and to the surroundings. Consequently the usual isothermal analytical approaches produce results that can be misleading. It is necessary to use a non-isothermal approach, and the work shows how this may be achieved. A second contribution is the identification of the important design variables and their causal effects on system performance. The primary design variable is engine layout. For an engine having inherently low efficiency due to the low temperature difference it is important to choose the engine layout that provides the highest power density possible in order to minimise engine size and to save costs. From this analysis the double-acting alpha-type configuration has been identified as being the most suitable, as opposed to the beta or gamma configurations. An-other key design variable is working fluid, and the results identify helium and hydrogen as suitable, and air and nitrogen as unsuitable. Frequency and phase angle are other design variables, and the work identifies favourable values. A sensitivity analysis identifies the phase angle, regenerator porosity, and temperature levels as the most sensitive parameters for power and efficiency. It has also been shown that the compression work in low-temperature difference Stirling engines is of similar magnitude as the expansion work. By compounding suitable working spaces on one piston the net forces on the piston rod can be reduced significantly. In double-acting alpha-engines this can be achieved by choosing the Siemens as opposed to the Franchot arrangement. As a result friction and piston seal leakage which are two important loss mechanisms are reduced significantly and longevity and mechanical efficiency is enhanced. Design implications are identified for various components, including pistons, seals, heat exchangers, regenerator, power extraction, and crankcase. The peculiarities of the heat source are also taken into account in these design recommendations. A third key contribution is the extraction of novel insights from the modelling process. For the heat exchangers it has been shown that the hot and cold heat exchangers can be identical in their design without any negative impact on performance for the low-temperature difference situation. In comparison the high temperature applications invariably require different materials and designs for the two heat exchangers. Also, frequency and phase angle are found to be quite different (lower frequency and higher phase angle) from the optimum parameters found in high temperature engines. Contrary to common belief the role of dead volume has been found to play a crucial and not necessary detrimental role at low temperature differentials. Taken together, the work is positioned at the intersection of thermodynamic analysis and engineering design, for the challenging area of Stirling engines at low temperature differences. The work extracts thermodynamic insights and extends these into design implications. Together these help create a robust theoretical and design foundation for further research and development in the important area of energy recovery.
19

Avaliação das alterações ambientais na sub-bacia hidrográfica do Ribeirão do Piçarrão, Campinas-SP / Evaluation of the environmental alterations in the Piçarrão river hydrographic basin, Campinas/SP - Brazil

Silva, Sandra Fernandes da 31 July 2000 (has links)
Este trabalho consiste no estudo de uma bacia hidrográfica onde se insere parte da área urbana de Campinas e tem como objetivo a aplicação de uma proposta metodológica que visa avaliar e determinar as alterações ambientais nela registradas, correlacionando-as às atividades antrópicas desenvolvidas em um período de 23 anos. Para a caracterização e avaliação ambiental da área foi a análise morfométrica da rede de drenagem, juntamente com a determinação dos diferentes tipos de atividades antrópicas desenvolvidos. O meio utilizado para estabelecer a relação entre as alterações registradas e as atividades antrópicas por elas responsáveis foi a análise detalhada das bacias de ordem 3. Os níveis de alteração da área foram considerados os tipos e a intensidade das alterações sofridas pela rede de drenagem. Como resultado obteve-se a segmentação da área em três setores com características de alteração ambiental bem distintas. Foram gerados, ainda, como documentos cartográficos: o mapa de documentação, a carta de declividade, o mapa de substrato rochoso, o mapa de materiais inconsolidados e o mapa de uso e ocupação. / This work consists in the study of a hydrographic basin that covers part of the urban area of Campinas city. It´s intent was aply a methodological proposal for assessing and evaluating basin´s environmental alteration, correlating this with human activities develop through a period of 23 years. The main tools used in the environmental characterization and evaluation of the area was the morphometric analysis of the drainage network along with the determination of the different sorts of human activities. The relation between the human activities and the transformation caused by them was stablished through a detailed analysis of third order basins. The type and intensity of the transformations in the drainage network were used in the determination of alteration levels, which permitted the definition of three distinct areas, concerning the environmental changes characteristics. Also, the following cartographic documents were produced: documentation map, declivity map, geologic map, inconsolidated material map and land use map.
20

Interdisciplinarity and self-reflection in civic education

Christensen, Torben January 2013 (has links)
Focus of interest in this article are the concepts of globalization and civic citizenship and the questions are; what is required to be a global citizen, and how to work with this in civic education. The concept of civic citizenship implies democracy. A citizen is an independent and (to some extent) educated decision maker and actor, not a mere subject loyal to the sovereign. So whenever speaking of a global citizen democracy is implied. But the world is not a democratic place as such. Most of it in fact is quite undemocratic. The question therefore is how it is possible to act as a citizen (as a democrat) in global space. The article argues that this will only be possibly if citizens are capable of dealing with complex societal problems and to understand their own role as citizens (democrats) in relation to these problems. The argument is firstly that problems and issues in global space are complex and can only be understood interdisciplinary. Therefore the ability to reflect problems interdisciplinary is crucial to the global citizen. The second argument is that the ability of self-reflection is necessary for citizens in their efforts to understand, maintain and develop their own (democratic) identity and (democratic) values and practices in relation to the complexity and unfamiliarity of the various non-democratic identities, values and practices in a global space. Therefore it is suggested that students in civic education need to develop competencies of reflection on interdisciplinarity and self-reflection-as-citizen as key tools for analyzing societal problems and to act democratically on them. And it is suggested that dealing with interdisciplinarity requires use of second order concepts and that self-reflection as citizens requires third order concepts

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