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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.
211

Návrh a realizace 3D tiskárny s podporou síťového tisku / Design and implementation of 3D printer with network printing support

Špringer, Radek January 2016 (has links)
The goal of this thesis is to design a 3D printer type delta. To describe 3D printing technologies used by this printer, basic printer features and commercially available material used at the print and its comparison. To define all hardware components, which are necessary for construction of the 3D printer type delta. To create a proposal and construct an expansion board to which all hardware components of the printer will be connected. To optimize the print space heating and cooling of the printout. To extend the 3D printer with a Web server, which will ensure the network printing possibility.
212

Connection between the Impregnation of Glass Multi-Filament Yarns and their Pull-out Behaviour

Fiorio, Bruno, Aljewifi, Hana, Gallias, Jean-Louis January 2011 (has links)
This experimental study focuses on the links that exist between the mechanical pull-out behaviour of multi-filament yarns embedded in concrete and the impregnation of the yarn by the concrete. To this aim, 5 glass yarns have been embedded in concrete (AR and E glass yarns from assembled or direct roving). A pre-treatment was applied to the yarn before the casting, and was chosen in the following three: wetting, drying or pre-impregnation with a cement slurry. By this way, 15 yarn / pre-treatment combinations were obtained that generate 15 conditions of impregnation of the yarn by the cementitious matrix. In each case, the mechanical properties were determined from a classical pull-out test and the yarns impregnation properties were characterized by two dedicated tests: yarns porosity measurements and along yarn water flow measurements. By studying the relationship between the mechanical behaviour and the physical properties of the impregnated yarns, it is shown that the pre- and post-peak behaviour are mainly connected to the flow rate measured during the water flow measurements, which suggest a specific influence of the connected pores parallel to the filaments and of the penetration depth of the matrix into the yarn. The postpeak and the residual behaviour are moreover linked to the yarn pore volume associated to the disorder induced in the filaments assembly by the penetration of the matrix. The overall result of this work is a contribution to the understanding of the relationship between the impregnation of the yarns and the pull-out behaviour.
213

Intermediate filaments ensure resiliency of single carcinoma cells, while active contractility of the actin cortex determines their invasive potential

Ficorella, Carlotta, Eichholz, Hannah Marie, Sala, Federico, Vázquez, Rebeca Martínez, Osellame, Roberto, Käs, Josef A. 02 May 2023 (has links)
During the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, the intracellular cytoskeleton undergoes severe reorganization which allows epithelial cells to transition into a motile mesenchymal phenotype. Among the different cytoskeletal elements, the intermediate filaments keratin (in epithelial cells) and vimentin (in mesenchymal cells) have been demonstrated to be useful and reliable histological markers. In this study, we assess the potential invasiveness of six human breast carcinoma cell lines and two mouse fibroblasts cells lines through single cell migration assays in confinement. We find that the keratin and vimentin networks behave mechanically the same when cells crawl through narrow channels and that vimentin protein expression does not strongly correlate to single cells invasiveness. Instead, we find that what determines successful migration through confining spaces is the ability of cells to mechanically switch from a substrate-dependent stress fibers based contractility to a substrate-independent cortical contractility, which is not linked to their tumor phenotype.
214

Additively Manufactured Cyclic Olefin Copolymer Tissue Culture Devices With Transparent Windows Using Fused Filament Fabrication

Saliba, Rabih 13 July 2022 (has links)
No description available.
215

Additive Manufacturing in Spacecraft Design and In-Space Robotic Fabrication of Large Structures

Spicer, Randy Lee 31 August 2023 (has links)
Additive Manufacturing (AM, 3D printing) has made significant advancements over the past decade and has become a viable alternative to traditional machining techniques. AM offers several advantages over traditional manufacturing techniques including improved geometric freedom, reduction in part lead time, cost savings, enhanced customization, mass reduction, part elimination, and remote production. There are many different AM processes with the most commonly used process being Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF). Small satellites have also made significant advancements over the past two decades with the number of missions launched annually increased by orders of magnitude over that time span. Small satellites offer several advantages compared to traditional spacecraft architectures including increased access to space, lower development costs, and disaggregated architectures. On-orbit manufacturing and assembly have become major research and development topics for government and commercial entities seeking the capability to build very large structures in space. AM is well suited on-orbit manufacturing since the process is highly automated, produces little material waste, and allows for a large degree of geometric freedom. This dissertation seeks to address three major research objectives regarding applications of additive manufacturing in space systems: demonstrate the feasibility of 3D printing an ESPA class satellite using FFF, develop a FFF 3D printer that is capable of operating in high vacuum and characterize its performance, and analyze the coupled dynamics between a satellite and a robot arm used for 3D printing in-space. This dissertation presents the design, finite element analysis, dynamic testing, and model correlation of AdditiveSat, an additively manufactured small satellite fabricated using FFF. This dissertation also presents the design, analysis, and test results for a passively cooled FFF 3D printer capable of manufacturing parts out of engineering grade thermoplastics in the vacuum of space. Finally, this dissertation presents a numerical model of a free-flying small satellite with an attached robotic arm assembly to simulate 3D printing structures on-orbit with analysis of the satellite controls required to control the dynamics of the highly coupled system. / Doctor of Philosophy / 3D printing has made significant advancements over the past decade and has become common place in offices, schools, and even the homes of hobbyist. 3D printing has become an alternative to traditional machining techniques, such as machining parts from blocks of material. 3D printing offers several advantages over traditional manufacturing techniques including improved geometry freedom, reduction in part lead time, cost savings, enhanced customization, mass reduction, part elimination, and remote production. There are many different types of 3D printing with the most commonly used process being Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) in which a thermoplastic is melded by a hotend and then extruded through a nozzle to deposited material layer-by-layer onto a printed part. Small satellites have also made significant advancements over the past two decades with the number of missions launched annually greatly increased over that time span. Small satellites offer several advantages compared to traditional spacecraft including increased access to space and lower development costs. On-orbit manufacturing and assembly have become major research and development topics for government and commercial entities seeking the capability to build very large structures in space. This dissertation seeks to address three major research objectives regarding applications of additive manufacturing in space systems: demonstrate the feasibility of 3D printing an ESPA class satellite using FFF, develop a FFF 3D printer that is capable of operating in high vacuum and characterize its performance, and analyze the coupled dynamics between a satellite and a robot arm used for 3D printing in-space. This dissertation presents the design, analysis, and test results of AdditiveSat, a 3D printed small satellite made using FFF. This dissertation also presents the development of a FFF 3D printer capable of operating in the vacuum of space. Finally, this dissertation presents a numerical simulation that models 3D printing structures on-orbit with a small satellite equipped with a robot arm.
216

Experimental study on compressive behavior and failure analysis of composite concrete confined by glass/epoxy ±55° filament wound pipes

Gemi, L., Koroglu, M.A., Ashour, Ashraf 21 December 2017 (has links)
Yes / This paper investigates the strength and ductility of concrete confined by Glass/Epoxy ±55° Filament Wound Pipes (GFRP) under axial compression. A total of 24 cylinderical specimens were prepared with expansive and Portland cements, properly compacted and un-compacted for different composite fresh concrete matrix. Test results showed that compressive strength and axial deformation at failure of concrete confined with GFRP tubes increased by an average of 2.85 and 5.57 times these of unconfined concrete, respectively. Macro and micro analyses of GFRP pipes after failure were also investigated. Debonding, whitening, matrix/transfer cracking, delamination and splitting mechanisms were detected at failure, respectively. The experimental results were also employed to assess the reliability of design models available in the literature for confined concrete compressive strength.
217

The Aerodynamics and Near Wake of an Offshore Floating Horizontal Axis Wind Turbine

Sebastian, Thomas 01 February 2012 (has links)
Offshore floating wind turbines represent the future of wind energy. However, significant challenges must be overcome before these systems can be widely used. Because of the dynamics of offshore floating wind turbines -- surge, sway, heave, roll, pitch, and yaw -- and the resulting interactions between the rotor and generated wake, the aerodynamic analysis methods and design codes that have found wide use throughout the wind energy industry may be inadequate. Application of these techniques to offshore floating wind turbine aerodynamics may result in off-optimal designs, effectively handicapping these next-generation systems, thereby minimizing their full potential. This dissertation will demonstrate that the aerodynamics of offshore floating wind turbines are sufficiently different from conventional offshore and onshore wind turbines, warranting the use of higher fidelity analysis approaches. It will outline the development and validation of a free vortex wake code, the Wake Induced Dynamics Simulator, or WInDS, which uses a more physically realistic Lagrangian approach to modeling complex rotor-wake interactions. Finally, results from WInDS simulations of various offshore floating wind turbines under different load conditions will be presented. The simulation results indicate that offshore floating wind turbine aerodynamics are more complex than conventional offshore or onshore wind turbines and require higher fidelity analysis approaches to model adequately. Additionally, platform pitching modes appear to drive the most aerodynamically-significant motions, followed by yawing modes. Momentum balance approaches are shown to be unable to accurately model these dynamic systems, and the associated dynamic inflow methods respond to velocity changes at the rotor incorrectly. Future offshore floating wind turbine designs should strive to either minimize platform motions or be complementarily optimized, via higher fidelity aerodynamic analysis techniques, to account for them. It is believed that this dissertation is the first in-depth study of offshore floating wind turbine aerodynamics and the applicability of various analysis methods.
218

Design of a filament fuser : Reducing 3D-printer filament waste / Design av en filamentsvetsare : Reducera materialsvinn av 3D-skrivare

Kanbour, Omar January 2022 (has links)
There has been a significant rise of users in the 3D-printer community. A common dilemma amongst users is how to handle spools of plastic filament that does not contain enough filament for an arbitrary print. This report explores the possibility of fusing strands of filament together from two different spools into one spool by the method of fusion bonding. This concept of plastic bonding generally consists of the following three steps. Preparing the surface area, heating the polymer and physically pushing the filament strands on to each other. Fusion bonding proved to be successful for temperatures between 150-190 ◦C without reducing required tensile strength for printing. There was a clear deterioration in the ability to follow tight curves for the fused filament. This showed in the result where many of the welded strands snapped when conducting the bending test. The welded filament had an average diameter of 1.992 mm. It appears that the filament bond formed based on the geometry of the PTFE tube that acted like a mold. It was concluded that the welded filament bond could improve if the used PTFE-tube had a diameter closer to 1.75 mm. Possible improvements were discussed where an example of using PTFE coating could improve the quality of the fuse in terms of strand diameter. / Användningen av 3D-skrivare har ökat markant bland konsumenter. En vanlig situation som uppstår är att kvarvarande filamentrulle inte har tillräckligt med material över för en godtycklig utskrift. Den här rapporten avser att behandla möjligheten att svetsa ihop två olika plasttrådar av filament till en enda tråd och därefter rulla ihop den sammansvetsade plasten till en filamantrulle. Metoden som användes för att utföra svetsningen kallas för fusion bonding. Det finns flera olika varianter av denna metod. För att utföra sammansvetsning med fusion bonding krävs följande tre steg, förberedelse av ytan på den tilltänkta svetsen, upphettning av polymererna och därefter fysiskt röra de upphettade polymererna mot varandra tills kontakt uppstår. Fusion bonding visade sig vara en fungerande metod att sammansvetsa filament med för temperaturer mellan 150-190◦C utan att påverka den nödvändiga styrkan för att klara av en utskrift. Böjtestet påvisade en kraftig försämring av det sammansvetsade materialets förmåga att böja sig. Det visade sig även att medeldiametern vid sammansvetsningen var 1.992 mm. Slutsatsen som drogs av resultatet var att sammansvetsningen formade sig efter PTFE-tuben som agerade som en form åt polymererna. En möjlig förbättring som diskuterades var att använda PTFE-beläggningpå aluminiumblocket för att minska skillnaden i diametern mellan sammansvetsningen och originaldiametern.
219

Astrostatistics: Statistical Analysis of Solar Activity from 1939 to 2008

Yousef, Mohammed A. 10 April 2014 (has links)
No description available.
220

Stark broadening approach for measuring the plasma density inside a filament induced by a femtosecond laser pulse in a gas mixture

Bernhardt, Jens 13 April 2018 (has links)
Suite à la propagation d 'une impulsion laser femtoseconde intense dans un milieu gazeux, l'impulsion laser s'effondre sur elle-même et forme des filaments de lumière. Ces filaments sont induits par un équilibre dynamique entre l'autofocalisation par effet Kerr et la défocalisa:tion due au plasma « auto généré ». L'équilibre de ces deux effets aboutit au phénomène universel. de la « saturation de l'intensité ». L'intensité saturée est assez grande pour ioniser ou dissocier les différentes espèces de gaz par l'ionisation multiphotonique/tunnel (MPlj TI) , produisant la fluorescence 'propre'. Le phénomène de la filamentation est riche en concepts et applications. Ceci inclut la détection et l'identification des gaz polluants, le contrôle de la foudre ou d'une décharge ou, finalement, la génération d'impulsions puissantes de peu de cycles. L'objectif de cette thèse était de développer un outil spectroscopique qui peut être utilisé pour mesurer la densité de plasma à l'intérieur du filament. La connaissance de ce paramètre clé est importante pour la caractérisation de la saturation de l'intensité du processus de filamentation. Ce défi pourrait être relevé en développant une nouvelle approche basée sur l'élargissement Stark de lignes atomiques du spectre d'émission du filament. Cette thèse traite des critères de l'applicabilité et de la validité de l'approche de l'élargissement Stark. L'approche de l'élargissement Stark est d'abord illustrée par la « spectroscopie de plasma induite par filament» (FIBS) du plomb métallique. On montre pourquoi la technique FIBS est avantageuse comparée à la spectroscopie conventionnelle de plasma induite par laser nanoseconde (ns-LIBS). Ensuite, la preuve de l'applicabilité de la méthode de l'élargissement Stark à un milieu gazeux (utilisant l'argon comme exemple) est fournie. Elle s'avère utile pour mesurer la densité de plasma à l'intérieur du filament dans l'air ambient dans différentes conditions de propagation. De plus, la saturation d'intensité du processus de filamentation dans l'hélium est confirmée. Ceci, en particulier, est effectué en mesurant les densités de plasma en fonction de l'énergie et de la pression, respectivement. La réalisation des objectifs ci-dessus serait profitable pour obtenir une meilleure compréhension de la physique fondamentale et développer les applications mentionnées.

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