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Brandverhalten textilbewehrter BauteileKulas, Christian, Hegger, Josef, Raupach, Michael, Antons, Udo 05 December 2011 (has links) (PDF)
Die Einhaltung von Brandschutzanforderungen ist ein wichtiger Aspekt für sichere Baukonstruktionen. Beim innovativen Werkstoff textilbewehrter Beton, der einen Verbundwerkstoff aus einer Feinbetonmatrix und textiler Bewehrung darstellt, ist das Brandverhalten bisher nur unzureichend erforscht worden. Insbesondere das Tragverhalten der einzelnen Komponenten unter hohen Temperaturen stellt noch eine Wissenslücke in der heutigen Forschung dar. Dieser Artikel befasst sich mit den experimentellen Untersuchungen an einer Feinbetonmatrix, die ein Größtkorndurchmesser von 0,6 mm aufweist, sowie an AR-Glas- und Carbongarnen. Basierend auf instationären Versuchen werden das Spannungs- und Dehnungsverhalten unter hohen Temperaturen abgeleitet und Ansätze zur rechnerischen Beschreibung des Hochtemperaturverhaltens vorgeschlagen. / The design of structural members under fire attack is an important aspect for safe constructions. For the innovative material textile reinforced concrete (TRC), which is a composite material made of fine-grained concrete and textile reinforcement, the fire behavior has not been investigated insufficiently yet. Especially the load-bearing behavior under high-temperatures of the single components marks a gap in the state-of-the-art of science and technology today. This article deals with experimental investigations on a fine-grained concrete matrix, which has maximum grain size of only 0.6 mm, as well as yarns made of AR-glass and carbon. On the basis of transient tests the stress and strain behavior under high temperatures is derived. Finally, a calculative approach for the hightemperature behavior is presented.
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Changing Complex DocumentsCarter, Simon Matthew James Unknown Date (has links)
Change management is a discipline fundamental to the task of building ever more complex computing systems. Properly managed change provides a means whereby alterations to existing components of a complex artefact and their relationships can be evaluated, managed and evolved. This thesis takes as its example Official RAAF Publications, some of which need to be revised as a result of changes to the system they describe. The thesis develops a model of change propagation providing a set of operations to examine and record the changes to a set of publications. Additional operations enable coping with reversing decisions and handling the unexpected arrival of externally generated amendments. The model is extended to cover a finer granularity of entities (at the page level) to determine whether this greater level of detail would ease some tasks. A further extension provides the notion of relationships between the publications of concern, focusing on a dependency relationship between two publications. This enables exploration of the possibility of improving the process by reducing the risk of missing publications needing revision and providing a means by which some tasks can be partly automated thus speeding up the process. The models presented were developed in Sum, a variant of the Z specification language, to gain greater insight into the essential details of the operations and data structures involved. By ignoring implementation details the essential logical steps of each model can be emphasised and their differences and similarities contrasted. This thesis demonstrates that fine-grained change management is feasible. The thesis develops processes that automatically track the status of changes as they are propagated through a set of documents. The greater knowledge of work done on individual pages allows only the page(s) of concern to be affected. The work also enables recommendations to be made as to the applicability of each model and, by comparing the models, provides insight into the amount of work and resources required for tackling change at different levels of granularity.
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Changing Complex DocumentsCarter, Simon Matthew James Unknown Date (has links)
Change management is a discipline fundamental to the task of building ever more complex computing systems. Properly managed change provides a means whereby alterations to existing components of a complex artefact and their relationships can be evaluated, managed and evolved. This thesis takes as its example Official RAAF Publications, some of which need to be revised as a result of changes to the system they describe. The thesis develops a model of change propagation providing a set of operations to examine and record the changes to a set of publications. Additional operations enable coping with reversing decisions and handling the unexpected arrival of externally generated amendments. The model is extended to cover a finer granularity of entities (at the page level) to determine whether this greater level of detail would ease some tasks. A further extension provides the notion of relationships between the publications of concern, focusing on a dependency relationship between two publications. This enables exploration of the possibility of improving the process by reducing the risk of missing publications needing revision and providing a means by which some tasks can be partly automated thus speeding up the process. The models presented were developed in Sum, a variant of the Z specification language, to gain greater insight into the essential details of the operations and data structures involved. By ignoring implementation details the essential logical steps of each model can be emphasised and their differences and similarities contrasted. This thesis demonstrates that fine-grained change management is feasible. The thesis develops processes that automatically track the status of changes as they are propagated through a set of documents. The greater knowledge of work done on individual pages allows only the page(s) of concern to be affected. The work also enables recommendations to be made as to the applicability of each model and, by comparing the models, provides insight into the amount of work and resources required for tackling change at different levels of granularity.
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Changing Complex DocumentsCarter, Simon Matthew James Unknown Date (has links)
Change management is a discipline fundamental to the task of building ever more complex computing systems. Properly managed change provides a means whereby alterations to existing components of a complex artefact and their relationships can be evaluated, managed and evolved. This thesis takes as its example Official RAAF Publications, some of which need to be revised as a result of changes to the system they describe. The thesis develops a model of change propagation providing a set of operations to examine and record the changes to a set of publications. Additional operations enable coping with reversing decisions and handling the unexpected arrival of externally generated amendments. The model is extended to cover a finer granularity of entities (at the page level) to determine whether this greater level of detail would ease some tasks. A further extension provides the notion of relationships between the publications of concern, focusing on a dependency relationship between two publications. This enables exploration of the possibility of improving the process by reducing the risk of missing publications needing revision and providing a means by which some tasks can be partly automated thus speeding up the process. The models presented were developed in Sum, a variant of the Z specification language, to gain greater insight into the essential details of the operations and data structures involved. By ignoring implementation details the essential logical steps of each model can be emphasised and their differences and similarities contrasted. This thesis demonstrates that fine-grained change management is feasible. The thesis develops processes that automatically track the status of changes as they are propagated through a set of documents. The greater knowledge of work done on individual pages allows only the page(s) of concern to be affected. The work also enables recommendations to be made as to the applicability of each model and, by comparing the models, provides insight into the amount of work and resources required for tackling change at different levels of granularity.
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Changing Complex DocumentsCarter, Simon Matthew James Unknown Date (has links)
Change management is a discipline fundamental to the task of building ever more complex computing systems. Properly managed change provides a means whereby alterations to existing components of a complex artefact and their relationships can be evaluated, managed and evolved. This thesis takes as its example Official RAAF Publications, some of which need to be revised as a result of changes to the system they describe. The thesis develops a model of change propagation providing a set of operations to examine and record the changes to a set of publications. Additional operations enable coping with reversing decisions and handling the unexpected arrival of externally generated amendments. The model is extended to cover a finer granularity of entities (at the page level) to determine whether this greater level of detail would ease some tasks. A further extension provides the notion of relationships between the publications of concern, focusing on a dependency relationship between two publications. This enables exploration of the possibility of improving the process by reducing the risk of missing publications needing revision and providing a means by which some tasks can be partly automated thus speeding up the process. The models presented were developed in Sum, a variant of the Z specification language, to gain greater insight into the essential details of the operations and data structures involved. By ignoring implementation details the essential logical steps of each model can be emphasised and their differences and similarities contrasted. This thesis demonstrates that fine-grained change management is feasible. The thesis develops processes that automatically track the status of changes as they are propagated through a set of documents. The greater knowledge of work done on individual pages allows only the page(s) of concern to be affected. The work also enables recommendations to be made as to the applicability of each model and, by comparing the models, provides insight into the amount of work and resources required for tackling change at different levels of granularity.
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Roboconf : une plateforme autonomique pour l'élasticité multi-niveau, multi-granularité pour les applications complexes dans le cloud / Roboconf : an Autonomic Platform Supporting Multi-level Fine-grained Elasticity of Complex Applications on the CloudPham, Manh Linh 04 February 2016 (has links)
Les applications logicielles sont de plus en plus diversifié et complexe. Avec le développement orageux du Cloud Computing et de ses applications, les applications logicielles deviennent encore plus complexes que jamais. Les applications de cloud computing complexes peuvent contenir un grand nombre de composants logiciels qui nécessitent et consomment une grande quantité de ressources (matériel ou d'autres composants logiciels) répartis en plusieurs niveaux en fonction de la granularité de ces ressources. En outre, ces composants logiciels peuvent être situés sur différents nuages. Les composants logiciels et de leurs ressources requises d'une application Nuage ont des relations complexes dont certains pourraient être résolus au moment de la conception, mais certains sont nécessaires pour faire face au moment de l'exécution. La complexité des logiciels et de l'hétérogénéité de l'environnement Couverture devenir défis que les solutions d'élasticité actuelles ont besoin de trouver des réponses appropriées à résoudre. L'élasticité est l'un des avantages du cloud computing, qui est la capacité d'un système Cloud pour adapter à la charge de travail des changements par des ressources d'approvisionnement et deprovisioning d'une manière autonome. Par conséquent, les ressources disponibles correspondent à la demande actuelle d'aussi près que possible à chaque moment. Pour avoir une solution d'élasticité efficace, qui ne reflète pas seulement la complexité des applications Cloud mais également à déployer et à gérer eux d'une manière autonome, nous proposons une approche d'élasticité roman. Il est appelé à plusieurs niveaux élasticité fine qui comprend deux aspects de la complexité de l'application: plusieurs composants logiciels et la granularité des ressources. Le multi-niveau élasticité fine concerne les objets touchés par les actions d'élasticité et la granularité de ces actions. Dans cette thèse, nous introduisons plateforme Roboconf un système de cloud computing autonome (ACCS) pour installer et reconfigurer les applications complexes ainsi que soutenir le multi-niveau élasticité fine. A cet effet, Roboconf est également un gestionnaire d'élasticité autonome. Merci à cette plate-forme, nous pouvons abstraire les applications cloud complexes et automatiser leur installation et de reconfiguration qui peut être de plusieurs centaines d'heures de travail. Nous utilisons également Roboconf à mettre en œuvre les algorithmes de multi-niveau élasticité fine sur ces applications. Les expériences menées indiquent non seulement l'efficacité de l'élasticité fine multi-niveau, mais aussi de valider les caractéristiques de support de cette approche de la plateforme Roboconf. / Software applications are becoming more diverse and complex. With the stormy development of Cloud Computing and its applications, software applications become even more complex than ever. The complex Cloud applications may contain a lot of software components that require and consume a large amount of resources (hardware or other software components) distributed into multiple levels based on granularity of these resources. Moreover these software components might be located on different clouds. The software components and their required resources of a Cloud application have complex relationships which some could be resolved at design time but some are required to tackle at run time. The complexity of software and heterogeneity of Cloud environment become challenges that current elasticity solutions need to find appropriate answers to resolve. Elasticity is one of benefits of Cloud computing, which is capability of a Cloud system to adapt to workload changes by provisioning and deprovisioning resources in an autonomic manner. Hence, the available resources fit the current demand as closely as possible at each point in time. To have an efficient elasticity solution which not only reflects the complexity of Cloud applications but also deploy and manage them in an autonomic manner, we propose a novel elasticity approach. It is called multi-level fine-grained elasticity which includes two aspects of application’s complexity: multiple software components and the granularity of resources. The multi-level fine-grained elasticity concerns objects impacted by elasticity actions and granularity of these actions. In this thesis, we introduce Roboconf platform an autonomic Cloud computing system (ACCS) to install and reconfigure the complex applications as well as support the multi-level fine-grained elasticity. To this end, Roboconf is also an autonomic elasticity manager. Thanks to this platform, we can abstract the complex Cloud applications and automate their installation and reconfiguration that can be up to several hundred hours of labour. We also use Roboconf to implement the algorithms of multi-level fine-grained elasticity on these applications. The conducted experiments not only indicate efficiency of the multi-level fine-grained elasticity but also validate features supporting this approach of Roboconf platform.
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Processos, fácies e geometria do sistema turbidítico da formação Taciba/Membro Rio Segredo, faixa aflorante norte catarinenseAndrade, Lygia Rodrigues de Moraes de [UNESP] 17 April 2009 (has links) (PDF)
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andrade_lrm_me_rcla.pdf: 1854084 bytes, checksum: 37c55097ff800285da56aac3723135e2 (MD5) / Os membros Lontras (Formação Campo Mourão) e Rio Segredo (Formação Taciba) constituem uma sucessão marinha de folhelhos e arenitos turbidíticos, que está encaixada entre diamictitos glaciais daquelas formações. O folhelho Lontras tem uma centena de metros na faixa aflorante norte catarinense, contendo em sua porção superior a fácies “folhelho várvico”, na verdade um estrato com gradação de siltito a folhelho (Tde) em escala milimétrica e que é considerado como sendo o turbidito distal da sucessão. O turbidito Rio Segredo tem de 15 a 25 m e consiste de estratos gradacionais portando sequência Bouma em diversas escalas: muito delgado (1 a 3 cm; Tde e Tcde), delgado (3 a 10 cm; Tcde e Tbcde), médio (10 a 30 cm; Tbcde e Tabcde), espesso (30 a 100 cm; Tabc) e muito espesso (acima de 1,0 m; Tabc). Há ainda uma divisão “superior” do Membro Rio Segredo normalmente com 10 a 20 m de espessura, que contém turbiditos areno-argilosos muito delgados (Tcde e Tde). Foram levantados sete perfis faciológicos de detalhe, escala 1:50, de modo a registrar turbiditos com até 5 cm de espessura (1 mm no perfil). Posteriormente, quatro desses perfis foram cronocorrelacionados em uma seção norte-sul: Forcação, Wiegand, Laeisz e Dona Emma, numa extensão de 28 km. A esta seção foi acrescido o perfil Taiózinho, localizado 30 km a oeste do Forcação, entre os dois últimos (semelhança faciológica com o Laeisz). Identificaram-se sete sistemas deposicionais, com uma média de 3 m de espessura por sistema e contidos em três sequências de alta frequência. Os sistemas deposicionais são formados por ciclos turbidíticos de origem marinha, encontrados principalmente nos perfis Laeisz e Taiózinho, com uma organização ascendente de adelgaçamento e granodecrescência. Outros ciclos turbidíticos... / The Lontras shale and overlying Rio Segredo sandstone are members of Campo Mourão and Taciba formations, corresponding to shelf marine and turbidite deposits; they are encased in glacial diamictites of those formations. The Lontras shale is 100 m thick in northern Santa Catarina outcrop belt and it displays a “varved shale” facies in its upper portion. In reality, it represents many mm-scale beds with Bouma sequence Tde, and therefore distal, argillaceous turbidites. The Rio Segredo Member is 15 to 25 m thick and contain beds of different thicknesses: very thin (1 to 3 cm; Tde and Tcde), thin (3 to 10 cm; Tcde and Tbcde), and medium beds (10 to 30 cm; Tbcde and Tabcde). Also, thick (30 to 100 cm) and very thick beds (thicker than 1 m) displays massive or graded sandstones with disperse laminations and cross-laminations resembling Ta, Tb and Tc intervals of Bouma sequence. There is also a Rio Segredo “upper” division with 10 to 20 m thick, consisting of very thin turbidites (Tcde and Tde). Seven detailed facies logs were constructed at 1:50 scale, to represent even 5 cm thin beds (1 mm). Later, four of the logs were put in a north-south stratigraphic section (28 km in length): Forcação, Wiegand, Laeisz and Dona Emma, in a 28 km extension. A fifth log, Taiózinho (distant 30 km west of Forcação), was added to the section between the last two logs, because of its facies similarity with Laeisz log. Seven depositional systems are identified, averaging 3 m thick in, thickness, and they belong to high frequency sequences. The systems are composed of turbidite cycles of marine origin, found mainly in Laeisz and Taiózinho logs: they form thinning- and fining-upward cycles. Turbidite cycles of deltaic origin are observed in Forcação and Dona Emma logs as thickening-up and coarsening-up cycles. In the latter, are included... (Complete abstract click electronic access below)
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Analysis And Prediction Of Compaction Characteristics Of Soils - An Integrated ApproachManoj, M 03 1900 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Elasto-Plastic Modelling Of Fine Grained Soils - A Variable Moduli ApproachShantharajanna, H R 07 1900 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Modifikace mikrostruktury hořčíkové slitiny Elektron 21 pomocí technologie elektronového paprsku / Modification of Elektron 21 magnesium alloy microstructure via electron beam treatmentHanáček, Josef January 2018 (has links)
This work presents a basic research on the influence of electron beam technology modification on chemical, structural and phases changes of Elektron 21 magnesium alloy. The samples were systematically modified under various parameters of the electron beam and coatings on their respective surfaces were deposited via controlled plasma electrolytic oxidation (PEO) subsequently. The influence of the EB modification on the PEO coating formation was observed. Several samples with remelted fine-grained surface layer were obtained. Having a thickness of 10^1 to 10^3 µm, the average grain sizes in this layer were quantitatively evaluated. The performed EDS analysis revealed in identical chemical composition of the remelted surface layer and the original alloy material, despite the detected sample weight loss upon the EB treatment. XRD analysis revealed an increased content of Mg3(Nd,Gd) intermetallic phase in the remelted area. The PEO coatings were more compact and less porous as compared with their counterpart coatings on the original, unmodified alloy material.The results of the presented work showed, among others, a suitable microstructure and chemical composition of some of the modified samples that could potentially exhibit enhanced corrosion resistance as opposed to the unmodified material. The corrosion testing will be part of a follow-up study. More compact PEO coatings formed on some of the modified surface layers likely represent, too, a more durable variant as compared to the original material.
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