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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.
581

Evaluation of long-hole mine design influences on unplanned ore dilution

Henning, John Gordon. January 2007 (has links)
Unplanned ore dilution or stope overbreak, which has a direct and large influence on the cost of a stope, and ultimately on the profitability of a mining operation, can be attributed to both the mining process and to geologic setting. The research undertaken in this document, applicable to a wide range of underground mines employing the blasthole mining method to extract tabular orebodies, focuses on examining factors attributable to the generation of unstable stope hanging-walls. / The primary objective of the research undertaken is to establish new models for stope and orezone design, with respect to anticipated stope overbreak, focusing on the position and type of stope within the orezone extraction sequence. Identified factors influencing unplanned dilution, such as: induced stress environment, stope geometry, and the setting of individual stopes are considered. / The research undertaken incorporates a variety of components, including (i) parametric 3-D numerical modelling to examine influences of individual factors on hanging-wall overbreak, (ii) case example analysis, and (iii) orezone extraction sequence simulation, using 3-D elastic numerical modelling. Design criteria, developed from the parametric modelling, was applied to the orezone sequence modelling to develop trends for stope dilution, as functions of stope design and construction. / It was found that hanging-wall overbreak is not significantly influenced by depth alone, and that stopes with large vertical and short horizontal dimensions or stopes having long horizontal and short vertical dimensions are more stable than large square-like stopes. Also, through parametric and case studies, it was demonstrated that, in addition to stope dimension, the amount of unplanned dilution differed according to stope type. Five stope types were identified, based on their position within a tabular blasthole mining sequence. Measured overbreak varies with stope type, with secondary stopes generating a greater volume of hanging-wall dilution than do primary stopes. A pillarless mining sequence will generate less overall dilution than a primary stope: secondary pillar mining sequence.
582

Characterization of the Ground Thermal Response to Heating by a Deep Vertical Borehole Heat Exchanger

Olfman, Maeir Zalman 13 January 2012 (has links)
This thesis presents an experiment and an analysis that evaluates some of the long-standing assumptions in deep vertical borehole ground heat exchanger (GHX) theory. These assumptions neglect ground heterogeneity and depth variations in GHX output and the ground temperature response (GTR). This thesis describes an apparatus and an experiment that measured the GTR at several depths, times, and at two different horizontal distances from a GHX both during and immediately after its operation. This thesis also reports the temperature response data, which may not be available from other sources in such detail. The experiment showed that the GTR can be highly depth dependant. The analysis involved a parametric study to characterize the GTR by developing an effective computer simulation of the experiment. The analysis showed that ground heterogeneity significantly affected the GTR and the GHX output in this study. Furthermore, this GHX output showed depth and time, dependence.
583

Co-disposal of low-level radioactive waste within sanitary landfills

Chang, Ker-Chi 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
584

Ground freeze-thaw, snow and roads in northern Sweden

Sarady, Maria January 2014 (has links)
In this thesis freeze-thaw along roads in northern Sweden is examined. The examinations are put in a context of changing climate and its amplification towards the Arctic region on earth. The research focuses on the impact of a warmer climate on ground freeze-thaw and in exten- sion road maintenance in the region. The investigation is presented through two scientific papers, where the first examines how ground temperatures are developed during a single frost season experiment, where a natural accumulation of snow cover and a continual removal of snow cover occur respectively. In the second paper, ground temperature data from sub-Arctic Sweden that has been logged by the Swedish Transport Administration, has been collected and freeze-thaw cycles have been calculated and analysed. The results are related to regional landscape factors and are in the context of regional climate change discussed to reach understanding of challenges for road maintenance in the region and opportunities to reach resilience. The results in Paper 1 show that also a thin cover of snow has impact on the freeze-thaw frequency, duration and intensity that occur in and on the surface of the ground. Furthermore the results show that the ground temperatures rise in due to an increase in snow cover amounts and that this process occurs in several steps. Paper 2 shows that the occurrence of ground freeze-thaw is affected by the proximity to open waters. Warmer temperatures in the air may cause later ice freeze-up and earlier ice break-up on lakes, rivers and on the Gulf of Bothnia and roads in northern Sweden are in general situated on the coast or near rivers. Ground temperatures around 0 °C has a high negative impact on road stability and a warmer and wetter climate in northern Sweden may thus increase road deterioration. The economic development in Sweden stays dependent on extraction of natural resources in sub-Arctic Sweden and thus it is of major concern to main- tain and improve road infrastructure in the region.
585

Development of a Computer-Aided Accelerated Durability Testing Method for Ground Vehicle Components

Shafiullah, A. K. M. 03 April 2012 (has links)
Presently in ground vehicle industries, conducting durability tests with a high acceleration factor have become increasingly demanding for the less time and cost involvement. In the previous work, to accelerate the field test, the standard ‘test tailoring’ approach has been modified due to the requirement of high acceleration factors and the limitations of testing implementation. In this study, a computer-aided testing method is developed for the validation of this modified approach. Hence, a new test-piece has been designed by a conjugative approach involving the finite element technique and fatigue analysis. Afterwards, the accelerated durability loading profiles synthesized via the modified approach have been applied on the designed test-piece and the fatigue life has been simulated to verify the effectiveness of those loading profiles. Simulation results show that loading profiles with an acceleration factor up to 330 can be successfully generated with an accuracy of 95% by this modified approach.
586

Ground dwelling beetle assemblages of remnant and created prairies of east-central Indiana

Brown, Angela M. January 2004 (has links)
Prairie restorations in east-central Indiana are commonly accomplished through purposeful planting of prairie vegetation, with the belief that prairie fauna will populate the planting independently at a later time. The objective of this study was to determine whether one assemblage, the ground dwelling beetles, would in fact re-populate tallgrass prairie restorations in a region where tallgrass prairie remnants are rare and highly fragmented. Two prairie remnants and five prairie plantings were sampled using pitfall traps from 21 May to 4 October 2003. Nine hundred forty-three beetles were collected, identified to family, and separated into morphospecies. Shannon diversity was greatest in the CR 575 E Cemetery prairie remnant, and increased linearly with increasing age in the created prairies, with the exception of the 1-year old prairie. TWINSPAN analysis grouped the two remnant prairies together in the first division, indicating that beetle assemblages of remnant prairies are more similar to each other than to created prairies. / Department of Biology
587

Anbauempfehlungen Schnellwachsende Baumarten im Kurzumtrieb / Cultivation recommendations quick-growing types of tree in the short machination

18 March 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Der Anbau von schnellwachsenden Baumarten im Kurzumtrieb auf landwirtschaftlichen Flächen ist eine spezielle Produktionsrichtung in der landwirtschaftlichen Pflanzenproduktion. Im zwei- bis zwanzigjährigen Umtrieb werden Schwachholzsortimente erzeugt, die als Brennstoff oder Industrieholz verwendet werden können. Diese Form des Anbaus unterscheidet sich von der forstlichen Nutzung durch wesentlich höhere Stammzahlen pro Hektar, geringere Stammdurchmesser und Stammeinzelgewichte. In der Fachbroschüre wird ein Überblick von der Pflanzung über Pflege- und Schutzmaßnahmen, die Umweltwirkung bis zur Ernte von schnellwachsenden Baumarten auf Kurzumtriebsplantagen gegeben. Gleichzeitig wird über Fragen der stofflichen und energetischen Verwertung als nachwachsender Rohstoff sowie der Wirtschaftlichkeit informiert.
588

SAME GROUND : musik från min sanna grund

Olivegren Wessblad, Hanna January 2014 (has links)
Mitt arbete handlar om redan från de att jag startade mitt eget band Ridge fram tills dess att vi släppte vår debutskiva Same Ground. Om att våga göra musik från sitt hjärta,att tveka,kämpa,repa,spela in och att släppa skiva på eget bolag. Det handlar också om min uppväxt och hur det påverkat mig. Jag skriver reflekterande om processen. / <p>Bilaga: 1 CD</p>
589

Karaktäristiken hos strukturmarken på olika altitud i Abiskoområdet – en koppling till klimat och komplex systemteori

Scharin, Gunnar January 2014 (has links)
Subarctic and alpine areas are sensitive to climatic change when they lie at the margin of permafrost occurrence. Patterned ground in such areas is generated from an interplay among different mechanisms such as temperature, hydrology, soil texture, snow cower and vegetation. The aim of this study is to describe the connection between patterned ground characteristics and altitude and to evaluate the impact different variables have on the appearance of patterned ground. To understand these interactions is a discussion of self-organization processes, threshold effects and feedback mechanisms essential.  In this investigation, characteristics of patterned ground are examined along an elevation gradient in the Abisko area in Northern Sweden. The study is limited to formations that are categorized into non-sorted circles on flat ground. To detect significant correlations between the characteristics of patterned ground and altitude nine places between 400 and 1400 m above sea level with at least 100 m difference in altitudes were investigated. These sites were categorized into six ridges and three sinks to evaluate the importance of topography. Non-sorted circles have less dwarf shrub, more moss-lichen cover and more cryptogam crust than surrounding ground. Outside the formations the amount of dwarf shrub decreases and the moss-lichen cover increases above 1000 m above sea level. At the highest altitude also a cryptogam crust is occurring around non sorted circles. Significant correlations exist between declining ground temperature and altitude, declining distance between non-sorted circles and altitude, and less dwarf shrub vegetation on non-sorted circles and altitude. These relationships are expected and can be connected to cryoturbation and abiotic stress. Shorter distance between formations can be linked to increased abiotic stress and less coverage soil stabilizing dwarf shrub vegetation. Formations are larger in sinks than ridges and surrounded by less dwarf shrub and more moss-lichen vegetation. This difference can be explained by longer snow duration, humid soil conditions and prolonged freezing processes in ground. Non-sorted circles on an east aspect slope ridge at about 900 meters altitude is characterized by low soil temperatures, high soil moisture, low height and low coverage plants. Around these formations is a well-developed ground cover consisting primarily of dwarf shrub vegetation. These observations are a sign of positive interaction resulting in strong self-generating soil movements that have exceeded a threshold when breaking through vegetation cover. Low soil temperature and high moisture at the time of measurement might be explained by existing ice-front and free water convection. These patterned ground characteristics can be linked to permafrost, the inflow of water from higher leeward slopes and thin snow cower.
590

Investigations of rc-loaded bow-tie antennas for impulse ground penetrating radar applications

Su, Hong 19 September 2006 (has links)
This thesis reports on the investigations of resistive-capacitive (RC) loaded bow-tie antennas with special emphasis on impulse ground penetrating radar applications. Impulse radiation for ground penetrating radar is a challenging research topic because of the unique problem arising from impulse radiation: late-time ringing, which usually masks the important echo signals from the targets. While resistive loading is a common solution for eliminating late-time ringing, use of resistive loading typically sacrifices the radiation efficiency. In this thesis, a resistive-capacitive loading technique is investigated for a circular bow-tie antenna in the attempt to reduce/suppress the late-time ringing as well as to maintain a relatively high radiation efficiency. To implement the system, a microstrip differentiator, which converts a monopulse into a Gaussian-like monocycle to be used as input impulse, is presented. Further, specially designed coplanar waveguide/coplanar strip (CPW/CPS) baluns embedded with Chebyshev transformers of characteristic impedance up to 120 have been constructed and tested. To evaluate the system, instead of using the conventional peak voltage value of the radiated waveform, average radiated energy, average ringing energy, relative radiation efficiency and relative ringing efficiency are utilized and these metrics are easily established using low-cost low-sensitivity probes. Measurement results show that the RC-loading scheme is functioning as expected and the impulse system as a whole is capable of reducing the late-time ringing energy to 50% while maintaining average radiation energy as 83% when compared with capacitive loading cases.

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