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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.
41

"Síntese de Zeólitas e Wolastonita à partir da cinza da casca do arroz" / ZEOLITE AND WOLASTONITE SYNTHESIS FROM RICE HULL ASH

Alberto de Andrade Fernandes 11 July 2006 (has links)
A cinza da casca do arroz (CCA) é um resíduo rico em sílica amorfa. Um método simples e de baixo consumo energético para extração desta sílica foi pesquisado, obtendo-se um material com baixo teor de impurezas e alta reatividade, adequado para a síntese de zeólitas e wolastonita (CaSiO3). As zeólitas sintéticas, que não possuem estruturas similares na natureza, são cada vez mais valorizadas no mercado devido a pureza e eficiência em aplicações específicas nas áreas de troca iônica, peneira molecular e catálise. A wolastonita com elevado grau de pureza tem várias aplicações na indústria e agricultura. O mineral wolastonita pode ser formado de várias maneiras na natureza. Em geral é aceito que existem dois processos de formação; os quais envolvem o metamorfismo (calor e pressão) do calcário. Neste trabalho, foi desenvolvido um novo processo para a síntese das zeólitas e da wolastonita, ambas a partir da sílica coloidal da CCA; tendo como objetivo um processo de um menor custo energético, menor número de etapas e menor consumo de reagentes. Foram sintetizadas neste trabalho as zeólitas: A, usada em detergentes, e a ZSM-5, empregada na indústria petroquímica, devido a sua alta seletividade em reações catalíticas e grande estabilidade térmica e resistência aos ácidos. A primeira etapa na síntese da wolastonita foi estudada com o objetivo da formação do hidrossilicato de cálcio (CSH). Contudo, onze hidrossilicatos de cálcio diferentes ocorrem no sistema Ca(OH)2-SiO2-H2O que em uma segunda etapa passam por um tratamento térmico para dar formação a fase wolastonita. / Rice hull ash (RHA) is a industry scrap rich in amorphous silica. A simple and low-energy cost method for the extraction of this silica was researched. A low level of impurity and high reactivity material was produced, which is appropriate for the synthesis of zeolites and wolastonite (CaSiO3). The synthetic zeolites, has not similar structures in nature, and they have been more and more valued in the market due to their purity and efficiency in specific applications like ion exchange, molecular sieve and catalysis areas. High purity wolastonite has many applications in manufacturing and agriculture. The mineral wolastonite can be formed in nature in different ways; it is generally accepted two forming processes, both encompassing limestone metamorphism (heat and pressure). In this work, a new process for the synthesis of zeolites and wolastonite from RHA colloidal silica was developed. Moreover, the process is aimed at lower energy costs, fewer stages and fewer reactants consume. In this work, zeolite A used in detergent and zeolite ZSM-5, employed in the petrochemical industry due to its high selectivity in catalytic reactions and its high thermo and acid stability, were synthesized. The first step of the wolastonite synthesis was studied, with the purpose of obtaining calcium hydrosilicate. Eleven different hydrosilicates occur in the system Ca(OH)2-SiO2-H2O, in the second step, it was annealed to form the wolastonite phase.
42

Avaliação da influência da tensão residual na instabilidade de cascos resistentes de submarinos / Residual stress assessment in submarine pressure hull instability

Paulo Rogério Franquetto 16 September 2015 (has links)
Na construção de cascos resistentes de submarinos são utilizados, frequentemente, os processos de conformação a frio e de soldagem. Estes processos produzem na estrutura deformações plásticas permanentes originando tensões residuais. A presença das tensões residuais é equivalente a introduzir uma pré-carga inicial na estrutura, o que acelera o processo de plastificação, reduzindo à capacidade de resistência da estrutura à pressão hidrostática. Para quantificar esta redução foi realizado, inicialmente, um estudo considerando a presença das tensões residuais devido à conformação a frio das chapas do casco e do flange das cavernas, para submarinos com 6, 8 e 10 m de diâmetro, em aço HY100. Para isso, um modelo não-linear foi produzido considerando não-linearidades geométricas e de material. Complementarmente, também foi estudada a influência de perfis de tensões residuais definidos a partir de resultados experimentais na redução da pressão de colapso do casco resistente do submarino espanhol S-80. Estes perfis consideram a presença simultânea de tensões residuais de conformação e de soldagem. Em todos os modelos estudados, as tensões residuais foram introduzidas no modelo numérico utilizando o comando INISTATE disponível no software comercial Ansys. Este comando é frequentemente utilizado na literatura em modelos numéricos envolvendo tensões residuais e foi validado utilizando três modelos de referência disponíveis na literatura. Ao final, pôde-se verificar que a presença das tensões residuais acelera a plastificação do casco resistente e reduz a pressão de colapso em até 5%, sendo a tensão residual de conformação a que mais contribuí nesta redução. De qualquer forma, pôde-se concluir que a influência das tensões residuais é pequena quando comparada com a pressão de colapso obtida para cada casco resistente analisado. / During the manufacturing of submarine pressure hull are often applied processes like cold forming and welding. Those processes lead to permanent plastic deformations which are associated with residual stresses. The presence of residual stresses is equivalent to the introduction of an initial pre-load in the structure, which accelerates the plastification process, decreasing hull pressure resistance. To quantify this reduction, a case study that considers residual stresses due to cold forming on hull and flange plates has been performed. The study encompasses hull diameters of 6, 8 and 10 m, made of HY100 steel. A nonlinear model has been done, considering material and geometric non-linearity. Complementarily, the influence of experimental residual stresses profiles on the reduction of collapse pressure of the Spanish S-80 submarine has been studied. These profiles consider the simultaneous presence of residual stresses due to cold forming and welding. In all studied models, the residual stresses have been introduced in the numerical models through INISTATE Ansys software command. This command has been validated using three reference models available in open source literature. In the end, it has been possible to verify that the presence of residual stresses increase the hull plastification and reduces the collapse pressure up to 5%, being the cold forming induced stress which most contributes to this reduction. Finally, it could be concluded, in the end of the study, that the influence of the residual stresses is small when compared with the collapse pressure obtained for the analyzed pressure hulls.
43

Modeling and monitoring of the price process of Credit Default Swaps

Loshkina, Anna, Malysheva, Elena January 2008 (has links)
<p>Credit derivatives are very popular on financial markets in recent days.</p><p>The most liquid credit derivative is a credit default swap (CDS). In</p><p>this research we investigate methods for modeling and monitoring of the</p><p>price process of CDS. We study Hull and White model to calculate CDS</p><p>spread and have data for our analysis. We consider different methods for</p><p>monitoring of the price process of CDS. In particular we study CUSUM</p><p>method. And we calculate more commonly used perfomance measures</p><p>for this method.</p>
44

Shortest Paths, Network Design and Associated Polyhedra

Magnanti, Thomas L., Mirchandani, Prakash 04 1900 (has links)
We study a specialized version of network design problems that arise in telecommunication, transportation and other industries. The problem, a generalization of the shortest path problem, is defined on an undirected network consisting of a set of arcs on which we can install (load), at a cost, a choice of up to three types of capacitated facilities. Our objective is to determine the configuration of facilities to load on each arc that will satisfy the demand of a single commodity at the lowest possible cost. Our results (i) demonstrate that the single-facility loading problem and certain "common breakeven point" versions of the two-facility and three-facility loading problems are polynomially solvable as a shortest path problem; (ii) show that versions of the twofacility loading problem are strongly NP-hard, but that a shortest path solution provides an asymptotically "good" heuristic; and (iii) characterize the optimal solution (that is, specify a linear programming formulation with integer solutions) of the common breakeven point versions of the two-facility and three-facility loading problems. In this development, we introduce two new families of facets, give geometric interpretations of our results, and demonstrate the usefulness of partitioning the space of the problem parameters to establish polyhedral integrality properties. Generalizations of our results apply to (i) multicommodity applications and (ii) situations with more than three facilities.
45

A Statistical Image-Based Shape Model for Visual Hull Reconstruction and 3D Structure Inference

Grauman, Kristen 22 May 2003 (has links)
We present a statistical image-based shape + structure model for Bayesian visual hull reconstruction and 3D structure inference. The 3D shape of a class of objects is represented by sets of contours from silhouette views simultaneously observed from multiple calibrated cameras. Bayesian reconstructions of new shapes are then estimated using a prior density constructed with a mixture model and probabilistic principal components analysis. We show how the use of a class-specific prior in a visual hull reconstruction can reduce the effect of segmentation errors from the silhouette extraction process. The proposed method is applied to a data set of pedestrian images, and improvements in the approximate 3D models under various noise conditions are shown. We further augment the shape model to incorporate structural features of interest; unknown structural parameters for a novel set of contours are then inferred via the Bayesian reconstruction process. Model matching and parameter inference are done entirely in the image domain and require no explicit 3D construction. Our shape model enables accurate estimation of structure despite segmentation errors or missing views in the input silhouettes, and works even with only a single input view. Using a data set of thousands of pedestrian images generated from a synthetic model, we can accurately infer the 3D locations of 19 joints on the body based on observed silhouette contours from real images.
46

Hull, ferulic acid, para-coumaric acid content and particle size characteristics of various barley varieties in relation to nutrient availability in ruminants

Du, Liqin 12 January 2009
The fibrous barley hull is the main reason for barleys low available energy relative to corn. Barley grain contains hydroxycinnamic acids (mainly ferulic acid (FA) and ñ-coumaric acid (PCA)) which are cross-linked to polysaccharides, therefore, limit cell wall degradability in the rumen. Paricle size of barley grain also affects the digestion of barley in the rumen. The objective of this study was to evaluate a set of barley varieties grown in Saskatchewan (Canada) and provided by Crop Development Center (CDC, Canada) and find a variety with low hull, FA, PCA and fiber content, while maintaining large particle size after mechanical processing, and having high nutrient availability.<p> Three studies were conducted to determine the content of barley hull, FA, PCA, neutral detergent fiber (NDF), acid detergent fiber (ADF) and acid detergent lignin (ADL) in various barley varities. Mean/median particle size of the barley grain after coarse dry-rolling was also determined. The relationships among these parameters and the digestibility of barley grain in ruminants were then assessed. Six barley varieties (AC Metcalfe, CDC Dolly, McLeod, CDC Helgason, CDC Trey and CDC Cowboy) from samples grown in three years (2003, 2004 and 2005) were evaluated in each study.<p> The first study determined the original content of barley hull, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF, ADL, and mean/median particle size of barley grain and evaluated the effects of barley variety. The results showed barley variety had a significant impact on the chemical and physical profiles of barley grain, with CDC Helgason and CDC Dolly showing relatively lower content of barley hull, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF, ADL, hemicellulose and cellulose, and moderate mean/median particle size, whereas McLeod and CDC Cowboy showed the opposite.<p> The second study involved two consecutive trials. Trial 1 was to assess differences in the in situ rumen degradability of dry matter (DM), FA, PCA, NDF, ADF and ADL at 12 and 24 h of rumen incubations. Results revealed that CDC Dolly consistently showed relatively lower rumen residues of DM, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF and ADL at 12 and 24 h, with McLeod being opposite. Barley variety displayed some effects on the digestibility of DM, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF and ADL at 12 and 24 h. Since CDC Dolly demonstrated relatively less content of hull, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF, ADL and mean/median particle size and higher rumen digestibility among the six barley varieties, while McLeod was the opposite, CDC Dolly and McLeod were selected for the third trial in order to compare differences in the rumen degradation kinetics of DM, FA and PCA. Trial 2 did not show significant differences in effective degradation of DM, FA, except for PCA. In general, CDC Dolly exhibited better degradability of DM, FA and PCA than McLeod.<p> The third study analyzed the correlation and regression between the original content of barley hull, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF, ADL and mean/median particle size in barley grain and rumen residual content of the corresponding parameters at 12 and 24 h of rumen incubation. Results showed that FA content in barley grain had a predominantly negative effect on DM degradability, while barley hull content affected the degradability of NDF and ADF.<p> In summary, the present studies show that hull and FA content in barley grain have negative effects on the degradability of barley grain in ruminants and also showed that CDC Dolly could be an ideal feed barley grain for ruminants due to its lower hull and FA content and higher rumen dry matter degradability.
47

Fibre fortification to increase stool frequency in children with a history of constipation

Flogan, Carla 14 January 2009
Constipation is a serious problem in the pediatric population and often requires medical management with laxatives and enemas. Participants (2-10 years of age, n=13) with a history of mild constipation were assigned randomly to a fibre treatment or placebo group. After three weeks, subjects were crossed over to the other treatment. Pea hull fibre (4.0-7.6 g/day = 3.6-6.8 g/day of dietary fibre) was added to snack foods and an inulin supplement (5.0 g/day = 4.5 g/day of dietary fibre) was given, whereas the placebos were non-fortified snacks and maltodextrin (5.0 g/day).<p> Subjects or their parents documented stool frequency, stool consistency, occurrence of abdominal pain and intake of snack foods and the supplement. Over the final two weeks, there was a trend towards an increase in the mean number of daily bowel movements in the fibre treatment group compared to the placebo group (n=11, 0.68 ± 0.18 vs. 0.59 ± 0.26, p=0.064). Exclusion of one subject with diarrhea-type stools led to a significant difference between groups (n=10, 0.54 ± 0.18 vs. 0.67 ± 0.22, p=0.002). Stool consistency, using the Bristol Stool Form Rating Scale, showed no significant differences in stool consistency between groups (p=0.379) nor was there a difference in the incidences of abdominal pain (p=0.129). Not all subjects experienced abdominal pain. The inulin supplement (91% compliance rate; 1 serving per day) was consumed more consistently than were the snack foods fortified with pea hull fibre (77% compliance rate; 2 servings per day). There were no significant differences in the intake of the snacks or supplement when the placebo and treatment groups were compared. Energy intake was significantly lower during the fibre treatment period compared to placebo (n=12, 1307 ± 296 kcal/day vs. 1441 ± 285 kcal/day, p=0.035). The addition of pea hull fibre to typical snack foods and an inulin supplement to beverages were well accepted by children and no adverse effects were reported. Fibre fortification of snack foods with pea hull fibre and fibre supplementation of beverages with inulin may provide an alternative means to treat pediatric constipation.
48

Hull, ferulic acid, para-coumaric acid content and particle size characteristics of various barley varieties in relation to nutrient availability in ruminants

Du, Liqin 12 January 2009 (has links)
The fibrous barley hull is the main reason for barleys low available energy relative to corn. Barley grain contains hydroxycinnamic acids (mainly ferulic acid (FA) and ñ-coumaric acid (PCA)) which are cross-linked to polysaccharides, therefore, limit cell wall degradability in the rumen. Paricle size of barley grain also affects the digestion of barley in the rumen. The objective of this study was to evaluate a set of barley varieties grown in Saskatchewan (Canada) and provided by Crop Development Center (CDC, Canada) and find a variety with low hull, FA, PCA and fiber content, while maintaining large particle size after mechanical processing, and having high nutrient availability.<p> Three studies were conducted to determine the content of barley hull, FA, PCA, neutral detergent fiber (NDF), acid detergent fiber (ADF) and acid detergent lignin (ADL) in various barley varities. Mean/median particle size of the barley grain after coarse dry-rolling was also determined. The relationships among these parameters and the digestibility of barley grain in ruminants were then assessed. Six barley varieties (AC Metcalfe, CDC Dolly, McLeod, CDC Helgason, CDC Trey and CDC Cowboy) from samples grown in three years (2003, 2004 and 2005) were evaluated in each study.<p> The first study determined the original content of barley hull, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF, ADL, and mean/median particle size of barley grain and evaluated the effects of barley variety. The results showed barley variety had a significant impact on the chemical and physical profiles of barley grain, with CDC Helgason and CDC Dolly showing relatively lower content of barley hull, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF, ADL, hemicellulose and cellulose, and moderate mean/median particle size, whereas McLeod and CDC Cowboy showed the opposite.<p> The second study involved two consecutive trials. Trial 1 was to assess differences in the in situ rumen degradability of dry matter (DM), FA, PCA, NDF, ADF and ADL at 12 and 24 h of rumen incubations. Results revealed that CDC Dolly consistently showed relatively lower rumen residues of DM, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF and ADL at 12 and 24 h, with McLeod being opposite. Barley variety displayed some effects on the digestibility of DM, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF and ADL at 12 and 24 h. Since CDC Dolly demonstrated relatively less content of hull, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF, ADL and mean/median particle size and higher rumen digestibility among the six barley varieties, while McLeod was the opposite, CDC Dolly and McLeod were selected for the third trial in order to compare differences in the rumen degradation kinetics of DM, FA and PCA. Trial 2 did not show significant differences in effective degradation of DM, FA, except for PCA. In general, CDC Dolly exhibited better degradability of DM, FA and PCA than McLeod.<p> The third study analyzed the correlation and regression between the original content of barley hull, FA, PCA, NDF, ADF, ADL and mean/median particle size in barley grain and rumen residual content of the corresponding parameters at 12 and 24 h of rumen incubation. Results showed that FA content in barley grain had a predominantly negative effect on DM degradability, while barley hull content affected the degradability of NDF and ADF.<p> In summary, the present studies show that hull and FA content in barley grain have negative effects on the degradability of barley grain in ruminants and also showed that CDC Dolly could be an ideal feed barley grain for ruminants due to its lower hull and FA content and higher rumen dry matter degradability.
49

Fibre fortification to increase stool frequency in children with a history of constipation

Flogan, Carla 14 January 2009 (has links)
Constipation is a serious problem in the pediatric population and often requires medical management with laxatives and enemas. Participants (2-10 years of age, n=13) with a history of mild constipation were assigned randomly to a fibre treatment or placebo group. After three weeks, subjects were crossed over to the other treatment. Pea hull fibre (4.0-7.6 g/day = 3.6-6.8 g/day of dietary fibre) was added to snack foods and an inulin supplement (5.0 g/day = 4.5 g/day of dietary fibre) was given, whereas the placebos were non-fortified snacks and maltodextrin (5.0 g/day).<p> Subjects or their parents documented stool frequency, stool consistency, occurrence of abdominal pain and intake of snack foods and the supplement. Over the final two weeks, there was a trend towards an increase in the mean number of daily bowel movements in the fibre treatment group compared to the placebo group (n=11, 0.68 ± 0.18 vs. 0.59 ± 0.26, p=0.064). Exclusion of one subject with diarrhea-type stools led to a significant difference between groups (n=10, 0.54 ± 0.18 vs. 0.67 ± 0.22, p=0.002). Stool consistency, using the Bristol Stool Form Rating Scale, showed no significant differences in stool consistency between groups (p=0.379) nor was there a difference in the incidences of abdominal pain (p=0.129). Not all subjects experienced abdominal pain. The inulin supplement (91% compliance rate; 1 serving per day) was consumed more consistently than were the snack foods fortified with pea hull fibre (77% compliance rate; 2 servings per day). There were no significant differences in the intake of the snacks or supplement when the placebo and treatment groups were compared. Energy intake was significantly lower during the fibre treatment period compared to placebo (n=12, 1307 ± 296 kcal/day vs. 1441 ± 285 kcal/day, p=0.035). The addition of pea hull fibre to typical snack foods and an inulin supplement to beverages were well accepted by children and no adverse effects were reported. Fibre fortification of snack foods with pea hull fibre and fibre supplementation of beverages with inulin may provide an alternative means to treat pediatric constipation.
50

A global optimization approach to pooling problems in refineries

Pham, Viet 15 May 2009 (has links)
The pooling problem is an important optimization problem that is encountered in operation and scheduling of important industrial processes within petroleum refineries. The key objective of pooling is to mix various intermediate products to achieve desired properties and quantities of products. First, intermediate streams from various processing units are mixed and stored in intermediate tanks referred to as pools. The stored streams in pools are subsequently allowed to mix to meet varying market demands. While these pools enhance the operational flexibility of the process, they complicate the decisionmaking process needed for optimization. The problem to find the least costly mixing recipe from intermediate streams to pools and then from pools to sale products is referred to as the pooling problem. The research objective is to contribute an approach to solve this problem. The pooling problem can be formulated as an optimization program whose objective is to minimize cost or maximize profit while determining the optimal allocation of intermediate streams to pools and the blending of pools to final products. Because of the presence of bilinear terms, the resulting formulation is nonconvex which makes it very difficult to attain the global solution. Consequently, there is a need to develop computationally-efficient and easy-to-implement global-optimization techniques to solve the pooling problem. In this work, a new approach is introduced for the global optimization of pooling problems. The approach is based on three concepts: linearization by discretizing nonlinear variables, pre-processing using implicit enumeration of the discretization to form a convex-hull which limits the size of the search space, and application of integer cuts to ensure compatibility between the original problem and the discretized formulation. The continuous quality variables contributing to bilinear terms are first discretized. The discretized problem is a mixed integer linear program (MILP) and can be globally solved in a computationally effective manner using branch and bound method. The merits of the proposed approach are illustrated by solving test case studies from literature and comparison with published results.

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