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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.
181

Development of a meso-scale liquid-fueled burner for electricity generation through the use of thermoelectric modules

Rechen, Ross Michael 12 July 2011 (has links)
The goal of this research was to design, build and test a small burner and heat exchanger system that could be used as a source of heat for thermoelectric modules (TEMs) for the purpose of generating portable electric power for soldiers in the field. The project was conducted as a subcontract to Marlow Industries Inc. which was under contract from the U.S. Army. The scale of the burner thermal output was to be in the approximate range of 2 kW of heat production and it was to be able to operate on a liquid fuel, specifically JP8. The first burner investigated was a custom burner designed and built at UT. It was tested with various fuel and air delivery systems. Different methods to start it, with the goal of developing an electrical starting system, were also investigated. It was capable of operating at outputs over 1 kW, but was difficult to start reliably and fuel vaporization characteristics were sensitive to operating conditions. Two commercial burners were also studied, each with somewhat different designs. One of those burners, manufactured by MSR, was chosen to be further tested in conjunction with a heat exchanger and thermoelectric modules. The performance of the thermoelectric modules used in this study was determined to be very dependent on an attached resistive load, with a peak power output occurring at approximately 3 ohms. Power output was also determined to increase linearly with increasing temperature difference between the hot and cold sides of the module. Power output followed similar trends as open circuit voltage. The temperatures of the heat exchanger across its width were very uniform, but the accuracy in centering the heat exchanger over the burner could significantly affect temperatures. The time to reach steady state temperatures was relatively insensitive to the length of the heat exchanger. The presence of attached thermoelectric modules reduced the temperature of the heat exchangers and exhaust gas slightly. Reducing the heat exchanger length resulted in higher metal temperatures. Without cooling the cold side of the thermoelectric modules, performance increased while the system was heating up, but then dropped after reaching a peak. Cold side cooling improved thermoelectric performance by increasing its temperature difference. Active cooling with a blower and heat sink provided even better performance than passive cooling using just a heat sink at the expense of a larger parasitic load. The TEMs on the 5 inch long heat exchanger could generate 6.32 W with passive cooling, but active cooling would produce no net power. The 11 inch long heat exchanger could generate 12.8 W with passive cooling, and 16 W net could be generated with active cooling. A heat exchanger efficiency calculation showed that the 16, 11 and 5 inch long heat exchangers were about 94.4%, 93.4%, and 90.7% efficient respectively. This efficiency was defined as the ratio of the heat transferred to the heat exchanger to the heat released in the flame. / text
182

Primary Decomposition in Non Finitely Generated Modules

Muiny, Somaya 21 April 2009 (has links)
In this paper, we study primary decomposition of any proper submodule N of a module M over a noetherian ring R. We start by briefly discussing basic facts about the very well known case where M is a finitely generated module over a Noetherian ring R, then we proceed to discuss the general case where M is any module over a Noetherian ring R. We put a lot of focus on the associated primes that occur with the primary decomposition, essentially studying their uniqueness and their relation to the associated primes of M/N.
183

Microwave/millimeter wave multi-layer organic based interconnects

Pham, Anh-Vu Huynh 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
184

A parallel digital interconnect test methodology for multi-chip module substrate networks

Newman, Kimberly Eileen 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
185

Analysis of interconnect yield for a high throughput flip chip assembly process

McGovern, Lawrence P. 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
186

Flip chip on flex for low cost electronics assembly

Venton, Jennifer Lynne 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
187

Advanced encapsulation processing for low cost electronics assembly

Pascarella, Nathan William 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
188

C*-modules et opérateurs d'entrelacement associés à la série principale de groupes de Lie semi-simples

Clare, Pierre 23 September 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Cette thèse est consacrée à l'étude de la série principale unitaire de certains groupes de Lie semi-simples, du point de vue de la géométrie non-commutative. Pour une famille de sous-groupes paraboliques minimaux de composante de Levi L fixée, nous décrivons la famille des représentations de la série principale unitaire associées au moyen de C*-modules sur C*(L). Cette construction s'inspire de celle des modules d'induction de M. A. Rieffel et nous proposons plusieurs modèles pour les C*-modules obtenus, qui reflètent à ce niveau global les réalisations classiques des représentations de la série principale. En rang réel 1, nous caractérisons certains opérateurs bornés sur ces modules, obtenant ainsi un résultat d'irréductibilité analogue à celui de F. Bruhat dans le cas classique. Nous démontrons ensuite la convergence, sur des sous-modules, d'intégrales d'entrelacement analogues à celles définissant les opérateurs de Knapp et Stein. Ces intégrales peuvent être décomposées en somme d'un opérateur densément défini et vraisemblablement borné, d'un opérateur densément défini et d'un terme résiduel, étudiés séparément. Nous indiquons enfin, dans certains cas particuliers, une procédure de normalisation aboutissant à la construction d'opérateurs d'entrelacement unitaires entre C*-modules. Ces opérateurs manifestent l'action du groupe de Weyl régissant les équivalences entre représentations de la série principale au niveau de la C*-algèbre réduite du groupe.
189

ModuleInducer: Automating the Extraction of Knowledge from Biological Sequences

Korol, Oksana 14 October 2011 (has links)
In the past decade, fast advancements have been made in the sequencing, digitalization and collection of the biological data. However the bottleneck remains at the point of analysis and extraction of patterns from the data. We have developed a method that is aimed at widening this bottleneck by automating the knowledge extraction from the biological data. Our approach is aimed at discovering patterns in a set of DNA sequences based on the location of transcription factor binding sites or any other biological markers with the emphasis of discovering relationships. A variety of statistical and computational methods exists to analyze such data. However, they either require an initial hypothesis, which is later tested, or classify the data based on its attributes. Our approach does not require an initial hypothesis and the classification it produces is based on the relationships between attributes. The value of such approach is that is is able to uncover new knowledge about the data by inducing a general theory based on basic known rules. The core of our approach lies in an inductive logic programming engine, which, based on positive and negative examples as well as background knowledge, is able to induce a descriptive, human-readable theory, describing the data. An application provides an end-to-end analysis of DNA sequences. A simple to use Web interface accepts a set of related sequences to be analyzed, set of negative example sequences to contrast the main set (optional), and a set of possible genetic markers as position-specific scoring matrices. A Java-based backend formats the sequences, determines the location of the genetic markers inside them and passes the information to the ILP engine, which induces the theory. The model, assumed in our background knowledge, is a set of basic interactions between biological markers in any DNA sequence. This makes our approach applicable to analyze a wide variety of biological problems, including detection of cis-regulatory modules and analysis of ChIP-Sequencing experiments. We have evaluated our method in the context of such applications on two real world datasets as well as a number of specially designed synthetic datasets. The approach has shown to have merit even in situations when no significant classification could be determined.
190

Uniform modules over serial rings.

Lelwala, Menaka. Muller, Bruno, J. Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--McMaster University (Canada), 1995. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 57-03, Section: B, page: 1845. Adviser: B. J. Mueller.

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