• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 240
  • 163
  • 35
  • 28
  • 22
  • 17
  • 14
  • 9
  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 671
  • 126
  • 119
  • 119
  • 99
  • 96
  • 66
  • 62
  • 58
  • 55
  • 52
  • 50
  • 50
  • 47
  • 47
  • 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.
191

Electroluminescence of Layer Thickness, Carbon Nano-particle Dopants, and Percolation Threshold Electric Conductivity of Fully Conjugated Rigid-rod Polymer

Chang, Chih-hao 02 July 2010 (has links)
Polymer light emitting diodes (PLED) were using a heterocyclic aromatic rigid-rod polymer poly-p-phenylene-benzobisoxazole (PBO) as an opto-electronically active layer; and poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(4-styrenesulfonic acid) (PEDOT:PSS) as a hole transporting layer. Aluminum (Al) and indium tin oxide (ITO) were served as device cathode and anode, respectively. [6,6]-phenyl C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PC61BM) or derivatized multi-wall carbon nano-tube (MWCNT-C18), with great electron transporting ability, was doped into PBO to enhance the performance of PLED devices as well as the thin-film electrical conductivity. The optical length was changed by using different spin coating speeds and durations. From the research, the £fmax of electroluminescence (EL) was blue-shifted as PEDOT:PSS spin coating speed increased for a thinner layer. Once using a higher spin coating speed repeatedly to coat PEDOT:PSS, the £fmax of electroluminescence was red-shifted. If the PEDOT:PSS film thicknesses were similar, the EL spectra were almost the same, independent of device processing scheme. The injection current and EL intensity were enhanced by doping PC61BM or MWCNT- C18. The electric conductivity parallel to film surface (£m¡ü) was increased as the doping concentration increased. Because of the extremely different aspect ratio, the MWCNT-C18 had a lower percolation threshold concentration. Therefore, at a low MWCNT-C18 doping concentration, the injection current and the EL intensity were enhanced compared with those of PC61BM.
192

Design of Conjugate Cam Mechanisms for Internal Combustion Engines

Chung, Huai-Sheng 04 January 2012 (has links)
Due to the kinematic limitation of slider-crank mechanisms used in traditional internal combustion engines, such devices driven by their piston motions have a difficulty to reach the better fuel efficiency. In order to make the fuel efficiency better, many engine mechanisms that can be tuned to obtain desired piston motions have been proposed. Since most of the proposed engine mechanisms have complex linkages and bulky size, they become impractical for real applications. The design of a conjugate cam engine mechanism containing a conjugate cam with a slider crank mechanism can be conveniently tuned to produce a desired piston motion in consideration of a limited space, weight, and the number of linkages. The aim of this research is to set up a systematic design and analysis procedure for conjugate cam engine mechanisms. First of all, the kinematic analysis of conjugate cam engine mechanisms is performed based on the rigid body transformation method to determinate the conjugate cam profiles. Then, the geometric properties including the pressure angle and radius of curvature are investigated. Also, in order to characterize the rigid body dynamic behavior of the mechanism, the Newton¡¦s Law is used to derive equations of motion. Finally, it is conducted to design and analyze a real system, and observe the real condition from the experiment to prove the theory is correct.
193

Synthesis and Characterization of Benzobisthiazole Derived Polymers

Chen, Chien-Fan 29 March 2004 (has links)
In this study, two series of polymers based on benzobisthiazole were synthesized. The poly(benzobisthiazoles) (PBTs) have been synthesized by the solution polycondensation of 2,5-diamino-1,4-benzenedithiol in poly(phosphoric acid)s (PPA). The diacids used were systematically varied to find the best for the solubilization of the aromatic heterocyclic rigid-rod polymers. The role of PPA is identified and the effects of phosphorous pentoxide and water on PBT during polycondensation are discussed. Polymer properties such as the inherent viscosity, decomposition temperature are correlated to systematically varied diacids. Finally, the effect of diacid architecture on the synthesis and microstructure of PBT is studied. The results are further discussed in terms of resonance, symmetry, and solubilization of the diacids. Next, we extend the rigidity and resonance of benzobisthiazole for the application as second-order nonlinear optics. Novel nonlinear optical (NLO) polyimides containing benzobisthiazole chromophores have been synthesized. The soluble polyimides containing different ratios of carboxylic acids (COOH) were first prepared and the precursors of NLO chromophores reacted with those carboxylic acids, followed by the benzobisthiazole derived chromophores synthesized at 300 oC under vaccum. The formation of benzobisthiazole was evidenced by FTIR and UV-vis spectra in combination with the analysis of model polyimides. The excellent thermal properties of those NLO polyimides were examined by TGA and TMA. PI-1 shows thermal decomposition temperature as high as 554 oC at 10 wt % loss and a Tg of 324 oC. The amorphous morphology of those polyimides was verified by XRD traces and some ordered alignments were found, due to the rigidity of the benzobisthiazole derivatize chromophores. The electrooptic coefficient of PI-1 (r33 = 5.3 pm/V) was obtained.
194

Package of Homojunction of Fully Conjugated Heterocyclic Aromatic Rigid-rod Polymer Light Emitting Diodes

Liao, Hung-chi 20 July 2004 (has links)
The focus of this study is mono-layer polymer light emitting diode (PLED). The emitting layer is poly-p-phenylenebenzobisoxazole (PBO). PBO is a fully conjugated heterocyclic aromatic rigid-rod polymer. Anode is indium-tin-oxide (ITO). Cathode is aluminum (Al). We used UV epoxy resin to package PLED devices, then measured current-voltage response, electroluminescence (EL) emission, and device lifetime. We demonstrate that the packaged mono-layer PBO LED reduced its demise from water and oxygen. Device lifetime increased from 1 hour to several hundred hours. At a larger bias voltage or current, emission intensity and device efficiency became higher. But decay rate increased leading to shortened device lifetime. Device temperature appeared linearly with current density. A red shift of the EL emission was observed. The £fmax. of emission spectra moved from 534 nm (initial) to 582 nm (after 100 hrs). After thermal annealing at 120¢J for ten hours, threshold voltage increased from 5 V to 12 V, current density decreased to several 10 mA/cm2, luminous intensity improved several ten times to 10-2 cd/m2, emission color changed from yellow-green to orange, luminous efficiency improved from 10-7 to 10-4 cd/A, but device lifetime declined to less than 20 hrs.
195

Chemical Synthesis and Ionic Conductivity of Water-Soluble Rigid-Rod Solid Polyelectrolytes with Aspect Ratio and Pendant Modifications

Tsay, Pei-yun 06 September 2005 (has links)
Polycondensation reaction was carried out for synthesizing rigid-rod polymer hPBI. Various molar ratios (50:1, 25:1, and 15:1) of 2-hydroterephthalic acid and 5-hydroisophthalic acid were also introduced in the synthesis for articulated rigid-rod polymer a-hPBI. The polymers were further derivatized with 1,3-propanesulton for pendants of lithium ionomer to become water soluble polyelectrolytes hPBI-PS(Li+) and a-hPBI-PS(Li+), respectively. Lithium salt doped cast film of the rigid-rod polyelectrolyte hPBI-PS(Li+) showed a room-temperature DC conductivity parallel to film surface as high as 4.02¡Ñ10-3 S/cm. Molecular weight of the rigid-rod polyelectrolyte was low indicating a small molecular aspect ratio. In cast film, the molecules were randomly distributed and highly isotropic facilitated Li cations mobility for a high film conductivity. The conductivity was also insensitive to the anion of lithium salt. No apparent layered structure was revealed by scanning electron microscope suggesting that the cast films had near three-dimensionally isotropic structure and conductivity.
196

Photovoltaic Cells and Light Emitting Diodes of Fully Conjugated Rigid-rod Polymer

Tsai, Jung-lung 24 July 2006 (has links)
Polymer photovoltaic cell (PV cell) utilizes a polymer to absorb photons for generating excitons. When excitons are separated into electrons and holes, the device has the photovoltaic effect. Polymer light emitting diode (PLED) injects electrons and holes respectively from cathode and anode into a polymer emission layer. Some of the electrons and the holes would recombine to induce light emission. This research used a heterocyclic aromatic rigid-rod polymer poly-p-phenylene- benzobisoxazole (PBO) as the opto-electronic layer, and a conducting material of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(4-styrenesulfonic acid) (PEDOT:PSS) as the hole transport layer. PV cells were fabricated using indium-tin-oxide (ITO) as anode and aluminium as cathode. Same layer arrangement was applied for PLEDs. These two kinds of devices were measured for electrical and optical response. It was evidenced that the addition of PEDOT:PSS layer facilitated the separation of excitons into electrons and holes at the PBO/PEDOT:PSS interface. Insertion of a LiF layer between PBO layer and Al cathode reduced their energy band gap and facilitated charge transport leading to an enhanced efficiency for PV cells and PLEDs. Thickness variations were found on spun PBO layer. According to emission intensity, we knew that the PBO layer quality was significant for electroluminescence. Introduction of a PEDOT:PSS layer improved the interface between ITO and PBO. The thickness of PEDOT:PSS layer depended on the ITO surface roughness. With a PEDOT:PSS layer, the opto-electronic efficiency of PV cell and PLED was improved.
197

Light Emitting Diodes and Photovoltaic Cells of Fully Conjugated Heterocyclic Aromatic Rigid-rod Polymers Doped with Multi-wall Carbon Nanotube

Huang, Jen-Wei 01 November 2006 (has links)
Poly-p-phenylenebenzobisoxazole (PBO) and carbon nanotube (CNT) contain fully conjugated rod like backbone entailing excellent mechanical properties, thermo -oxidative stability and solvent resistance. Rigid-rod PBO is commonly processed by dissolving in methanesulfonic acid or Lewis acid. A CNT of multi-wall carbon nanotube (MWNT) was dissolved in a Lewis acid solution of PBO for dispersion, and then spun for thin film. MWNT concentration in the films was from zero up to 5 wt. %. Compared to that of pure PBO film, all PBO/MWNT composite films retained same but enhanced UV-Vis absorption peaks, according to MWNT concentration, showing that PBO and MWNT did not have overlapping electron orbitals affecting their energy gaps. The composite films were excited at 325 nm using a He-Cd laser for photoluminescence (PL) emission. All PL spectra had maximum intensity at 540 nm indicative of yellow-green light emission. The composite films were fabricated as light emitting diodes using indium-tin-oxide/glass as substrate and anode, as well as vacuum evaporated Al as cathode for respectively hole and electron injectors. In these light emitting devices, MWNT doped PBO would decrease threshold voltage for about 2 V. Up to 0.1 wt. % of MWNT, the device emission current was increased two orders of magnitude than those of the devices without MWNT. Further increase of MWNT caused a successive decrease in electroluminescence emission intensity attributed to a quench effect from aggregations of MWNTs. UV epoxy resin was applied to package the mono-layer and bilayer PBO light emitting devices. The UV epoxy resin had some gas release during encapsulation. The devices were packaged with vacuum and without vacuum encapsulation. It was demonstrated that the device encapsulation reduced its demise from water and oxygen. The vacuum encapsulation could remove gaseous volatile of the device to inhibit oxygen and moisture to prolong device lifetime. The main degradation of light emitting device was the oxidization of cathode. The interactions between nitrogen of PBO and H2O caused the formation of hydrogen bonding at room temperature. Oxygen and moisture diffused into PBO polymer and were suspected to form mid-gap state for the polymer. The mid energy band disappeared upon heat treatment before encapsulation. A device under a higher bias voltage was found to have a shorter lifetime, but a larger EL emission intensity. The EL emission intensity was not a constant under a constant current bias. The vacuum encapsulated device had two or twenty times lifetime than, respectively, the device encapsulation without vacuum evacuation or in ambient conditions. The sandwich structure of ITO/PBO/Al had no observable photovoltaic effect due to insufficient exciton separation into electrons and holes. Poly(2,3-dihydro thieno-1,4-dioxin):polystyrenesulfonate (PEDOT:PSS), a hole transferring medium, was spun into a thin-film between PBO and indium-tin-oxide to facilitate photovoltaic (PV) effect by forming a donor-acceptor interlayer to separate and to transport photoinduced charges. Optimum PBO thickness for the PV heterojunctions was about 71 nm at which the hole transferring PEDOT:PSS generated the maximum short circuit current (Isc) at a thickness of 115 nm. By using a layer of lithium fluoride (LiF) as an electron transferring layer adhering to Al cathode, the most open circuit voltage (Voc) and the maximum short circuit current (Isc) were achieved with a LiF thickness of 1-2 nm due to possible electric dipole effect leading to an increase of Voc from 0.7 V to 0.92 V and of Isc from about 0.1
198

Finite Strip With Rigid Ends And Edge Notches

Erozkan, Deniz 01 August 2009 (has links) (PDF)
This study considers a symmetrical finite strip with a length of 2L and a width of 2h containing two collinear edge cracks located at the center of the strip. Each edge crack has a width h&amp / #8211 / a. Two ends of the finite strip are bonded to two rigid plates through which uniformly distributed axial tensile loads of intensity p0 are applied. The finite strip is assumed to be made of a linearly elastic and isotropic material. For the solution of the finite strip problem, an infinite strip of width 2h containing two internal cracks of width b&amp / #8211 / a at y=0 and two rigid inclusions of width 2c at y=&plusmn / L is considered. When the width of rigid inclusions approach the width of the strip, the portion of the infinite strip between the inclusions becomes identical with the finite strip problem. When the outer edges of the internal cracks approach the edge of the strip, they become edge cracks (notches). Governing equations are solved by using Fourier transform technique and these equations are reduced to a system of three singular integral equations. By using Gauss-Lobatto and Gauss-Jacobi integration formulas, these three singular integral equations are converted to a system of linear algebraic equations which is solved numerically.
199

Axisymmetric Finite Cylinder With Rigid Ends And A Circumferential Edge Crack

Durucan, Ayse Rusen 01 August 2010 (has links) (PDF)
An axisymmetric finite cylinder with rigid ends and a circumferential edge crack is considered in this study. The finite cylinder is under the action of uniformly distributed loads at two rigid ends. Material of the finite cylinder is assumed to be linearly elastic and isotropic. This finite cylinder problem is solved by considering an infinite cylinder containing an internal ring-shaped crack located at z=0 plane and two penny-shaped rigid inclusions located at z=&plusmn / L planes. General expressions of the infinite cylinder problem are obtained by solving Navier equations with Fourier and Hankel transforms. This infinite cylinder problem is then converted to the target problem by letting the radius of the rigid inclusions approach the radius of the cylinder and letting the outer edge of the crack approach the surface of the cylinder. Consequently, these rigid inclusions form the rigid ends and internal crack form the circumferential edge crack resulting in the problem of a finite cylinder with rigid ends having an edge crack. The problem is reduced to a set of three singular integral equations. These singular integral equations are converted to a system of linear algebraic equations with the aid of Gauss-Lobatto and Gauss-Jacobi integration formulas and are solved numerically.
200

Reconstruction of 3D rigid body motion in a virtual environment from a 2D image sequence

Dasgupta, Sumantra 30 September 2004 (has links)
This research presents a procedure for interactive segmentation and automatic tracking of moving objects in a video sequence. The user outlines the region of interest (ROI) in the initial frame; the procedure builds a refined mask of the dominant object within the ROI. The refined mask is used to model a spline template of the object to be tracked. The tracking algorithm then employs a motion model to track the template through a sequence of frames and gathers the 3D affine motion parameters of the object from each frame. The extracted template is compared with a previously stored library of 3D shapes to determine the closest 3D object. If the extracted template is completely new, it is used to model a new 3D object which is added to the library. To recreate the motion, the motion parameters are applied to the 3D object in a virtual environment. The procedure described here can be applied to industrial problems such as traffic management and material flow congestion analysis.

Page generated in 0.0407 seconds