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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.
411

Routing with Safety Vectors in the Hypercube

Chung-Rung, Shih 20 August 2001 (has links)
Reliable communication in the hypercube with the safety vectors is discussed in this thesis. In the hypercube, the safety levels and the safety vectors, used to guide fault-tolerant routing, is a kind of limited global information based methods. The transmission cost of the safety vectors is O(n2) for each node. For increasing the probability of optimal routing, we attempt to increase the transmission cost for obtaining more information. We propose two methods with O(n3) transmission cost in each node, the enhanced safety vector and the spanning safety vector, to achieve the goal. We also propose the probabilistic safety vector which provides the probability of optimal routing for each node. Finally, our experiments show that the routing with the enhanced safety vector is more reliable than the safety vectors and the extended safety vectors, which were propose the probabilistic safety vector.
412

The enforcement of labour legislation in Hong Kong : a study of industrial safety regulations /

Chan, Sung-tai. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (M. Soc. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 1986.
413

Implementation of functional safety in a robotic manufacturing cell using IEC 61508 standard and Siemens technology /

Kamtekar, Darshana M. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 2009. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 209-213).
414

Safety first? : looking at a non-traditional safety training program for Spanish-speaking construction workers / Looking at a non-traditional safety training program for Spanish-speaking construction workers

Prochnow, Allison Nicole 27 February 2013 (has links)
Construction is a very deadly industry with Texas having the highest rate of deaths of construction workers of any state. Hispanic workers are at an even higher risk than white, non-Hispanic workers for being injured or killed while working on a construction site. However, traditional materials available through the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to train workers in job safety cannot effectively reach the Hispanic construction worker population because of language and educational barriers. This study examines a non-traditional safety training program tailored specifically for Spanish monolingual construction workers in order to reach these otherwise hard-to-reach workers, created by Workers Defense Project (WDP) in Austin, Texas, through a Department of Labor grant. Through participatory learning techniques, WDP has had a high rate of success in educating low-literacy, Spanish monolingual construction workers on workplace safety and rights. Through further evaluation of this program, the unique methods utilized in this training can be developed and applied in other areas and industries to reduce the number of injuries and fatalities in construction and other hazardous industries. / text
415

The impact of the diversity of cultures upon the implementation of the international management code for the safe operation of ships and for pollution prevention

Trafford, Sean Michael January 2006 (has links)
Shipping is a fragmented, global industry operating in a culturally diverse environment. As a result of rising maritime accident rates and pollution incidents in the 1970s and 1980s, the International Maritime Organisation introduced two conventions that entered fully into force in 2002: the International Management Code for the Safe Operation of Ships and Pollution Prevention (ISM Code), and the 1995 revision of the 1978 Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW Code). Introduction of the conventions served to focus the attention of the international maritime community on the need to raise industry-wide safety standards, but questions were raised about whether it was possible to develop a safety culture in a fragmented, global industry and what effects the diversity of cultures might have upon implementation of the ISM Code. This study explores those questions. Subsequent to a review of the literature, a model of the working of the ISM Code is developed and used to identify the constraints and pressures, particularly those that might be influenced by cultural values and attitudes, that impact upon the development and implementation of a Safety Management System in individual shipping organisations, which is the essence of the ISM Code. A comparative case study methodology is adopted for the empirical research and a number of investigative techniques are used to test the ISM Code model and obtain both qualitative and quantitative data to determine whether the impact of culturally influenced constraints and pressures would be best addressed by stricter enforcement of existing regulatory provisions or greater emphasis on education and training. From analysis of the data collected, the study concluded that: • Professional, vocational and safety training correctly utilised are effective in harmonising culturally influenced safety perspectives, thus improving safety performance; and • Culturally influenced constraints and pressures can be dealt with by the application of standard management techniques which, in a multi-cultural environment requires good cross-cultural management skills. The most common method of determining how effective a company has been in dealing with the various constraints and pressures affecting safety performance is to evaluate the efficacy of the organisation's Safety Management System by analysis of accident records, lost time incidents and hazardous occurrences (ACNSI, 1993). These data, reported under the provisions of Clause 9 of the ISM Code, are therefore analysed and compared with an industry sector benchmark. The study however, goes beyond such a purely quantitative approach and establishes the relative safety climate of the case study companies by means of perceptual audit of salient, safety-related factors. This qualitative technique draws together all the main research elements of the study and a Safety Climate Comparator is developed that provides a useful indicator of the relative status of those culturally influenced factors that ultimately affect a company's safety performance. By extension, the technique may be used to provide a Relative Safety Culture Maturity Model to measure the safety climate of other shipping companies relative to a benchmark standard.
416

Patient Safety Law: Regulatory Change in Britain and Canada

McDonald, Fiona 26 July 2010 (has links)
Did governments in different countries regulate common concerns about patient safety differently? If so how and why did they do this? This thesis undertakes a historical comparison of the regulation of patient safety in Britain and Canada between 1980 and 2005. These jurisdictions began the period with very similar regulatory frameworks, but by 2005 there were distinct differences in each jurisdiction‘s regulatory response to patient safety. Britain was very actively regulating all aspects of service provision within its health system in the name of patient safety, whereas Canada‘s regulatory direction showed adherence to the 1980s model with only scattered incremental developments. This thesis assesses the broader sociopolitical context and the structure of the health systems in each jurisdiction and concludes there are differences in the logics of these systems that established a foundation for future regulatory divergence. It is argued that between 1980 and 2005 there were two factors that influenced regulatory directionality in each jurisdiction: changing political norms associated with the development of neoliberalism and the New Public Management; and events or scandals associated with the provision of health services. The differing levels of penetration of both the changing political norms into governance cultures and of scandals into the public and political consciousness are critical to explaining regulatory differences between jurisdictions. The thesis concludes that what and how governments chose to regulate is a function of the perceived need for action and the dominant social and political norms within that society. Context is everything in the formulation of regulatory approaches to address pressing social problems.
417

A heterogeneous finite element method and a leakage corrected homogenization technique

Nichita, Eleodor Marian 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
418

Evaluation of Alternatives for Safer and More Efficient Reactions: A study of the N-oxidation of Alkylpyridines

Saenz Noval, Lina Rocio 2011 December 1900 (has links)
The catalytic N-oxidation of alkylpyridines, a reaction which uses hydrogen peroxide as the oxidizing agent and the water soluble phosphotungstic acid as the catalyst, is a reaction employed in the pharmaceutical industry. The safety concerns of this process revolve around the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide and the liquid-liquid phase separation of the reacting mixture. The decomposition of hydrogen peroxide is an undesired reaction parallel to the desired N-oxidation and is responsible for: 1) a high potential for runaway due to the condition sensitivity of the peroxide group, 2) a potential over-pressurization of the reaction vessel during a runaway due to the production of oxygen, and 3) the enrichment with oxygen of the flammable alkylpyridine environment. The presence of an organic phase and an aqueous phase occurs in a wide range of conditions and results in: 1) a dramatic reduction in the reaction selectivity, and consequently in the efficiency, due to the additional mass transfer constrains imposed by the phase separation, and 2) the safety of the process being seriously compromised because most of the catalyst remains in the aqueous phase, excessively promoting the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide over the N-oxidation. With these concerns in mind, this research aimed to determine conditions for an inherently safer and more efficient N-oxidation reaction and focused on three key targets: i) the possibility of reducing the extend of the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide, thus leading to an inherently safer process, ii) the study of phase equilibrium so as to enable the identification of conditions that increase the efficiency of the N-oxidation and reduces the hazards, and iii) the evaluation of safety parameters that will allow for the control of a potential runaway reaction. Two alkylpyridines were considered: 2-methylpyridine which represents the case of a homogeneous reacting mixture and 2,6-dimethylpyridine to study the two-liquid phase separation effects. The methodology employed calorimetric studies to assess the runaway behavior and to determine the conditions that favor the N-oxidation, and for the N-oxidation of 2,6-dimethylpyridine, thermodynamic studies were incorporated to evaluate the conditions for phase separation.
419

Safety-oriented Resilience Evaluation in Chemical Processes

Dinh, Linh Thi Thuy 2011 December 1900 (has links)
In the area of process safety, many efforts have focused on studying methods to prevent the transition of the state of the system from a normal state to an upset and/or catastrophic state, but many unexpected changes are unavoidable, and even under good risk management incidents still occur. The aim of this work is to propose the principles and factors that contribute to the resilience of the chemical process, and to develop a systematic approach to evaluate the resilience of chemical processes in design aspects. Based on the analysis of transition of the system states, the top-level factors that contribute to Resilience were developed, including Design, Detection Potential, Emergency Response Planning, Human, and Safety Management. The evaluation framework to identify the Resilience Design Index is developed by means of the multifactor model approach. The research was then focused on developing complete subfactors of the top-level Design factor. The sub-factors include Inherent Safety, Flexibility, and Controllability. The proposed framework to calculate the Inherent Safety index takes into account all the aspects of process safety design via many sub-indices. Indices of Flexibility and Controllability sub-factors were developed from implementations of well-known methodologies in process design and process control, respectively. Then, the top-level Design index was evaluated by combining the indices of the sub-factors with weight factors, which were derived from Analytical Hierarchical Process approach. A case study to compare the resilience levels of two ethylene production designs demonstrated the proposed approaches and gave insights on process resilience of the designs.
420

A System Approach To Occupational Health And Safety Management

Gozuyilmaz, Cem 01 December 2003 (has links) (PDF)
In this thesis, methods used at present in occupational health and safety management are analyzed and a model safety management system is developed. History, development and recent occupational safety regulations in the United States of America and European Union are introduced to give a sight on this subject in developed countries. The suggested model is evaluated with work accident data taken from a company and hazard and risk analysis methods are used to investigate these accidents. Preventive measures to eliminate and reduce the consequences of these accidents are recommended. Finally a model safety management system which can be used in all types of industry is developed.

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