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Pages
- Title
- Cure for the IKIA Syndrome : presented at IACRL 2008 conference: revised_assignment1for approval
- Creator
- Uth, Charles, Link, Jeanne
- Date
- 2008-02
- Description
-
Informal observations of a practical and creative approach piloting Blended Library Instruction for undergraduate Civil Architecture and...
Show moreInformal observations of a practical and creative approach piloting Blended Library Instruction for undergraduate Civil Architecture and Engineering students, in collaboration with faculty. At Illinois Institute of Technology students don’t receive library instruction as a required class or in tandem with a composition class. Faculty will schedule one-time sessions, which ideally should be planned with a class assignment in mind, but students are rarely engaged with a one time instruction. Many have IKIA syndrome or I Know It Already syndrome. The Millennials are a group that has integrated technology into every aspect of their lives and they assume that retrieving useful or necessary information will be easy. When they discover this isn’t the case lack of time, heightened anxiety, and increased frustration can prevent them from doing their best work. By intentionally creating a similar crisis prior to library instruction, students were more interested in what they stood to gain during pending library instruction. In this presentation we will discuss: 1) A creative means of delivering library instruction to a traditionally challenging population: engineering undergraduate students 2) Qualitative information collected via multiple assignments and interpreted in a quantitative fashion, as well as our observations. 3) A method for preparing students for library instruction that can be applied in almost any discipline without asking the instructor to sacrifice class time.
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- Title
- Sloan Valve Company (sequence unknown), IPRO 306 - Deliverables
- Creator
- Delahanty, Sean, Jaouen, Julien, Thakkar, Hetul, Jones, Santiago Guerrero, Kim, Sung, Toor, Hammad, Jalan, Arjun, Soleja, Sikander, Zhang, Yayan
- Date
- 2009-12
- Description
-
Sloan Valve manufactures and distributes commercial valves and plumbing fixtures globally. The IPRO team will work to improve the 'procure to...
Show moreSloan Valve manufactures and distributes commercial valves and plumbing fixtures globally. The IPRO team will work to improve the 'procure to pay' process and also assist in the development of a new warehouse management module.
Sponsorship: Sloan Valve Company
Deliverables for IPRO 306: Sloan Valve for the fall 2009 semester.
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- Title
- ENABLING TOOLS FOR SINGLE CELL ANALYSIS
- Creator
- Li, Zhaoxia
- Date
- 2011-07, 2011-07
- Description
-
Cells are basic functional units of life. A cell function is mediated by proteins and genes, whose distribution and expression level depends...
Show moreCells are basic functional units of life. A cell function is mediated by proteins and genes, whose distribution and expression level depends remarkably on the microenvironment. In the native environment, individual cells behave differently but communicate with surrounding cells. It is imperative to investigate proteins and genes at the single cell level in their native environment. The current representative single cell analysis methods, fluorescent techniques, are the most direct tools to study a single cell. The commonly used methods to measure protein and gene expression levels in single cells are on the basis of fluorescence labeling, such as fluorescence-activated cell sorting and live cell microscopy. They become more powerful when combine with the use of microfluidic devices. The disadvantages of these methods are, (1) their limited sensitivity doesn’t allow the detection of low-abundance proteins and genes; (2) they are unable to detect the cell-to-cell difference within a population; (3) the cell-sorting based method is lack of spatial resolution since the isolation of cells from the natural environment is required for analysis. To tackle these challenges, we established atomic force microscopy based approaches for in-situ gene and protein analysis on a target single live cell. The methods provide the spatial and quantitative information of cells in their native culture environment. They are effective and sensitive to detect low-abundant proteins and genes. In this thesis work, we developed a novel immunofluorescence assisted affinity mapping (IF-AM) method, in which immunofluorescence provides the guidance to locate a desired type of cell in a cell community for performing affinity mapping to quantify the local protein density at a high spatial resolution. Due to the ability of directly assessing proteins of individual cells, the IF-AM method is shown to be a sensitive tool for xiii resolving subtle differences in the local expression of membrane proteins even at low abundance. In the following work, we improved the accuracy of protein quantification by adapting the separation work based calculation rather than the previously used maximum adhesion force based calculation, and established a practical model to analyze the data systematically. We applied the methods to investigate the membrane proteins TRA-1-81 and E-cadherin on human embryonic stem cells. The heterogeneous distribution of TRA- 1-81 and the homogeneous distribution of E-cadherin as well as the quantitative measurement of the protein local abundance provided comprehensive information in understanding the strategy of hES cells to maintain the stemness during cell proliferation and to initiate the differentiation. An mRNA retrieval method was also developed to perform the gene expression analysis on a single cell of a desired type in a cell community. This was achieved by using a functionalized AFM tip as a bait to bind and retrieve mRNA from a desired single cell, followed by sensitive Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (Q-PCR) analysis. The extraction of mRNA from live cells was performed with non/negligible damage to the cells. The established method here enabled the gene expression analysis of individual live cells at the original sites without disrupting the cell context. Thus the gene expression of a target cell and its surrounding cells can be analyzed in parallel, deriving concrete data for understanding the behavior of one cell in concert with that of the surrounding cells in the same or different cell population. The method was successfully applied in the study of side population cells in ovarian cancer cells. The methods developed in this thesis are versatile, and can be broadly applied to the study of different membrane proteins and genes of various cell types.
Ph.D. in Chemistry, July 2011
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- Title
- MESOSCALE DEFORMATION IN A 9310 STEEL AND 2139 ALUMINUM ALLOY
- Creator
- Snyder, David
- Date
- 2012-09-10, 2012-12
- Description
-
As technology continues to develop, the need for materials with superior structural performance grows. In recent years, the design of such...
Show moreAs technology continues to develop, the need for materials with superior structural performance grows. In recent years, the design of such high integrity alloys has led to a need for a more fundamental understanding of the deformation response of materials under various loading conditions. In this study, the deformation response of two high performance, high stacking fault metallic alloys are investigated. It has long been known that deformation in high stacking fault metals is a complex process of dislocation interactions that vary substantially with the loading conditions of strain, strain rate and temperature, as well as the chemistry and processing history of the alloy. The flow behavior and recrystallization response of a 9310 steel alloy deformed in the ferrite temperature range were studied in this work. Samples were compressed under various conditions of strain, strain rate and temperature using a Gleeble thermo-mechanical simulator. Deformation was characterized by both qualitative and quantitative means, using standard microscopy, electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis and flow stress modeling. The results indicate that deformation is primarily accommodated through dynamic recovery in sub-grain formation. EBSD analysis shows a continuous increase in sub-grain boundary misorientation with increasing strain, ultimately producing recrystallized grains from the sub-grains at high strains. This suggests that a sub-grain rotation recrystallization mechanism predominates in this temperature range. Demonstrated trends include a decreasing mean dynamically recrystallized grain size with increasing strain and Zener-Hollomon parameter, and an increasing recrystallized fraction with increasing strain. Another high stacking fault metal that has garnered a great deal of attention for its possible high performance structural applications is the 2139 aluminum alloy. In this study, the effect of chemistry and strain on the deformation response of the alloy system is investigated. 2139 aluminum is a very complex alloy, with multiple strengthening phases and mechanisms contributing to its overall high structural integrity compared to other aluminum alloys in its class. While the structural performance and TEM-scale deformation behavior of this alloy have been extensively analyzed, grain-scale microstructural features of deformation have not been well characterized. In addition, the contributions of each strengthening mechanism in the alloy are not well established. To characterize the deformation response of the alloy, alloys of various chemistries were produced and subjected to room temperature compression testing, in order to isolate and establish the effects of the major strengthening mechanisms on the overall behavior. Through electron backscatter diffraction analysis, the microstructural features of deformation generated in the alloys under these conditions were characterized, and the evolution and distribution of strain on a grain-scale was analyzed. Differences in deformation behavior with alloy chemistry were established by tracking differences in the evolution of lattice rotations with strain in the several alloys. It was determined that, for alloys subjected to artificial aging, the refinement in scale and distribution of the precipitate structure represents the greatest decrease in the development of lattice rotations with strain. This represents a first study into the room temperature, grain-scale deformation response of a heavily alloyed aluminum alloy, and the effect of alloy chemistry and precipitate structure on the deformation behavior of a 2139 aluminum alloy. As a preface to this study, a thorough review of the current state of literature on the deformation response of aluminum alloys was compiled as well.
M.S. in Materials Science and Engineering, December 2012
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- Title
- Tungsten lamp as a secondary standard of light
- Creator
- Bremers, H. J., Jr., Chapman, A. J., Jr.
- Date
- 2009, 1910
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/tungstenlampasse00brem
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology
- Title
- FORCED PERIODIC CONTROL OF AN EXOTHERMIC CSTR WITH MULTIPLE INPUT OSCILLATIONS
- Creator
- Rigopoulos, K., Shu, X. S., Cinar, A.
- Date
- 1988-12
- Publisher
- AMER INST CHEMICAL ENGINEERS
- Description
-
Interaction among various oscillating inputs may result in significant modifications in the behavior of a system under forced periodic control...
Show moreInteraction among various oscillating inputs may result in significant modifications in the behavior of a system under forced periodic control. Forced oscillations in the input flow rate and input concentrations of an exothermic continuous stirred tank reactor enable the stabilized operation of the CSTR in the unstable steady state region. Reactor temperature oscillations under forced periodic control are similar to the oscillations resulting from proportional-integral feedback or nonlinear (push-pull) feedback control, and under some operating conditions the oscillation amplitude is significantly lower. Theoretical and experimental studies illustrate the effects of forcing frequency and phase shift on reactor behavior.
Endnote format citation
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- Title
- PEGYLATION OF FIBRONECTIN AND ITS FUNCTIONAL DOMAINS: EFFECT ON STABILITY AND BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY
- Creator
- Zhang, Chen
- Date
- 2013, 2013-07
- Description
-
Delayed wound healing in many chronic wounds has been linked to the lack of extracellular matrix (ECM) support and the degradation of...
Show moreDelayed wound healing in many chronic wounds has been linked to the lack of extracellular matrix (ECM) support and the degradation of fibronectin (FN) by an abnormally high protease level. The ECM is important in wound healing because it provides physical and chemical cues that direct tissue growth and development. FN is a key ECM protein that attracts and binds different molecules and cells and thereby supports biological responses associated with wound healing. The goal of my study is two fold: (1) To create an ECM analogue based on a composite of polyethylene glycol (PEG) hydrogels and FN binding domains and (2) To stabilize FN against proteolytic degradation by conjugating it to PEG. To address the first goal, I used Michael addition chemistry to covalently link the cell-binding domain of FN, III9−10, to PEG diacrylate and cross-linked the conjugate to PEG hydrogels. The conjugation of PEG to III9−10 was through cysteines in the affinity tag Glutathione S Transferase (GST). The conjugate of GST-III9−10 and PEG was characterized by: (i) Circular dichroism studies to determine secondary structure, (ii) Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) to determine molecular weight, and (iii) Ellmans reagent to determine the efficiency of PEG conjugation to GST-III9−10. The conjugate of PEG and GST-III9−10 had comparable secondary structure to GST-III9−10. SDS-PAGE studies showed that up to three PEG molecules were attached to one GST-III9−10 molecule. The efficiency of PEG conjugation was greater than 90% and occurred within 30 minutes after PEG diacrylate addition. Adhesion assays were used as a metric of biological activity. These assays demonstrated that on a molar basis cell adhesion and spreading were significantly higher on PEG hydrogels with GST-III9−10 than those with the commonly used arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) peptide. Scaffold rigidity is an important biological cues that influence xi cell responses. However, a comparative study of rigidity on GST-III9−10 and RGD functionalized PEG hydrogels demonstrated that differences in rigidity could not account for differences in cell adhesion and spreading between RGD and GST-III9−10 functionalized PEG hydrogels. Thus as ECM analogues, GST-III9−10 functionalized hydrogels provide more robust biochemical cues than RGD functionalized hydrogels. Studies of PEG hydrogel composites with mixtures of III9−10 and a fibronectin binding domain demonstrated that biological responses of adhesion and spreading and extracellular matrix assembly could be controlled by varying the ratio of these two domains and the rigidity of the PEG hydrogels. FN was stabilized against proteolytic degradation by covalent attaching it to PEG or by PEGylating it. FN was first isolated from human plasma by gelatin affinity chromatography and then PEGylated using two methods. The first method is to PEGylate human plasma fibronectin (HPFN) at cysteine residues with 3.4 kDa PEG diacrylate. The second method is to PEGylate HPFN at lysine residues on the surface with 2-10 kDa PEG Succinimidyl carboxy methyl esters. Cysteine PEGylation of HPFN was first carried out because cysteines are concentrated in the amino- terminus of HPFN which leaves two-thirds of the molecule, including the cell-binding domain, unperturbed. PEGylation of HPFN on cysteines resulted in a molecule that supported cell adhesion, spreading, focal adhesion formation and cell migration in a comparable manner to native HPFN. Moreover, PEGylated HPFN was incorporated into the ECM in a similar manner to native HPFN when present in the culture media but not when coated on a surface indicating that PEGylation on cysteines modified some biological activity of HPFN. Additionally, HPFN PEGylated by this manner could not bind denatured collagen or gelatin. The gelatin-binding domain is at the site of cysteine PEGylation. The second approach for PEGylation of HPFN was through lysine residues xii on the surface of the protein. This approach was used because it targeted different amino acid residues in FN. The length of PEG and extent of PEGylation have been reported to influence biological activity of proteins. In the second approach, both PEG length and extent were varied. HPFN completely PEGylated on lysines residues was significantly more proteolytically stable than native HPFN but had reduced cell attachment and spreading. Furthermore, cell spreading and attachment on surfaces conjugated with this lysine PEGylated HPFN decreased with increasing PEG length. Partially PEGylated HPFN was synthesized by masking the cell and gelatin binding domains during PEGylation. The partially PEGylated HPFN supported cell adhesion and spreading in a similar manner to native HPFN and was more proteolytically stable. For the partially PEGylated HPFN, the size of PEG poly had no significant influence on the attachment and spreading of cells. These studies are the first attempt by any laboratory to stabilize FN against proteolytic degradation while retaining activity and show the feasibility of this approach as a potential therapeutic approach. The work presented here shows a two-prong approach by which the problem of ECM degradation and deficiency chronic wound healing can be addressed. The first approach for addressing ECM deficiency is through a scaffold design methodology. The novelty of the scaffold approach is that it uses the cell-binding domains of FN instead of the often-used RGD peptide. I demonstrate that a PEG hydrogel with the cell-binding domain produces a more robust biological response in cells than a PEG hydrogel with the RGD peptide. I also demonstrate that varying different functional domains of fibronectin can be used to controllably stimulate multiple biological responses. The second approach demonstrates a method by which FN, a key ECM protein, is stabilized against proteolytic degradation without perturbing its activity. These studies of creating PEG-FN conjugates are the first of their kind. Collectively, the data that I present in this thesis will lead to novel therapeutic methods for treating chronic wounds.
PH.D in Chemical Engineering, December 2012
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- Title
- Kaon Freeze-out Dynamics in √sNN=200 GeV Au+Au Collisions at RHIC, Proceedings of the XLIII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics
- Creator
- Šumbera, Michal
- Date
- 2013-09-15, 2013-09-15
- Publisher
- IIT Press
- Description
-
Measurements of three-dimensional correlation functions of like-sign low transverse momentum kaon pairs from Au+Au collisions at top RHIC...
Show moreMeasurements of three-dimensional correlation functions of like-sign low transverse momentum kaon pairs from Au+Au collisions at top RHIC energy √sNN =200 GeV are presented. The extracted kaon source function is narrower than the pion one and does not have the long tail along the pair transverse momentum direction. This indicates a much smaller role of long-lived resonance decays and/or of the emission duration on kaon emission. Three-dimensional Gaussian shape of the kaon source function can be adequately reproduced by Therminator simulations with resonance contributions taken into account. Comparison to pion data at the same energy reveals that the kaon Gaussian radii in the outward and sideward directions scale with the transverse mass mT. In the longitudinal direction, unlike at lower SPS energies, the Gaussian radii do not seem to follow the exact mT scaling between kaons and pions.
Sponsorship: IIT College of Science, High Energy Physics Division of Argonne National Laboratory
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- Title
- ACTION RECOGNITION USING SPATIO-TEMPORAL FEATURE EXTRACTION
- Creator
- Mesmakhosroshahi, Maral
- Date
- 2012-04-24, 2012-05
- Description
-
The importance of automatically recognition of human activities and it's ap- plications increase as the technology is growing fast these days....
Show moreThe importance of automatically recognition of human activities and it's ap- plications increase as the technology is growing fast these days. In this thesis we focus on the action recognition techniques using 3D feature extraction techniques and try to improve the performance of the available feature extraction methods to have more accurate action classi cation. This thesis is based on spatio-temporal feature extraction techniques that can be extension of two dimensional feature extractions. At rst, 3D corner detector and 3D blob detector, two popular interest point detectors that successfully extended to spatio-temporal domain are reviewed. 3D corner detector is an extension of Harris corner detector which is proposed for corner detection in space-time and 3D blob detector is the 3D version of Hessian blob detector. A method is proposed to improve the robustness of 3D corner detectors against illumination variances based on the application of sigmoid function in contrast stretching. These interest points need to be described by feature vectors. In this part also a review on the SIFT descriptor and it's 3D extension is done. Another 3D feature descriptor discussed in this thesis is Cuboid. In the feature description part a new method is proposed based on the 3D SIFT feature descriptor by changing the binning method of the gradient orientation histogram to a non-uniform binning scheme. Using these non-uniform bins increases the accuracy of action classi cation by focusing on the areas near the interest points. Action classi cation is done using bag of features and supervised learning techniques. For making a dictionary of features, feature vectors are clustered by K-means clustering method and support vector machine is used for classi cation of human activities.
M.S. in Electrical Engineering, May 2012
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- Title
- The study of the formation of chromates
- Creator
- Kaplon, H., Schiffman, H. M.
- Date
- 2009, 1921
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/studyofformation00kapl
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology; Bibliography: leaf 30
- Title
- AGENT-BASED MODELING OF ANGIOGENESIS: EXPLORATION OF THE EFFECTS OF VEGF DELIVERY STRATEGIES ON PROMOTING ANGIOGENESIS
- Creator
- Xiao, Nan
- Date
- 2015, 2015-05
- Description
-
This is a dissertation about three-dimensional agent-based modeling (ABM) of angiogenesis within porous scaffold. Tissue engineering...
Show moreThis is a dissertation about three-dimensional agent-based modeling (ABM) of angiogenesis within porous scaffold. Tissue engineering technology provides great benefits for humanity in maintaining healthy tissue formation and disease rehabilitation. However, biomedical experiments, especially animal experiments, are very costly, timeconsuming and high technological level of equipment required. The computational modeling can provide an efficient alternative to biomedical experiments in strategy design and assist clinical research. To simulate the angiogenesis process, an agent-based model was developed using java-based Repast toolkit. The purpose of this research is to explore the effects of different Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) delivery methods in promoting angiogenesis. The work here includes four parts: a) model verification by comparing simulation results with experimental results; b) exploration of different VEGF delivery methods by changing total dose and release rate; c) exploration of the effects of prevascularized strategies; d) development of a tissue cell VEGF secretion model. The simulation results showed that: angiogenesis can be promoted by increasing VEGF total dose or decreasing releasing rate; prevascularized scaffolds can improve new vascular network formation and result in better invasion depth; pre-seeded tissue cells in the scaffold can provide a continuous source of VEGF and promote angiogenesis. This ABM can provide a good reference for the design of biomedical applications.
M.S. in Chemical Engineering, May 2015
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- Title
- A STEP TOWARD SUPPORTING LONG-RUNNING APPLICATIONS WITH REAL-TIME CONSTRAINTS ON HYBRID CLOUDS
- Creator
- Wu, Hao
- Date
- 2017, 2017-05
- Description
-
The advancement of computer and network technology has brought the world into a new computer cloud era. The ”pay-as-you-go” business model and...
Show moreThe advancement of computer and network technology has brought the world into a new computer cloud era. The ”pay-as-you-go” business model and the service oriented models allow users to have ”unlimited” resources if needed and free from infrastructure maintenance and software upgrades. Cloud services are currently among the top-ranked high growth areas in computing and are seeing an acceleration in enterprise adoption with the worldwide market predicted to reach more than $270b in 2020. According to Google, currently more than 95% of the web services are deployed on cloud.Many di↵erent types of applications are deployed on computer clouds. However, due to inherent performance uncertainty within computer clouds, as of today, applications with real-time and high QoS constraints still operate on traditional computer systems and are not able to benefit from elastic computer clouds.. The thesis focuses on both theoretical analysis and real system implementation on the problem of guaranteeing real-time application’s deadline requirement while minimizing the application’s execution cost on hybrid clouds. Four major problems have been addressed towards moving applications with real-time constraint on hybrid computer clouds. 1). A minimal slack time and minimal distance (MSMD) scheduling algorithm is developed to minimize the resources needed to guarantee an application’s end-to-end deadline requirement using computer clouds. 2). A VM Instance Hour Minimization (IHM) algorithm is developed to reduce the application’s execution cost for given schedules. The proposed IHM algorithm can be integrated with common scheduling algorithm used in the literature. In addition, we also evaluated the feasibility of utilizing spot instance to further reduce the application’s execution cost while not sacrificing QoS guarantees. 3). A reference model for virtual machine launching overhead is developed to predict both system utilization and timing overhead during the VM launching process. 4). A hybrid cloud management tool that integrates the developed algorithms and reference model is developed to support running long-running applications with real-time constraints on hybrid clouds.
Ph.D. in Computer Science, May 2017
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- Title
- PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS AND OPTIMIZATION OF LARGE-SCALE SCIENTIFIC APPLICATIONS
- Creator
- Wu, Jingjin
- Date
- 2013, 2013-07
- Description
-
Scientific applications are critical for solving complex problems in many areas of research, and often require a large amount of computing...
Show moreScientific applications are critical for solving complex problems in many areas of research, and often require a large amount of computing resources in terms of both runtime and memory. Massively parallel supercomputers with ever increasing computing power are being built to satisfy the need of large-scale scientific applications. With the advent of petascale era, there is an enlarged gap between the computing power of supercomputers and the parallel scalability of many applications. To take full advantage of the massive parallelism of supercomputers, it is indispensable to improve the scalability of large-scale scientific applications through performance analysis and optimization. This thesis work is motivated by cell-based AMR (Adaptive Mesh Refinement) cosmology simulations, in particular, the Adaptive Refinement Tree (ART) application. Performance analysis is performed to identify its scaling bottleneck, a performance emulator is designed for efficient evaluation of different load balancing schemes, and topology mapping strategies are explored for performance improvements. More importantly, the exploration of topology mapping mechanisms leads to a generic methodology for network and multicore aware topology mapping, and a set of efficient mapping algorithms for popular topologies. These have been implemented in a topology mapping library – TOPOMap, which can be used to support MPI topology functions.
PH.D in Computer Science, July 2013
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- Title
- The time factor in the operation of dry pipe sprinkler system
- Creator
- Metz, F. W., Moore, W. W., Schultz, W. E.
- Date
- 2009, 1911
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/timefactorinoper00metz
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology
- Title
- High Performance Green Homes (sequence unknown), IPRO 317 - Deliverables
- Creator
- Bhat, Adnan, Campbell, Brittanie, Cink, Jefferey, Gutstein, Yehuda, Hadi, Shuaib, Hafdi, Kamal, Hasan, Hasan, Kenig, Elezar, Lipski, Brian, Lollino, Luca, Margolis, Jordan, Nigamatzyanov, Tagir, Patel, Hiren, Patel, Neal, Shehada, Hazem, Toops, Melissa, Trauner, Crystal, Zgourdah, Mourad
- Date
- 2009-12
- Description
-
The purpose of this project is to show how a team committed to helping people help save the world can leapfrog today's best designs. As...
Show moreThe purpose of this project is to show how a team committed to helping people help save the world can leapfrog today's best designs. As opposed to the tradition of minimum design standards that just meeting the building code, highest practical design standards are the focus. True sustainability is the goal of this project, including; Zero Carbon Emissions, Net Zero Energy, 100% Solar Power, 10 times the traditional design life, 1/10th the maintenance, rot proof, termite proof, fire proof, hurricane and earthquake resistant. The project team, using cutting edge technology, will develop all aspects of a start-up design and build company to promote High Performance Green Homes. This project will provide a great opportunity for IIT students to experience a challenging and interesting project and to significantly contribute to a better world.
Sponsorship: Jimmy Eng
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- Title
- Orthotics and Prosthetics in Latin America (sequence unknown), IPRO 309 - Deliverables: IPRO 309 Poster F09
- Creator
- Ashley, Trevor, Claxton, Matt, Conover, Stephen, Gotanco, Francis, Mathai, Alexander, Nizich, Adam, Park, Yong, Quikr, Kerry, Ray, Monmayuri, Vasquez, Raul
- Date
- 2009-12
- Description
-
The overall goal of our IPRO team is to create a program for delivering orthotics and prosthetics that is sustainable. This will be...
Show moreThe overall goal of our IPRO team is to create a program for delivering orthotics and prosthetics that is sustainable. This will be accomplished by improving the quality of the product by increasing availability of funding, improving cost effectiveness of prosthetics, and promoting awareness of treatment available.
Deliverables for IPRO 309: Orthotics and Prosthetics in Latin America for the fall 2009 semester.
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- Title
- Gerry-meandering: An Assessment of the Congressional District Model of Depository Allocation (preprint): AhrensGriffinfinalpreprint
- Creator
- Ahrens, Aric G., Griffin, Luke A.
- Date
- 2003-06
- Description
-
The preprint of a published article dealing with the effect of allocating Federal Depositories by Congressional district. Conclusions drawn...
Show moreThe preprint of a published article dealing with the effect of allocating Federal Depositories by Congressional district. Conclusions drawn include the fact that due to redistricting that occurs after each decennial census, over time some districts may have within their boundaries a greater number than the two depositories that Congressional district allocation was intended to produce. Likewise, over time shifting boundaries of districts have created districts that have no depositories whatsoever.
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- Title
- Study of phasing transformers
- Creator
- Meyer, E. D.
- Date
- 2009, 1906
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/studyofphasingtr00meye
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology
- Title
- Measurement of the strong coupling αS from the 3-jet rate in e⁺ e⁻ annihilation using JADE data, Proceedings of the XLIII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics
- Creator
- Kluth, S.
- Date
- 2013-09-15, 2013-09-15
- Publisher
- IIT Press
- Description
-
We describe a measurement of the strong coupling αS(MZ₀ ) from the 3-jet rate in hadronic final states of e⁺ e⁻ annihilation recorded with the...
Show moreWe describe a measurement of the strong coupling αS(MZ₀ ) from the 3-jet rate in hadronic final states of e⁺ e⁻ annihilation recorded with the JADE detector at centre-of-mass energies of 14 to 44 GeV. The jets are reconstructed with the Durham jet clustering algorithm. The JADE 3-jet rate data are compared with QCD predictions in NNLO combined with resummed calculations. We find good agreement between the data and the prediction and extract αS(MZ₀ ) = 0.1199±0.0010(stat.)±0.0021(exp.)±0.0054(had.)±0.0007(theo.) .
Sponsorship: IIT College of Science, High Energy Physics Division of Argonne National Laboratory
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- Title
- THE BIFURCATION BEHAVIOR OF AN AUTOTHERMAL PACKED-BED TUBULAR REACTOR
- Creator
- Adomaitis, R. A., Cinar, A.
- Date
- 1988
- Publisher
- PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
- Description
-
The analysis of a chemical reactor by numerical bifurcation techniques can completely define the multiplicity and stability of its equilibrium...
Show moreThe analysis of a chemical reactor by numerical bifurcation techniques can completely define the multiplicity and stability of its equilibrium states and can give insights into the reactor's parametric sensitivity and dynamical behavior in the neighborhood of the chosen operating points. In this paper, we will present some of the numerical bifurcation techniques used and developed in analyzing an autothermal packed bed tubular reactor. The bifurcation behavior found will be cataloged over the range of relevant reactant inlet conditions, and an explanation for the isolated solution branches characteristic of this reactor will also be presented.
Endnote format citation
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