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(341 - 360 of 2,990)
Pages
- Title
- Recent developments in Monte Carlo simulations, Proceedings of the XLIII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics
- Creator
- Thompson, Jennifer M.
- Date
- 2013-09-15, 2013-09-15
- Publisher
- IIT Press
- Description
-
This talk outlines the current status of Monte Carlo simulations in particle physics. It demonstrates the implementation of automated NLO...
Show moreThis talk outlines the current status of Monte Carlo simulations in particle physics. It demonstrates the implementation of automated NLO contributions to matrix elements. The matching methods MC@NLO and POWHEG are outlined and results using various NLO tools are presented. The first plots from POWHEG showing the matching of NNLO matrix elements to the parton shower are also presented.
Sponsorship: IIT College of Science, High Energy Physics Division of Argonne National Laboratory
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- Title
- The academic library building in the digital age : a study of construction, planning, and design of new library space
- Creator
- Stewart, Christopher
- Date
- 2010
- Publisher
- Association of College & Research Libraries
- Description
-
The Academic Library Building in the Digital Age: A Study of Construction, Planning, and Design of New Library Space is the first...
Show moreThe Academic Library Building in the Digital Age: A Study of Construction, Planning, and Design of New Library Space is the first comprehensive study of planning and construction of academic library buildings completed entirely in the new century. Given digitization of collections, the dynamic mix of new learning spaces with traditional library functions, and other factors informing contemporary library design, the digital age has not raised so much the question of if libraries will survive, but how they will survive. This book answers this question, among others, by looking to academic library building projects completed in recent years.
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- Title
- Impacts of Sulfur Capture Technology in Coal Power Plants (sequence unknown), IPRO 302 - Deliverables: IPRO 302 IPRO Day Presentation F09
- Creator
- Contreras, Abraham, Dickman, Justin, Enadeghe, Gregory, Garcia Rodriguez, Hector, Haddad, Michael, Kyle, Ryan, Mongillo, Michael, Murphy, Ryan, Shonubi, Oluwaseun, Swillum, Bryce, Wolber, Brian, Worthon, Terrika
- Date
- 2009-12
- Description
-
The IPRO team was investigating the net impact of sulfur capture technologies used in current and next generation power plants in the United...
Show moreThe IPRO team was investigating the net impact of sulfur capture technologies used in current and next generation power plants in the United States. It planned to use this knowledge to determine which sulfur capture technologies produce the greatest benefit for industry and society and to find the marketability of the sulfur byproducts created in these power plants.
Sponsorship: Sargent & Lundy, LLC
These are the deliverables for IPRO 302: Impacts of Sulfur Capture Technology in Coal Power Plants from the Fall 2009 semester.
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- Title
- Devices that Assist Blind & Visually-Impaired Individuals in Swimming and Other Exercise Activities (sequence unknown), IPRO 310 - Deliverables
- Creator
- Dykeman, Kimberly, Healton, Michaela, Lipman, Timothy, Ludwig, Ross, Park, Jay, Reilly, Jeffrey, Sarkar, Smita, Sirk, Phillip, Toro, Branden
- Date
- 2009-12
- Description
-
The objective is to develop, test, and implement assistive technology with the community that promotes safety and improves independence of...
Show moreThe objective is to develop, test, and implement assistive technology with the community that promotes safety and improves independence of blind and visually impaired (BVI) swimmers.
Sponsorship: Chicago Lighthouse for the Blind & Visually-Impaired. Notre Dame University
Deliverables for IPRO 310:Devices that Assist Blind & Visually-Impaired Individuals in Swimming and Other Exercise Activities for the fall 2009 semester.
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- Title
- SCALABLE RESOURCE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM SOFTWARE FOR EXTREMESCALE DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS
- Creator
- Wang, Ke
- Date
- 2015, 2015-07
- Description
-
Distributed systems are growing exponentially in the computing capacity. On the high-performance computing (HPC) side, supercomputers are...
Show moreDistributed systems are growing exponentially in the computing capacity. On the high-performance computing (HPC) side, supercomputers are predicted to reach exascale with billion-way parallelism around the end of this decade. Scientific applications running on supercomputers are becoming more diverse, including traditional large-scale HPC jobs, small-scale HPC ensemble runs, and fine-grained many-task computing (MTC) workloads. Similar challenges are cropping up in cloud computing as data-centers host ever growing larger number of servers exceeding many top HPC systems in production today. The applications commonly found in the cloud are ushering in the era of big data, resulting in billions of tasks that involve processing increasingly large amount of data. However, the resource management system (RMS) software of distributed systems is still designed around the decades-old centralized paradigm, which is far from satisfying the ever-growing needs of performance and scalability towards extreme scales, due to the limited capacity of a centralized server. This huge gap between the processing capacity and the performance needs has driven us to develop next-generation RMSs that are magnitudes more scalable. In this dissertation, we first devise a general system software taxonomy to explore the design choices of system software, and propose that key-value stores could serve as a building block. We then design distributed RMS on top of key-value stores. We propose a fully distributed architecture and a data-aware work stealing technique for the MTC resource management, and develop the SimMatrix simulator to explore the distributed designs, which informs the real implementation of the MATRIX task execution framework. We also propose a partition-based architecture and resource sharing techniques for the HPC resource management, and implement them by building the Slurm++ real workload manager and the SimSlurm++ simulator. We study the distributed designs through real systems up to thousands of nodes, and through simulations up to millions of nodes. Results show that the distributed paradigm has significant advantages over centralized one. We envision that the contributions of this dissertation will be both evolutionary and revolutionary to the extreme-scale computing community, and will lead to a plethora of following research work and innovations towards tomorrow’s extremescale systems.
Ph.D. in Computer Science, July 2015
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- Title
- CO2 CAPTURE AND HYDROGEN PRODUCTION IN SORBENT ENHANCED WATER-GAS SHIFT (SEWGS) PROCESS WITH REGENERABLE SOLID SORBENT
- Creator
- Zarghami Khanehsar, Shahin
- Date
- 2015, 2015-07
- Description
-
Carbon dioxide emission from fossil fuel combustion and its impact on global warming is one of the most critical environmental issues nowadays...
Show moreCarbon dioxide emission from fossil fuel combustion and its impact on global warming is one of the most critical environmental issues nowadays. Coal as a main source of produce energy is the most CO2-intensive fossil fuel. Advanced power generation processes that use gasification technology, such as Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC), which offer higher efficiency, are among the leading contenders for power generation in the 21st century. In an IGCC process, because of high pressure, carbon dioxide in the fuel gas is at higher concentration, which can be captured and sequestered at lower costs. Utilization of regenerable MgO-based sorbents has been shown to be an effective method for capturing CO2 from gasification-based processes at elevated temperatures and pressures (i.e. p > 20 atm and 330° < T < 450°C). Low cost MgO based sorbent can be prepared through modification of natural dolomite. The reactivity of the sorbent in carbonation/regeneration cycles has a significant impact on the economics of the proposed regenerable process. Although the sorbent can be regenerated in successive cycles, the sorbent reactivity and capacity gradually decline during the cyclic process. Therefore, it is crucial to develop a better understanding on the role of the key parameters affecting the reactivity of the sorbent going through the cyclic carbonation/regeneration process. In this work, a systematic study on the sorbent preparation parameters (i.e., calcination temperature, calcination duration, calcination temperature ramp, potassium concentration, impregnation duration, drying temperature, re-calcination temperature, and re-calcination duration) was conducted to understand the effect of each parameter on the overall capacity and reactivity of the sorbent. The concentration of potassium additive (as carbonation reaction promoter) has the most significant effect on the reactivity of the sorbent and the optimum K/Mg molar ratio appears to be in the range of 0.1-0.16. The reactivity of the sorbent toward carbon dioxide at various operating conditions (i.e. temperature, CO2 concentration and steam concentration) was experimentally evaluated. The presence of steam significantly improves the reactivity of the sorbent which is attributed to formation of more favorable pore structure as well as the existence of a parallel carbonation reaction pathway involving the formation of a transient MgO.H2O* compound. The optimum carbonation reaction temperature in the presence of steam is around 380˚C. The effect of cycling on CO2 capture capacity of MgO-based sorbent was also experimentally investigated in this work. Series of carbonation/regeneration cycles (up to 25) have been carried out in a dispersed bed reactor to determine the effect of various variables on long term durability of the sorbent. The gradual loss of CO2 sorption capacity appears to be mainly due to loss potassium (a carbonation reaction promoter) in the cyclic process. Durability of the sorbents improves in the presence of steam, which is likely due to the favorable changes in the pore structure of the sorbents. A kinetic model was developed to fit the reactivity curves obtained from the dispersed bed tests at different operating conditions which was needed to predict the sorbent/catalyst performance in the regenerative process. Model parameters were defined and discussed for each of the operating conditions, as well as dispersed bed cyclic tests. Furthermore, the thermal behavior and the kinetics of partial decomposition of dolomite were studied in a dispersed-bed reactor to improve the reactivity of the sorbent. The microstructure and the nature of the solid products were found to be strongly dependent on the CO2 partial pressure near the reacting interface and on the decomposition temperature. A significant increase in the rate of the dolomite decomposition reaction was found in the presence of steam. Steam improves the kinetics of decomposition, modifies the radial distribution of the pores; and improves the connectivity of the pores inside the dolomite particles, which decreases the diffusion resistance of produced carbon dioxide inside the particle. A shrinking core model with variable product layer diffusivity was used to fit the experimental data and determine the kinetic parameters of the dolomite decomposition reaction. The results indicate that transport of CO2 across the reacting interface in the porous particle was the main limiting factor in the decomposition reaction at the experimental conditions investigated. A lab-scaled high-pressure/high-temperature packed-bed reactor was utilized to evaluate the performance of the sorbent in simultaneous water-gas shift reaction and sorbent carbonation environment. It was shown that the CO2 in the coal gas can be removed by regenerable MgO-based sorbents at temperatures around 350°C, and the CO2 removal can shift WGS reaction to enhance hydrogen production. Therefore, Sorbent Enhanced Water-Gas-Shift (SEWGS) can result in much higher hydrogen production without lowering the temperature, leading to higher overall process efficiency.
Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering, July 2015
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- Title
- Laboratory Notebook 106
- Creator
- Cooper, Kerri, Lee, Alvin, Slade, Peter
- Date
- 2010-09-09T21:17:47Z
- Description
-
Validating ozone's optimal conditions on a sucrose food matrix embedded with Bacillus Spores
- Title
- Criteria for the Existence of Helical Instabilities in Subsonic Inpinging Jets
- Creator
- Panickar, Praveen, Raman, Ganesh
- Date
- 2007-10
- Publisher
- American Inst Physics
- Description
-
Understanding instability modes in impinging jets is important for the design of advanced vertical takeoff and landing aircraft. Our initial...
Show moreUnderstanding instability modes in impinging jets is important for the design of advanced vertical takeoff and landing aircraft. Our initial experimental observations of helical modes in subsonic impinging jets were contrary to expectations based on published stability theory results. This paper focuses on the curious phenomenon of the occurrence of these, hitherto unexpected, helical modes in subsonic impinging jets and provides, both experimental and analytical proof for their existence. Past results, based on linear stability analysis, that call for an absence of helical modes in cold, subsonic impinging jets have been re-examined to reconcile new experimental data. Based on this re-examination, a new threshold Mach number has been proposed, above which helical modes are permissible. The revised theory put forth in this paper indicates that the threshold Mach number for the existence of the helical mode depends on the jet temperature and that this threshold decreases as the jet temperature increases. This threshold Mach number has been experimentally verified for unheated jets. Additionally, the experimental results reveal that the threshold Mach number also depends on the stand-off distance. Finally, it has been shown that the experimentally obtained mean Strouhal numbers for the helical mode show excellent agreement with the Strouhal number of the least dispersive wave of the same mode calculated at various Mach numbers. The results presented here offer hope for better understanding of impinging jet instability modes. (C) 2007 American Institute of Physics.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2798804
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- Title
- Delta Shelter (sequence unknown), IPRO 311 - Deliverables: IPRO 311 Poster F09
- Creator
- Schug, Timothy, Bradley, Joshua, Cahan, Noah, Dobbin, Dan, Hallenbeck, Jeff, Jordan, Davyd, Strandquist, Brad, Dohm, Jacob, Hoffman, Kent, Lee, Woong-kyo, Waisath, Nathan
- Date
- 2009-12
- Description
-
The Delta Tau Delta fraternity wants to make their current house as energy efficient and green as possible. The team will look at all aspects...
Show moreThe Delta Tau Delta fraternity wants to make their current house as energy efficient and green as possible. The team will look at all aspects of the DTD house and their operations to create a more energy efficient fraternity. During the term, the team will consider possible alternatives to many issues including but not limited to: mechanical heating system, building envelope, thermal properties of buildings perimeter, roofing materials, air infiltration, ventilation, and occupancy trends.
Deliverables for IPRO 311: Delta Shelter for the fall 2009
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- Title
- Diffraction at the LHC, Proceedings of the XLIII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics
- Creator
- Csanád, M.
- Date
- 2013-09-15, 2013-09-15
- Publisher
- IIT Press
- Description
-
Proton-proton collisions at the LHC can be classified as elastic, non-diffractive, and diffractive. In this paper we discuss various...
Show moreProton-proton collisions at the LHC can be classified as elastic, non-diffractive, and diffractive. In this paper we discuss various measurements of these above processes at various LHC experiments. We report about the total proton-proton cross-section measurements, about the analysis of diffractive events and also about the pseudorapidity distribution in inelastic events.
Sponsorship: IIT College of Science, High Energy Physics Division of Argonne National Laboratory
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- Title
- INCORPORATING REACTIVE POWER MARKET INTO THE DAY-AHEAD ELECTRICITY MARKET
- Creator
- Al Ghamdi, Mohammed
- Date
- 2012-05-29, 2012-07
- Description
-
The research work presented in this thesis proposes the incorporation of the reactive power market into the day-ahead electricity market in...
Show moreThe research work presented in this thesis proposes the incorporation of the reactive power market into the day-ahead electricity market in order to compensate generation companies (GENCOs) and independent power producers (IPPs) for providing any additional reactive power support, which varies on an hourly basis based on the load demand, transmission network configuration, and any contingencies that might occur. This proposal would minimize the total payment burden on the independent system operator (ISO), which is related to the reactive power dispatch. The proposed model achieves the main objective of an ISO in a competitive electricity market, which is to provide the required reactive power support from generators at minimum cost while ensuring the secure operation of the power system. In this research, the reactive power price is the bidding-based price that is submitted by the GENCOs and IPPs to the ISOs during the day-ahead market. The proposal takes into the account both the technical and economic aspects associated with the active power and reactive power dispatch in the context of the new operating paradigms in competitive electricity markets. In this research, the Security Constrained Unit Commitment (SCUC) based on AC power flow modeling is considered as the drive engine for clearing the day-ahead electricity market based on the amount of information provided by the market participants. This proposed framework would provide appropriate reactive power support from service providers at minimum cost, while ensuring the secure and reliable operation of the electrical power system. In the research, the PQ capability curves of the generating units are modeled to ensure the practically of the SCUC solutions that are obtained. This proposal would be an essential step toward a fair electricity market while increasing the security of the power system and reducing transmission congestions. Also, it would pave the road for various renewable energy resources since the penetration of renewable energy resources would impact the commitment of the generating units. This would impact the available reactive power reserve margin and security of the network. In addition, incorporating the reactive power market into the day-ahead market would provide a clear signal for optimal private investment in the reactive power capacity. The framework that has been developed is general in nature and can be used for any electricity market structure.
Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, July 2012
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- Title
- Low-energy exclusive cross sections and inclusive production of identified charged hadrons with Babar, Proceedings of the XLIII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics
- Creator
- Gary, J. William
- Date
- 2013-09-15, 2013-09-15
- Publisher
- IIT Press
- Description
-
Recent measurements of exclusive hadronic cross sections from the Babar Collaboration at SLAC are presented. Specifically, we present results...
Show moreRecent measurements of exclusive hadronic cross sections from the Babar Collaboration at SLAC are presented. Specifically, we present results on the e⁺e⁻ → K⁺K⁻(γ), p̅p, KₛKₗ, KₛKₗπ⁺π⁻ , KₛKₛπ⁺π⁻, and KₛKₛK⁺K⁻ cross sections performed using events with initial-state photon radiation, which allows the cross sections to be measured at low energy and over an extended energy range. In addition, we present results on the inclusive momentum spectra of identified charged pions, kaons, and protons at the fixed center-of-mass energy of 10.54 GeV, allowing new tests of QCD.
Sponsorship: IIT College of Science, High Energy Physics Division of Argonne National Laboratory
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- Title
- INVESTIGATION OF NIOBIUM SURFACE STRUCTURE AND COMPOSITION FOR IMPROVEMENT OF SUPERCONDUCTING RADIO-FREQUENCY CAVITIES
- Creator
- Trenikhina, Yulia
- Date
- 2014, 2014-12
- Description
-
Nano-scale investigation of intrinsic properties of niobium near-surface is a key to control performance of niobium superconducting radio...
Show moreNano-scale investigation of intrinsic properties of niobium near-surface is a key to control performance of niobium superconducting radio-frequency cavities. Mechanisms responsible for the performance limitations and their empirical remedies needs to be justified in order to reproducibly control fabrication of SRF cavities with desired characteristics. The high field Q-slope and mechanism behind its cure (120◦C mild vacuum bake) were investigated by comparison of the samples cut out of the cavities with high and low dissipation regions. Material evolution during mild field Q-slope nitrogen treatment was characterized using the coupon samples as well as samples cut out of nitrogen treated cavity. Evaluation of niobium near-surface state after some typical and novel cavity treatments was accomplished. Various TEM techniques, SEM, XPS, AES, XRD were used for the structural and chemical characterization of niobium near-surface. Combination of thermometry and structural temperature-dependent comparison of the cavity cutouts with different dissipation characteristics revealed precipitation of niobium hydrides to be the reason for medium and high field Q-slopes. Step-by-step effect of the nitrogen treatment processing on niobium surface was studied by analytical and structural characterization of the cavity cutout and niobium samples, which were subject to the treatment. Low concentration nitrogen doping is proposed to explain the benefit of nitrogen treatment. Chemical characterization of niobium samples before and after various surface processing (Electropolishing (EP), 800◦C bake, hydrofluoric acid (HF) rinsing) showed the differences that can help to reveal the microscopic effects behind these treatments as well as possible sources of surface contamination.
Ph.D. in Physics, December 2014
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- Title
- Chicago Politicians on Twitter
- Creator
- Hemphill, Libby, Shapiro, Matthew A., Otterbacher, Jahna
- Date
- 2012-03-12, 2012-03-12
- Description
-
This paper uses data from 1,042 tweets posted by or mentioning Chicago Aldermen or Mayor Rahm Emanuel to examine how Chicago politicians use...
Show moreThis paper uses data from 1,042 tweets posted by or mentioning Chicago Aldermen or Mayor Rahm Emanuel to examine how Chicago politicians use social media. Twitter provides a public communication medium in which constituents and their representatives can have two-way conversations that others can witness and record, and we used qualitative and social network methods to examine conversations between Chicagoans and representatives in city government. We coded the contents of each tweet over the two-week time period (e.g., official business, fundraising) and created representations of the social networks created by the users’ following behaviors. These networks indicate who receives politicians’ tweets and help identify the audiences for political messaging in social media. Our analysis indicates that Chicago’s Aldermen and Mayor use Twitter for social conversations more often than political ones, and that only a small number of Aldermen dominate the resulting conversation networks.
Sponsorship: Social Network Research Group at IIT, IIT Graduate College
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- Title
- EXPLOITING NETWORK CODING IN DIFFERENT WIRELESS NETWORKS
- Creator
- Guo, Bin
- Date
- 2012-07-06, 2012-07
- Description
-
Wireless communication networks have been incorporated into our daily life and provide convenience anytime and anywhere. However, the wireless...
Show moreWireless communication networks have been incorporated into our daily life and provide convenience anytime and anywhere. However, the wireless medium is unreliable and unpredictable. Current wireless networks suffer from low throughput, low reliability, etc. Network coding, an alternative approach, has attracted more interests and has emerged as an important technology in wireless networks. It can provide significant potential throughput improvements and a high degree of robustness. This dissertation is built on the theory of network coding. In this dissertation, different network coding protocols are designed in varied wireless networks. The first part of this dissertation proposes a novel coding-ware routing protocol in wireless mesh networks. In particular, a generalized coding condition is formally established to identify the coding opportunities. Based on general coding conditions analysis, a novel routing metric FORM (Free-ride Optimal Routing Metric) and the corresponding routing protocol are developed with the objective to exploit the coding opportunities and maximize the benefit of “free-ride” in order to reduce the total number of transmissions and consequently to increase the network throughput. The results show the proposed protocol achieves significant throughput gain than existing approaches. The second part of this dissertation exploits network coding in wireless cooperative networks. Firstly, a Decode-and-Forward Network Coded (DFNC) protocol is proposed for multi-user cooperative communication system. In particular, DFNC develops an efficient construction method for coding coefficients and a novel decoding algorithm that combines network coding and channel coding. DFNC exploits both temporal and spatial diversities through multiple channels by allowing all the users to generate redundant network-coded packets in a distributed manner and it helps fully explore the redundancy provided by network coding to realize error correction. Theoretical analysis and simulation results demonstrate that DFNC outperforms other transmission schemes in terms of Symbol Error Rate (SER) and achieves higher diversity order. Secondly, the idea of DFNC is extended and Modified-DFNC (M-DFNC) is introduced for a more practical scenario: not all the users will be able to dedicate their resources to provide assistance for others. The throughput analysis shows that M-DFNC outperforms the conventional cooperative protocol in the low-SNR regime and it implies that an adaptive cooperation system should be adopted to optimize the performance. The simulation results validate the theoretical analysis.
Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, July 2012
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- Title
- Eco-Life (URBAN REDEVELOPMENT following CATASTROPHE in nanjing, china): Yingqiu Wu_Master project_poster
- Creator
- Wu, Yingqiu
- Date
- 2011-05-04, 2011-05
- Description
-
My project is an urban redevelopment following catastrophe. A catastrophic explosion in 2010 left a portion of Nanjing city destroyed. The...
Show moreMy project is an urban redevelopment following catastrophe. A catastrophic explosion in 2010 left a portion of Nanjing city destroyed. The project proposes a new urban plan to rebuild the neighborhood and restore the community. A powerful explosion at an abandoned plastics factory in Qixia district of Nanjing city has left several people dead and dozens injured. Buildings and vehicles within 100m of the factory destroyed, 3000 citizen got the key of the street and buildings suffered varying degrees of damage in the area 8 miles in circumference. The blast was caused by a leak from a gas pipeline inside the factory, the blast happened after workers dismantling the plant damaged a propylene pipeline. The leaked gas was then ignited when a car engine was started at the scene. There were a community college and several kindergartens in this area, fortunately, it was summer break at that time, no students hurt reported. It is a unique opportunity to develop a plan in an urban context when the prior years of development have been wiped away. The purpose of the project is giving condos return to 3000 people who lost their houses in the explosion and planing mix-used buildings of the community for next 20 years. At present, many old nerghbourhoods in China are being replaced by new ones. In the most cases, the existing urban patternes are erased and a town is built with out any links to what had previouly existed there. My ptoposal is reusing most of the existing tree line streets, river and bridges. The key of this proposal is sustainability, first idea is using existing river to develop a nice wetland park and the second idea is farming gradens.
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- Title
- Control of grade transitions in distributed chemical reactor networks - An agent-based approach
- Creator
- Tetiker, M. Derya, Artel, Arsun, Teymour, Fouad, Cinar, Ali
- Date
- 2008-09-26
- Publisher
- PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
- Description
-
Supervision of distributed manufacturing processes producing different grades of a product requires intelligent reconfiguration strategies...
Show moreSupervision of distributed manufacturing processes producing different grades of a product requires intelligent reconfiguration strategies during grade transition phases to minimize off-spec production. Agent-based approaches are ideal for such problems and they provide flexible, robust, and emergent solutions during dynamically changing process conditions. Three different multi-layered multi-agent, frameworks are proposed for the supervision of grade transitions in autocatalytic reactor networks. The first framework is the centralized framework and it is useful for small-scale grade transitions where only a small region of the network needs to be reconfigured. Alternatively, the other two frameworks use a decentralized approach. The first decentralized framework implements genetic algorithms and the second one uses self-organizing heuristics and auctions for large-scale grade transitions. The case studies demonstrate that as the complexity of the reconfiguration problem increases, decentralized solutions perform more efficiently.
Endnote format citation for DOI:10.1016/j.compchemeng.2008.02.008
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- Title
- A COMPARATIVE-STUDY OF TOOLS FOR ASSESSING THE EFFECTS OF FORCED PERIODIC OPERATION OF CATALYTIC REACTORS
- Creator
- Ozgulsen, F., Rigopoulos, K. R., Cinar, A.
- Date
- 1992
- Publisher
- GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
- Description
-
Two methods for assessing the effects of forced periodic catalytic reactor operation are presented. The vibrational control method is an...
Show moreTwo methods for assessing the effects of forced periodic catalytic reactor operation are presented. The vibrational control method is an analytical technique which evaluates the effects of high frequency forcing of system parameters by the method of averaging. The second technique is a numerical tool based on a shooting algorithm. These methods are capable of handling multiple input forcing and various shapes of forcing functions. Both methods are applied to isothermal, adiabatic and nonadiabatic operation of an internal recycle reactor in which the catalytic oxidation of ethylene takes place. The basic features of both techniques are discussed and the results obtained by using these methods are compared. Effects of single and multiple input parameter forcing are investigated. Experimental verification of the theoretical results is also performed for the isothermal case.
Endnote format citation
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- Title
- SUSTAINABLE MULTILINGUAL COMMUNICATION: MANAGING MULTILINGUAL CONTENT USING FREE AND OPEN SOURCE CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
- Creator
- Kelsey, Todd
- Date
- 2011-05-03, 2011-05
- Description
-
Multilingual content management systems, combined with streamlined processes and inexpensive organizational tools, make it possible for...
Show moreMultilingual content management systems, combined with streamlined processes and inexpensive organizational tools, make it possible for educators, non-profit entities and individuals with limited resources to develop sustainable and accessible multilingual Web sites. The research included a review of what’s been done in the theory and practice of designing Web sites for multilingual audiences. On the basis of that review, a series of sustainable multilingual Web sites were created, and a series of approaches and systems were tested, including MediaWiki, Plone, Drupal, Joomla, PHPMyFAQ, Blogger, Google Docs and Google Sites. There was also a case study on “Social CMS”, which refers to emergent social networks such as Facebook. The case studies are reported on, and conclude with high-level recommendations that form a roadmap for sustainable multilingual Web site development.
Ph.D. in Technical Communication, May 2011
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- Title
- THERMAL RESISTANCE OF SALMONELLA ENTERICA AND ESCHERICHIA COLI 0157:H7 IN PEANUT BUTTER
- Creator
- He, Yingshu
- Date
- 2014, 2014-05
- Description
-
Salmonella enterica is a frequent food contaminant and the leading cause of foodborne bacterial illnesses in the United States. Our study...
Show moreSalmonella enterica is a frequent food contaminant and the leading cause of foodborne bacterial illnesses in the United States. Our study demonstrated that a 5-strain S. enterica cocktail displayed increased heat resistance in peanut butter of low water activity (aw). Significant differences (P < 0.05) were found between the survival rates of Salmonella enterica and Escherichia coli O157:H7 in peanut butter with different formulations and water activity. High carbohydrate content in peanut butter and low incubation temperature resulted in higher levels of bacterial survival during storage but lower levels of bacterial resistance to heat treatment. Furthermore, we also compared the relative heat resistance of three individual strains of S. enterica representing serotypes Typhimurium, Enteritidis and Tennessee and the 3-strain cocktail treated at both 90oC and 126oC in two different peanut butter formulations with varied fat and carbohydrate contents and adjusted water activities (aw from 0.2 to 0.8). When treated at 90oC, increased water activity in peanut butter significantly (P < 0.05) reduced the heat resistance of desiccation-stressed S. enterica cells. Differences in heat resistance were also detected among the three S. enterica serotypes and between the two peanut butter formulations. When treated at 126oC, the differences in bacterial heat resistance among serotypes and adjusted water activities were less notable (P > 0.05). Based on the Weibull model, an average of 52 to 132 min was required to achieve a 5-log reduction of the 3-strain cocktail at 90oC in peanut butter with an aw of 0.2. When aw was increased to 0.6, to achieve the same 5-log reduction required only 23-27 min. At aw of 0.8, S. enterica could be completely killed in less than 10 min in peanut butter with a fat content of 48.49%. Using scanning electron microscopy, we observed minor morphological changes xiii of S. enterica cells during desiccation and rehydration processes in peanut oil, which was used as a surrogate for peanut putter. Results from this study collectively suggest that water activity plays a critical role in determining S. enterica heat resistance in peanut butter. The variability that exists among the heat resistance of different S. enterica serotypes in different peanut butter formulations should also be taken into consideration for developing and validating effective intervention and mitigation strategies in peanut butter production.
PH.D in Biology, May 2014
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