scholarly journals Bio-Tile: An Intelligent Hybrid-Infrastructure

2021 ◽  
pp. 80-91
Author(s):  
Sara Pezeshk

AbstractBio-tile is a multipurpose artifact designed for protecting the coastline from erosion while creating a landscape element and an architectural experience for visitors. Bio-tile performs as a mitigation strategy to slow down erosion while promoting biodiversity. This paper describes the methodology used to develop the bio-tile as the nexus between digital and environmental for resolving coastline challenges through material tectonics. A non-linear algorithm and nature’s inherent code are used to develop the Bio-tile, a nature-based hybrid infrastructure. This approach aims to generate a performance-oriented design by using emergence theory to construct shoreline elements adaptive to climatic conditions.

2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 302-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Brauner ◽  
Axel S Herrmann ◽  
Philipp M Niemeier ◽  
Konstantin Schubert

Fibre-reinforced thermoplastic composite materials can be manufactured rapidly using a thermoforming process. The assortment of thermoplastic matrix systems is manifold and starts from bulk plastic like polypropylene (PP) up to high-performance systems like polyether ether ketone. High-performance thermoplastic polymers have durable properties but relatively high raw material costs. For structural application, engineering methods are needed to ensure the availability for use over the full range of the life cycle of parts. This equates to at least 15 years under exposure to varying climatic conditions for an automobile component. Bulk plastics have complex viscoelastic behaviour, which means that advanced methods are needed to ensure the long-term behaviour of both the pure plastic or fibre-reinforced materials with such a matrix system. In the following study, the creep behaviour of a glass fibre-reinforced PP material is investigated using different uniaxially loaded creep tests at different load and temperature levels. Starting from this empirical base, two characteristic creep functions are derived using a modified Burgers approach. To transfer the results of uniaxial creep situations to a three-dimensional multiaxial stress state, a method to interpolate the experimental creep curves is presented. This developed creep model is integrated into the implicit non-linear finite element program SAMCEF/Mecano and used to predict the creep behaviour of a complex laminate. The results are then validated against the performed experiments.


2021 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Cárdenas ◽  
J. Delgado

This paper shows a numerical polynomial approach to the topic of how bipolar junction transistors (BJT) and field effect transistors (FET) can be safe or unsafe when operating in explosive atmospheres. The most used transistors have been analyzed thermographically, working in a controlled environment, to characterize their thermal behavior. The target is to prevent the transistor from creating conditions that achieve the minimum activation energy for combustible vapors, dusts, or fibers/flyings. We have brought the transistors to their nominal values, specified by working currents and voltages, and confirmed that the effect of heat dissipation in a BJT is non-linear and much greater than in a MOSFET. We have experimentally found a thermal difference of more than 200ºC of overheating of a common BJT compared to a MOSFET with similar load in fixed polarization. We found temperatures above 300ºC in BJTs operating within their nominal ranges and conditions, when the accepted “safe” temperature is not supposed to exceed 200ºC in any case. Through a performance-based analysis focused on temperature, our research suggests that equipment with BJT technologies should not be implemented in certain areas of classified locations or explosive zones; so MOSFET technologies are preferable


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lina M. Estupinan-Suarez ◽  
Alexander Brenning ◽  
Fabian Gans ◽  
Guido Kraemer ◽  
Carlos A. Sierra ◽  
...  

<p>The response of tropical vegetation to El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is considered a main driver of global annual atmospheric CO2 concentrations at inter-annual time scales. ENSO warm and cold phases, El Niño and La Niña respectively, cause contrasting climatic conditions along tropical South America. While some regions experience wetter conditions during El Niño, such as  the Pacific coast, others regions such as the Amazon are exposed to warmer and drier climates. Besides this spatial variation, the biospheric response also differs between ENSO type and intensity, overruling of local conditions and ecosystems types. Due to this complexity, there is a lack of understanding on what ecosystems and regions are systematically affected by ENSO and how biospheric variables respond. Here, we analysed the Northern region of tropical South America covering tropical savannas, forests, and mountainous ecosystems in several countries. To do this, we assessed different land surface (e.g. GPP, NDVI,  FPAR, LST) and climate data streams compiled in the regional Earth System Data Lab (ESDL, https://www.earthsystemdatalab.net/) at 1 km and 10 km pixel size from 2001 to 2015. We applied Isomap, a non-linear dimensionality reduction method in the time domain for high dimensional dynamical systems. Our analysis was constrained to the fourth order continental basins and dominant land cover types. Land use change pixels were disregarded. Further, a comparison of ENSO indexes was conducted among basins. We found that isomap components  are able to capture the biosphere variability related to ENSO in basins that have been historically affected such as Magdalena-Cauca valleys and the Caribbean region. Implementation of non-linear methods increases our understanding of ENSO impacts spatially in regions where events intensity and frequency is increasing, and effective ecosystems management is urgent.</p>


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