Experimental performance results of IMT-2000 CDMA TDD system

Author(s):  
T. Futakata ◽  
M. Itoh ◽  
Sung Uk Moon ◽  
S. Uebayashi
1994 ◽  
Vol 04 (04) ◽  
pp. 477-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.K.S. GUPTA ◽  
C.-H. HUANG ◽  
P. SADAYAPPAN ◽  
R.W. JOHNSON

Implementations of various fast Fourier transform (FFT) algorithms are presented for distributed-memory multiprocessors. These algorithms use data redistribution to localize the computation. The goal is to optimize communication cost by using a minimum number of redistribution steps. Both analytical and experimental performance results on the Intel iPSC/860 system are presented.


Author(s):  
Liam Barr ◽  
Stephen Spence ◽  
David Thornhill ◽  
Paul Eynon

This report details the numerical and experimental investigation of the performance characteristics of a conventional radial turbine compared with a new back swept design for the same application. The blade geometry of an existing turbine from a turbocharger was used as a baseline. A new back swept blade was subsequently designed for the rotor, which departed from the conventional radial inlet blade angle to incorporate a 25° inlet blade angle. A comparative numerical analysis between the two geometries is presented. Results show that the 25° back swept blade offers significant increases in efficiency while operating at lower than optimum velocity ratios (U/C). Improvements in efficiency at off-design conditions could significantly improve turbocharger performance since the turbine typically experiences lower than optimum velocity ratios while accelerating during engine transients. A commercial CFD code was used to construct single passage steady state numerical models. The numerical predictions show off-design performance gains of 2% can be achieved, while maintaining design point efficiency. A finite element stress analysis was conducted to show that the nonradial inlet blade angle could be implemented without exceeding the acceptable stress levels for the rotor. A modal analysis was also carried out in order to identify the natural blade frequencies, showing that these were not significantly changed by the implementation of backswept blading. A prototype backswept rotor was produced and tested in a direct comparison with the baseline rotor geometry. Experimental performance results showed strong correlations with those obtained numerically, and verified the predicted performance gains at off-deign velocity ratios. This numerical and experimental study has shown that it is feasible from both an aerodynamic and structural point of view to improve the performance characteristic of a radial turbine at lower than optimum velocity ratios through the implementation of back swept blading.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jordan Ansell

<p>Analytical modelling and experimental measurement can are used to evaluate the performance of a network. Models provide insight and measurement provides realism.  For software defined networks (SDN) it is unknown how well the existing queueing models represent the performance of a real SDN network. This leads to uncertainty between what can be predicted and the actual behaviour of a software defined network.  This work investigates the accuracy of software defined network queueing models. This is done through comparing the performance results of analytical models to experimental performance results.  The outcome of this is an understanding of how reliable the existing queueing models are and areas where the queueing models can be improved.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jordan Ansell

<p>Analytical modelling and experimental measurement can are used to evaluate the performance of a network. Models provide insight and measurement provides realism.  For software defined networks (SDN) it is unknown how well the existing queueing models represent the performance of a real SDN network. This leads to uncertainty between what can be predicted and the actual behaviour of a software defined network.  This work investigates the accuracy of software defined network queueing models. This is done through comparing the performance results of analytical models to experimental performance results.  The outcome of this is an understanding of how reliable the existing queueing models are and areas where the queueing models can be improved.</p>


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (18) ◽  
pp. 4873
Author(s):  
Yaguang Heng ◽  
Yuming Han ◽  
Huiyu Zhang ◽  
Weibin Zhang ◽  
Gérard Bois ◽  
...  

A preliminary experimental work on a centrifugal pump model specifically designed to transport slurry and multiphase flows is presented. The impeller design corresponds to the so-called “Tesla Bladed Pump” adapted from an existing DiscflowTM pump design for the petroleum deep-sea application. The overall performance results of such a specific pump design are presented for different rotational speeds and discussed in relation to affinity laws coefficients. The results show that the performance of the tested disc pump strongly differs from the conventional centrifugal bladed pump. A one-dimensional approach using complete Euler relation is used to explain the differences in the present case. Moreover, it has been found that available results in open literatures do not correspond to the real optimum conditions, more detailed research work must be performed to get a better understanding on this kind of bladed disc pump.


2004 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
pp. 481-534 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. E. Dixon ◽  
M. L. Ginsberg ◽  
E. M. Luks ◽  
A. J. Parkes

This is the second of three planned papers describing ZAP, a satisfiability engine that substantially generalizes existing tools while retaining the performance characteristics of modern high performance solvers. The fundamental idea underlying ZAP is that many problems passed to such engines contain rich internal structure that is obscured by the Boolean representation used; our goal is to define a representation in which this structure is apparent and can easily be exploited to improve computational performance. This paper presents the theoretical basis for the ideas underlying ZAP, arguing that existing ideas in this area exploit a single, recurring structure in that multiple database axioms can be obtained by operating on a single axiom using a subgroup of the group of permutations on the literals in the problem. We argue that the group structure precisely captures the general structure at which earlier approaches hinted, and give numerous examples of its use. We go on to extend the Davis-Putnam-Logemann-Loveland inference procedure to this broader setting, and show that earlier computational improvements are either subsumed or left intact by the new method. The third paper in this series discusses ZAP's implementation and presents experimental performance results.


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