4 resultados para Cultural flows and consumption
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
With the rising prices of the retail electricity and the decreasing cost of the PV technology, grid parity with commercial electricity will soon become a reality in Europe. This fact, together with less attractive PV feed-in-tariffs in the near future and incentives to promote self-consumption suggest, that new operation modes for the PV Distributed Generation should be explored; differently from the traditional approach which is only based on maximizing the exported electricity to the grid. The smart metering is experiencing a growth in Europe and the United States but the possibilities of its use are still uncertain, in our system we propose their use to manage the storage and to allow the user to know their electrical power and energy balances. The ADSM has many benefits studied previously but also it has important challenges, in this paper we can observe and ADSM implementation example where we propose a solution to these challenges. In this paper we study the effects of the Active Demand-Side Management (ADSM) and storage systems in the amount of consumed local electrical energy. It has been developed on a prototype of a self-sufficient solar house called “MagicBox” equipped with grid connection, PV generation, lead–acid batteries, controllable appliances and smart metering. We carried out simulations for long-time experiments (yearly studies) and real measures for short and mid-time experiments (daily and weekly studies). Results show the relationship between the electricity flows and the storage capacity, which is not linear and becomes an important design criterion.
Resumo:
Under the 12th International Conference on Building Materials and Components is inserted this communication related to the field of management of those assets that constitute the Spanish Cultural Heritage and maintenance. This work is related to the field of management of those assets that constitute the Spanish Cultural Heritage which share an artistic or historical background. The conservation and maintenance become a social demand necessary for the preservation of public values, requiring the investment of necessary resources. The legal protection involves a number of obligations and rights to ensure the conservation and heritage protection. The duty of maintenance and upkeep exceeds the useful life the property that must endure more for their cultural value for its usability. The establishment of the necessary conditions to prevent deterioration and precise in order to fulfill its social function, seeking to prolong the life of the asset, preserving their physical integrity and its ability to convey the values protected. This obligation implies a substantial financial effort to the holder of the property, either public or private entity, addressing a problem of economic sustainability. Economic exploitation, with the aim of contributing to their well-maintained, is sometimes the best way to get resources. The work will include different lines of research with the following objectives. - Establishment of processes for assessing total costs over the building life cycle (LCC), during the planning stages or maintenance budgets to determine the most advantageous operating system. - Relationship between the value of property and maintenance costs, and establishing a sensitivity analysis.
Resumo:
Una de las características definitorias del sistema urbano contemporáneo es su desterritorialización, es decir, su adopción de un modelo de desarrollo que se da al margen del territorio concreto que lo sustenta y de los recursos biofísicos y culturales existentes en él. Dicha desterritorialización es posible gracias al uso intensivo de energía que ha permitido ampliar hasta la escala global los flujos del metabolismo urbano. De este modo se han roto las relaciones de proximidad urbano-rurales, y se ha aumentado la dependencia de recursos externos. Entre las diferentes manifestaciones de esta desterritorialización se encuentra la organización del sistema alimentario, que en la actualidad responde a un modelo globalizado, en el que la distancia entre producción y consumo ha aumentado a costa de incrementar el gasto energético en transporte y conservación de alimentos. Este distanciamento físico va acompañado también de un distanciamiento social e identario, con la hegemonía de un modelo agroindustrial que no respeta los paisajes, las prácticas agrícolas, los conocimientos tradicionales ni las variedades genéticas locales. Tanto el modelo territorial como el alimentario son altamente vulnerables ante crisis externas que pueden alterar su funcionamiento. El enfoque (bio)regionalista desde el mismo inicio de la ciudad industrial hasta nuestros días ha propuesto un modelo de ordenación territorial alternativo, adaptado a las condiciones locales y basado en la proximidad, que dotaría al sistema territorial de mayor resiliencia y sostenibilidad. Para confirmar este presupuesto y evaluar la capacidad de reterritorialización alimentaria se ha desarrollado una metodología que aborda el estudio del sistema territorial como socioecosistema complejo, en el que se distinguen componentes de tipo social, construido y biofísico, que se encuentran interrelacionados. La historia de cambios en la organización del sistema, su estado actual y su capacidad de reorganizarse en estados alternativos son las bases de dicha evaluación. Esta metodología se aplica a la Comunidad de Madrid con el fin de describir su sistema territorial desde el punto de vista del abastecimiento alimentario y evaluar su capacidad de reterritorialización. ABSTRACT Deterritorialization is one of the defining characteristics of the contemporary urban system. This means that its development model is designed ignoring the attributes of the specific region in which is located, and the biophysical and cultural resources therein. Such territorialization is possible due to the intensive energy consumption that allows expanding to a global scale the flows of urban metabolism. This way, urban-rural linkages have been broken, increasing dependency on external resources. The modern food system is among the clearest expressions of a deterritorialized model. In a globalized food system, increasing distances between production and consumption spaces are possible through energy-intensive transport and preservation activities. Physical distanciation goes hand in hand with social disconnection and loss of identity, due to a hegemonic agro-industrial model that does not respect local landscapes, agricultural practices, traditional knowledge or genetic varieties. Both the regional and the food systems are highly vulnerable to external shocks that may affect their functions. The bioregionalist approach has proposed, since the industrial city until today, an alternative model, adapted to local conditions and rooted on proximity, which provides a sustainable and resilient regional planning and management. To confirm this assumption and assess the food reterritorialisation capacity, a methodology has been developed that address the regional system as a complex social-ecosystem, in which interrelated social, built and biophysical subsystems are included. Assessment is based in the analysis of regimes shifts in the history of the system, and in the description of its current and alternative states. This methodology is applied to the administrative region of Madrid in order to describe its regional food system and assess its reterritorialization capacity.
Resumo:
Statistically stationary and homogeneous shear turbulence (SS-HST) is investigated by means of a new direct numerical simulation code, spectral in the two horizontal directions and compact-finite-differences in the direction of the shear. No remeshing is used to impose the shear-periodic boundary condition. The influence of the geometry of the computational box is explored. Since HST has no characteristic outer length scale and tends to fill the computational domain, long-term simulations of HST are “minimal” in the sense of containing on average only a few large-scale structures. It is found that the main limit is the spanwise box width, Lz, which sets the length and velocity scales of the turbulence, and that the two other box dimensions should be sufficiently large (Lx ≳ 2Lz, Ly ≳ Lz) to prevent other directions to be constrained as well. It is also found that very long boxes, Lx ≳ 2Ly, couple with the passing period of the shear-periodic boundary condition, and develop strong unphysical linearized bursts. Within those limits, the flow shows interesting similarities and differences with other shear flows, and in particular with the logarithmic layer of wall-bounded turbulence. They are explored in some detail. They include a self-sustaining process for large-scale streaks and quasi-periodic bursting. The bursting time scale is approximately universal, ∼20S−1, and the availability of two different bursting systems allows the growth of the bursts to be related with some confidence to the shearing of initially isotropic turbulence. It is concluded that SS-HST, conducted within the proper computational parameters, is a very promising system to study shear turbulence in general.