23 resultados para curto-circuito
Resumo:
A Engenharia de Tecidos é um domínio multidisciplinar que combina especialistas de múltiplos domínios, no sentido de se desenvolverem substitutos biológicos para a regeneração, reparação ou restauração de funções de órgãos ou tecidos. A estratégia mais comum em engenharia de tecidos consiste na utilização de matrizes de suporte (scaffolds) tridimensionais, biocompatíveis, biodegradáveis e altamente porosos, os quais servem de substrato físico ao processo de adesão, proliferação e diferenciação celular. O objectivo deste trabalho de investigação centrou-se na produção e caracterização de scaffolds de PCL e de PCL com partículas de biovidro, abordando um processo de biofabricação, que teve por base o princípio da extrusão. Utilizou-se para tal um equipamento patenteado pelo Centro para o Desenvolvimento Rápido e Sustentado do Produto (CDRsp) designado Bioextruder. Trata-se de um sistema concebido para a produção de matrizes com ou sem encapsulamento de células, de uma forma automática, flexível e integrada. As estruturas obtidas caracterizaram-se quanto às propriedades térmicas, químicas, morfológicas e mecânicas. Realizaram-se ainda, testes de bioactividade e testes de degradação in vitro. Os resultados obtidos mostram que as condições de processamento não induzem qualquer alteração no que diz respeito às propriedades térmicas e químicas dos materiais, que o aumento do teor de biovidro conduz a uma fragmentação da matriz polimérica num período de tempo mais curto, que os scaffolds obtidos apresentam uma geometria bem definida e uma distribuição de poros uniforme. Demonstra-se assim, que a combinação da matriz polimérica (PCL) com o biovidro, sob a forma de scaffolds é promissora para aplicações em Engenharia de Tecidos e Medicina Regenerativa.
Resumo:
O transporte marítimo e o principal meio de transporte de mercadorias em todo o mundo. Combustíveis e produtos petrolíferos representam grande parte das mercadorias transportadas por via marítima. Sendo Cabo Verde um arquipelago o transporte por mar desempenha um papel de grande relevância na economia do país. Consideramos o problema da distribuicao de combustíveis em Cabo Verde, onde uma companhia e responsavel por coordenar a distribuicao de produtos petrolíferos com a gestão dos respetivos níveis armazenados em cada porto, de modo a satisfazer a procura dos varios produtos. O objetivo consiste em determinar políticas de distribuicão de combustíveis que minimizam o custo total de distribuiçao (transporte e operacões) enquanto os n íveis de armazenamento sao mantidos nos n íveis desejados. Por conveniencia, de acordo com o planeamento temporal, o prob¬lema e divido em dois sub-problemas interligados. Um de curto prazo e outro de medio prazo. Para o problema de curto prazo sao discutidos modelos matemáticos de programacao inteira mista, que consideram simultaneamente uma medicao temporal cont ínua e uma discreta de modo a modelar multiplas janelas temporais e taxas de consumo que variam diariamente. Os modelos sao fortalecidos com a inclusão de desigualdades validas. O problema e então resolvido usando um "software" comercial. Para o problema de medio prazo sao inicialmente discutidos e comparados varios modelos de programacao inteira mista para um horizonte temporal curto assumindo agora uma taxa de consumo constante, e sao introduzidas novas desigualdades validas. Com base no modelo escolhido sao compara¬das estrategias heurísticas que combinam três heur ísticas bem conhecidas: "Rolling Horizon", "Feasibility Pump" e "Local Branching", de modo a gerar boas soluçoes admissíveis para planeamentos com horizontes temporais de varios meses. Finalmente, de modo a lidar com situaçoes imprevistas, mas impor¬tantes no transporte marítimo, como as mas condicões meteorológicas e congestionamento dos portos, apresentamos um modelo estocastico para um problema de curto prazo, onde os tempos de viagens e os tempos de espera nos portos sao aleatórios. O problema e formulado como um modelo em duas etapas, onde na primeira etapa sao tomadas as decisões relativas as rotas do navio e quantidades a carregar e descarregar e na segunda etapa (designada por sub-problema) sao consideradas as decisoes (com recurso) relativas ao escalonamento das operacões. O problema e resolvido por um metodo de decomposto que usa um algoritmo eficiente para separar as desigualdades violadas no sub-problema.
Resumo:
É extensa a bibliografia dedicada a potenciais aplicações de materiais com mudança de fase na regulação térmica e no armazenamento de calor ou de frio. No entanto, a baixa condutividade térmica impõe limitações numa grande diversidade de aplicações com exigências críticas em termos de tempo de resposta curto ou com requisitos de elevada potência em ciclos de carga/descarga de calor latente. Foram desenvolvidos códigos numéricos no sentido de obter soluções precisas para descrever a cinética da transferência de calor com mudança de fase, com base em geometrias representativas, i.e. planar e esférica. Foram igualmente propostas soluções aproximadas, sendo identificados correspondentes critérios de validação em função das propriedades dos materiais de mudança de fase e de outros parâmetros relevantes tais como as escalas de tamanho e de tempo, etc. As referidas soluções permitiram identificar com rigor os fatores determinantes daquelas limitações, quantificar os correspondentes efeitos e estabelecer critérios de qualidade adequados para diferentes tipologias de potenciais aplicações. Os referidos critérios foram sistematizados de acordo com metodologias de seleção propostas por Ashby e co-autores, tendo em vista o melhor desempenho dos materiais em aplicações representativas, designadamente com requisitos ao nível de densidade energética, tempo de resposta, potência de carga/descarga e gama de temperaturas de operação. Nesta sistematização foram incluídos alguns dos compósitos desenvolvidos durante o presente trabalho. A avaliação das limitações acima mencionadas deu origem ao desenvolvimento de materiais compósitos para acumulação de calor ou frio, com acentuada melhoria de resposta térmica, mediante incorporação de uma fase com condutividade térmica muito superior à da matriz. Para este efeito, foram desenvolvidos modelos para otimizar a distribuição espacial da fase condutora, de modo a superar os limites de percolação previstos por modelos clássicos de condução em compósitos com distribuição aleatória, visando melhorias de desempenho térmico com reduzidas frações de fase condutora e garantindo que a densidade energética não é significativamente afetada. Os modelos elaborados correspondem a compósitos de tipo core-shell, baseados em microestruturas celulares da fase de elevada condutividade térmica, impregnadas com o material de mudança de fase propriamente dito. Além de visarem a minimização da fração de fase condutora e correspondentes custos, os modelos de compósitos propostos tiveram em conta a adequação a métodos de processamento versáteis, reprodutíveis, preferencialmente com base na emulsificação de líquidos orgânicos em suspensões aquosas ou outros processos de reduzidas complexidade e com base em materiais de baixo custo (material de mudança de fase e fase condutora). O design da distribuição microestrutural também considerou a possibilidade de orientação preferencial de fases condutoras com elevada anisotropia (p.e. grafite), mediante auto-organização. Outros estágios do projeto foram subordinados a esses objetivos de desenvolvimento de compósitos com resposta térmica otimizada, em conformidade com previsões dos modelos de compósitos de tipo core-shell, acima mencionadas. Neste enquadramento, foram preparados 3 tipos de compósitos com organização celular da fase condutora, com as seguintes características e metodologias: i) compósitos celulares parafina-grafite para acumulação de calor, preparados in-situ por emulsificação de uma suspensão de grafite em parafina fundida; ii) compósitos celulares parafina-Al2O3 para acumulação de calor, preparados por impregnação de parafina em esqueleto cerâmico celular de Al2O3; iii) compósitos celulares para acumulação de frio, obtidos mediante impregnação de matrizes celulares de grafite com solução de colagénio, após preparação prévia das matrizes de grafite celular. Os compósitos com esqueleto cerâmico (ii) requereram o desenvolvimento prévio de um método para o seu processamento, baseado na emulsificação de suspensões de Al2O3 em parafina fundida, com adequados aditivos dispersantes, tensioactivos e consolidantes do esqueleto cerâmico, tornando-o auto-suportável durante as fases posteriores de eliminação da parafina, até à queima a alta temperatura, originando cerâmicos celulares com adequada resistência mecânica. Os compósitos desenvolvidos apresentam melhorias significativos de condutividade térmica, atingindo ganhos superiores a 1 ordem de grandeza com frações de fase condutora inferior a 10 % vol. (4 W m-1 K-1), em virtude da organização core-shell e com o contributo adicional da anisotropia da grafite, mediante orientação preferencial. Foram ainda preparados compósitos de armazenamento de frio (iii), com orientação aleatória da fase condutora, obtidos mediante gelificação de suspensões de partículas de grafite em solução aquosa de colagénio. Apesar da estabilidade microestrutural e de forma, conferida por gelificação, estes compósitos confirmaram a esperada limitação dos compósitos com distribuição aleatória, em confronto com os ganhos alcançados com a organização de tipo core-shell.
Resumo:
Future emerging market trends head towards positioning based services placing a new perspective on the way we obtain and exploit positioning information. On one hand, innovations in information technology and wireless communication systems enabled the development of numerous location based applications such as vehicle navigation and tracking, sensor networks applications, home automation, asset management, security and context aware location services. On the other hand, wireless networks themselves may bene t from localization information to improve the performances of di erent network layers. Location based routing, synchronization, interference cancellation are prime examples of applications where location information can be useful. Typical positioning solutions rely on measurements and exploitation of distance dependent signal metrics, such as the received signal strength, time of arrival or angle of arrival. They are cheaper and easier to implement than the dedicated positioning systems based on ngerprinting, but at the cost of accuracy. Therefore intelligent localization algorithms and signal processing techniques have to be applied to mitigate the lack of accuracy in distance estimates. Cooperation between nodes is used in cases where conventional positioning techniques do not perform well due to lack of existing infrastructure, or obstructed indoor environment. The objective is to concentrate on hybrid architecture where some nodes have points of attachment to an infrastructure, and simultaneously are interconnected via short-range ad hoc links. The availability of more capable handsets enables more innovative scenarios that take advantage of multiple radio access networks as well as peer-to-peer links for positioning. Link selection is used to optimize the tradeo between the power consumption of participating nodes and the quality of target localization. The Geometric Dilution of Precision and the Cramer-Rao Lower Bound can be used as criteria for choosing the appropriate set of anchor nodes and corresponding measurements before attempting location estimation itself. This work analyzes the existing solutions for node selection in order to improve localization performance, and proposes a novel method based on utility functions. The proposed method is then extended to mobile and heterogeneous environments. Simulations have been carried out, as well as evaluation with real measurement data. In addition, some speci c cases have been considered, such as localization in ill-conditioned scenarios and the use of negative information. The proposed approaches have shown to enhance estimation accuracy, whilst signi cantly reducing complexity, power consumption and signalling overhead.
Resumo:
The promise of a truly mobile experience is to have the freedom to roam around anywhere and not be bound to a single location. However, the energy required to keep mobile devices connected to the network over extended periods of time quickly dissipates. In fact, energy is a critical resource in the design of wireless networks since wireless devices are usually powered by batteries. Furthermore, multi-standard mobile devices are allowing users to enjoy higher data rates with ubiquitous connectivity. However, the bene ts gained from multiple interfaces come at a cost in terms of energy consumption having profound e ect on the mobile battery lifetime and standby time. This concern is rea rmed by the fact that battery lifetime is one of the top reasons why consumers are deterred from using advanced multimedia services on their mobile on a frequent basis. In order to secure market penetration for next generation services energy e ciency needs to be placed at the forefront of system design. However, despite recent e orts, energy compliant features in legacy technologies are still in its infancy, and new disruptive architectures coupled with interdisciplinary design approaches are required in order to not only promote the energy gain within a single protocol layer, but to enhance the energy gain from a holistic perspective. A promising approach is cooperative smart systems, that in addition to exploiting context information, are entities that are able to form a coalition and cooperate in order to achieve a common goal. Migrating from this baseline, this thesis investigates how these technology paradigm can be applied towards reducing the energy consumption in mobile networks. In addition, we introduce an additional energy saving dimension by adopting an interlayer design so that protocol layers are designed to work in synergy with the host system, rather than independently, for harnessing energy. In this work, we exploit context information, cooperation and inter-layer design for developing new energy e cient and technology agnostic building blocks for mobile networks. These technology enablers include energy e cient node discovery and short-range cooperation for energy saving in mobile handsets, complemented by energy-aware smart scheduling for promoting energy saving on the network side. Analytical and simulations results were obtained, and veri ed in the lab on a real hardware testbed. Results have shown that up to 50% energy saving could be obtained.
Resumo:
Wireless communication technologies have become widely adopted, appearing in heterogeneous applications ranging from tracking victims, responders and equipments in disaster scenarios to machine health monitoring in networked manufacturing systems. Very often, applications demand a strictly bounded timing response, which, in distributed systems, is generally highly dependent on the performance of the underlying communication technology. These systems are said to have real-time timeliness requirements since data communication must be conducted within predefined temporal bounds, whose unfulfillment may compromise the correct behavior of the system and cause economic losses or endanger human lives. The potential adoption of wireless technologies for an increasingly broad range of application scenarios has made the operational requirements more complex and heterogeneous than before for wired technologies. On par with this trend, there is an increasing demand for the provision of cost-effective distributed systems with improved deployment, maintenance and adaptation features. These systems tend to require operational flexibility, which can only be ensured if the underlying communication technology provides both time and event triggered data transmission services while supporting on-line, on-the-fly parameter modification. Generally, wireless enabled applications have deployment requirements that can only be addressed through the use of batteries and/or energy harvesting mechanisms for power supply. These applications usually have stringent autonomy requirements and demand a small form factor, which hinders the use of large batteries. As the communication support may represent a significant part of the energy requirements of a station, the use of power-hungry technologies is not adequate. Hence, in such applications, low-range technologies have been widely adopted. In fact, although low range technologies provide smaller data rates, they spend just a fraction of the energy of their higher-power counterparts. The timeliness requirements of data communications, in general, can be met by ensuring the availability of the medium for any station initiating a transmission. In controlled (close) environments this can be guaranteed, as there is a strict regulation of which stations are installed in the area and for which purpose. Nevertheless, in open environments, this is hard to control because no a priori abstract knowledge is available of which stations and technologies may contend for the medium at any given instant. Hence, the support of wireless real-time communications in unmanaged scenarios is a highly challenging task. Wireless low-power technologies have been the focus of a large research effort, for example, in the Wireless Sensor Network domain. Although bringing extended autonomy to battery powered stations, such technologies are known to be negatively influenced by similar technologies contending for the medium and, especially, by technologies using higher power transmissions over the same frequency bands. A frequency band that is becoming increasingly crowded with competing technologies is the 2.4 GHz Industrial, Scientific and Medical band, encompassing, for example, Bluetooth and ZigBee, two lowpower communication standards which are the base of several real-time protocols. Although these technologies employ mechanisms to improve their coexistence, they are still vulnerable to transmissions from uncoordinated stations with similar technologies or to higher power technologies such as Wi- Fi, which hinders the support of wireless dependable real-time communications in open environments. The Wireless Flexible Time-Triggered Protocol (WFTT) is a master/multi-slave protocol that builds on the flexibility and timeliness provided by the FTT paradigm and on the deterministic medium capture and maintenance provided by the bandjacking technique. This dissertation presents the WFTT protocol and argues that it allows supporting wireless real-time communication services with high dependability requirements in open environments where multiple contention-based technologies may dispute the medium access. Besides, it claims that it is feasible to provide flexible and timely wireless communications at the same time in open environments. The WFTT protocol was inspired on the FTT paradigm, from which higher layer services such as, for example, admission control has been ported. After realizing that bandjacking was an effective technique to ensure the medium access and maintenance in open environments crowded with contention-based communication technologies, it was recognized that the mechanism could be used to devise a wireless medium access protocol that could bring the features offered by the FTT paradigm to the wireless domain. The performance of the WFTT protocol is reported in this dissertation with a description of the implemented devices, the test-bed and a discussion of the obtained results.
Resumo:
Desulfurization is one of the most important processes in the refining industry. Due to a growing concern about the risks to human health and environment, associated with the emissions of sulfur compounds, legislation has become more stringent, requiring a drastic reduction in the sulfur content of fuel to levels close to zero (< 10 ppm S). However, conventional desulfurization processes are inefficient and have high operating costs. This scenario stimulates the improvement of existing processes and the development of new and more efficient technologies. Aiming at overcoming these shortcomings, this work investigates an alternative desulfurization process using ionic liquids for the removal of mercaptans from "jet fuel" streams. The screening and selection of the most suitable ionic liquid were performed based on experimental and COSMO-RS predicted liquid-liquid equilibrium data. A model feed of 1-hexanethiol and n-dodecane was selected to represent a jet-fuel stream. High selectivities were determined, as a result of the low mutual solubility between the ionic liquid and the hydrocarbon matrix, proving the potential use of the ionic liquid, which prevents the loss of fuel for the solvent. The distribution ratios of mercaptans towards the ionic liquids were not as favorable, making the traditional liquid-liquid extraction processes not suitable for the removal of aliphatic S-compounds due to the high volume of extractant required. This work explores alternative methods and proposes the use of ionic liquids in a separation process assisted by membranes. In the process proposed the ionic liquid is used as extracting solvent of the sulfur species, in a hollow fiber membrane contactor, without co-extracting the other jet-fuel compound. In a second contactor, the ionic liquid is regenerated applying a sweep gas stripping, which allows for its reuse in a closed loop between the two membrane contactors. This integrated extraction/regeneration process of desulfurization produced a jet-fuel model with sulfur content lower than 2 ppm of S, as envisaged by legislation for the use of ultra-low sulfur jet-fuel. This result confirms the high potential for development of ultra-deep desulfurization application.
Resumo:
Forest fires implications in overland flow and soil erosion have been researched for several years. Therefore, is widely known that fires enhance hydrological and geomorphological activity worldwide as also in Mediterranean areas. Soil burn severity has been widely used to describe the impacts of fire on soils, and has being recognized as a decisive factor controlling post-fire erosion rates. However, there is no unique definition of the term and the relationship between soil burn severity and post-fire hydrological and erosion response has not yet been fully established. Few studies have assessed post-fire erosion over multiple years, and the authors are aware of none which assess runoff. Small amount of studies concerning pre-fire management practices were also found. In the case of soil erosion models, the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE) and the revised Morgan–Morgan–Finney (MMF) are well-known models, but not much information is available as regards their suitability in predicting post-fire soil erosion in forest soils. The lack of information is even more pronounced as regards post-fire rehabilitation treatments. The aim of the thesis was to perform an extensive research under the post fire hydrologic and erosive response subject. By understanding the effect of burn severity in ecosystems and its implications regarding post fire hydrological and erosive responses worldwide. Test the effect of different pre-fire land management practices (unplowed, downslope plowed and contour plowed) and time-since-fire, in the post fire hydrological and erosive response, between the two most common land uses in Portugal (pine and eucalypt). Assess the performance of two widely-known erosion models (RUSLE and Revised MMF), to predict soil erosion rates during first year following two wildfires of distinctive burn severity. Furthermore, to apply these two models considering different post-fire rehabilitation treatments in an area severely affected by fire. Improve model estimations of post-fire runoff and erosion rates in two different land uses (pine and eucalypt) using the revised MMF. To assess these improvements by comparing estimations and measurements of runoff and erosion, in two recently burned sites, as also with their post fire rehabilitation treatments. Model modifications involved: (1) focusing on intra-annual changes in parameters to incorporate seasonal differences in runoff and erosion; and (2) inclusion of soil water repellency in runoff predictions. Additionally, validate these improvements with the application of the model to other pine and eucalypt sites in Central Portugal. The review and meta-analysis showed that fire occurrence had a significant effect on the hydrological and erosive response. However, this effect was only significantly higher with increasing soil burn severity for inter-rill erosion, and not for runoff. This study furthermore highlighted the incoherencies between existing burn severity classifications, and proposed an unambiguous classification. In the case of the erosion plots with natural rainfall, land use factor affected annual runoff while land management affected both annual runoff and erosion amounts significantly. Time-since-fire had an important effect in erosion amounts among unplowed sites, while for eucalypt sites time affected both annual runoff and erosion amounts. At all studied sites runoff coefficients increase over the four years of monitoring. In the other hand, sediment concentration in the runoff, recorded a decrease during the same period. Reasons for divergence from the classic post-fire recovery model were also explored. Short fire recurrence intervals and forest management practices are viewed as the main reasons for the observed severe and continuing soil degradation. The revised MMF model presented reasonable accuracy in the predictions while the RUSLE clearly overestimated the observed erosion rates. After improvements: the revised model was able to predict first-year post-fire plot-scale runoff and erosion rates for both forest types, these predictions were improved both by the seasonal changes in the model parameters; and by considering the effect of soil water repellency on the runoff, individual seasonal predictions were considered accurate, and the inclusion of the soil water repellency in the model also improved the model at this base. The revised MMF model proved capable of providing a simple set of criteria for management decisions about runoff and erosion mitigation measures in burned areas. The erosion predictions at the validation sites attested both to the robustness of the model and of the calibration parameters, suggesting a potential wider application.