7 resultados para Contract of adhesion
em Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa - Portugal
Resumo:
Mestrado em Contabilidade e Análise Financeira
Resumo:
A presente investigação procurou descrever, de forma exaustiva, o processo de previsão, negociação, implementação e avaliação do Contrato de Execução celebrado entre a Câmara Municipal de Sintra e o Ministério da Educação em 2009. Este contrato corresponde a um instrumento previsto na regulamentação do quadro de transferências de competências para os municípios em matéria de educação, de acordo com o regime previsto no Decreto-Lei n.º 144/2008, de 28 de julho. Definida a problemática e os objetivos, a investigação centrou-se num estudo de caso no qual foi feita a descrição e interpretação do processo e das ações desenvolvidas pelos intervenientes no período compreendido entre 2008 e 2011. Recorreu-se à confrontação dos dados obtidos através da análise das fontes documentais e do recurso às entrevistas realizadas aos responsáveis pelo Pelouro da Educação e diretores dos Agrupamentos de Escolas, à luz da revisão da literatura e do contributo de diferentes trabalhos de investigadores nesta matéria. A investigação permitiu concluir que o processo de contratualização foi algo complexo face à realidade deste Município e que o normativo apresenta várias lacunas no que diz respeito à contratualização da referida transferência de competências, designadamente porque procura generalizar algo que não é, de todo, generalizável – o campo da educação face à complexidade dos territórios educativos em causa e aos dos intervenientes envolvidos no mesmo.
Resumo:
Relatório de Estágio para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Civil
Resumo:
Relatório de Estágio para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Civil na Área de Especialização de Edificações
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Trabalho de Relatório de Estágio para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Civil na Área de Especialização de Edificações
Resumo:
Amorphous and crystalline sputtered boron carbide thin films have a very high hardness even surpassing that of bulk crystalline boron carbide (≈41 GPa). However, magnetron sputtered B-C films have high friction coefficients (C.o.F) which limit their industrial application. Nanopatterning of materials surfaces has been proposed as a solution to decrease the C.o.F. The contact area of the nanopatterned surfaces is decreased due to the nanometre size of the asperities which results in a significant reduction of adhesion and friction. In the present work, the surface of amorphous and polycrystalline B-C thin films deposited by magnetron sputtering was nanopatterned using infrared femtosecond laser radiation. Successive parallel laser tracks 10 μm apart were overlapped in order to obtain a processed area of about 3 mm2. Sinusoidal-like undulations with the same spatial period as the laser tracks were formed on the surface of the amorphous boron carbide films after laser processing. The undulations amplitude increases with increasing laser fluence. The formation of undulations with a 10 μm period was also observed on the surface of the crystalline boron carbide film processed with a pulse energy of 72 μJ. The amplitude of the undulations is about 10 times higher than in the amorphous films processed at the same pulse energy due to the higher roughness of the films and consequent increase in laser radiation absorption. LIPSS formation on the surface of the films was achieved for the three B-C films under study. However, LIPSS are formed under different circumstances. Processing of the amorphous films at low fluence (72 μJ) results in LIPSS formation only on localized spots on the film surface. LIPSS formation was also observed on the top of the undulations formed after laser processing with 78 μJ of the amorphous film deposited at 800 °C. Finally, large-area homogeneous LIPSS coverage of the boron carbide crystalline films surface was achieved within a large range of laser fluences although holes are also formed at higher laser fluences.
Resumo:
Microbial adhesion is a field of recognized relevance and, as such, an impressive array of tools has been developed to understand its molecular mechanisms and ultimately for its quantification. Some of the major limitations found within these methodologies concern the incubation time, the small number of cells analyzed, and the operator's subjectivity. To overcome these aspects, we have developed a quantitative method to measure yeast cells' adhesion through flow cytometry. In this methodology, a suspension of yeast cells is mixed with green fluorescent polystyrene microspheres (uncoated or coated with host proteins). Within 2 h, an adhesion profile is obtained based on two parameters: percentage and cells-microsphere population's distribution pattern. This flow cytometry protocol represents a useful tool to quantify yeast adhesion to different substrata in a large scale, providing manifold data in a speedy and informative manner.