53 resultados para Multi-attribute reverse auctions
Resumo:
A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
Resumo:
Dissertation presented to obtain the Ph.D degree in Biochemistry, Structural Biochemistry
Resumo:
Dissertação para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Química e Bioquímica
Resumo:
Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Engenharia Química e Bioquímica
Energy-efficient diversity combining for different access schemes in a multi-path dispersive channel
Resumo:
Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Engenharia Electrotécnica e Computadores
Resumo:
Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Engenharia Eletrotécnica e de Computadores
Resumo:
Dissertation presented to obtain the Ph.D degree in Computational Biology
Resumo:
Reverse Mortgage é um tipo de produto financeiro já comercializado em vários países (EUA, Reino Unido, Austrália, Espanha, etc.) mas que não teve ainda visibilidade em Portugal. Destina-se a pessoas com mais de 65 anos, com habitação própria e livres de encargos com a mesma, que pretendam obter um rendimento extra, dando a sua casa como garantia. Na contratação de uma Reverse Mortgage, os proprietários podem receber um montante inicial e/ou uma renda até ao final das suas vidas, mantendo o usufruto da habitação. No momento da morte, o valor da venda do imóvel é utilizado para pagar o empréstimo contraído. Assim, Reverse Mortgage permite reestabelecer ou reforçar a autonomia financeira de pessoas que, durante a sua vida activa, constituíram património mas que, por algum motivo, perderam poder económico ou se encontram actualmente com dificuldades financeiras e que não estão, no entanto, dispostas a desfazer-se da sua habitação para fazer face aos seus compromissos. Nesta dissertação pretende estudar-se a possibilidade de implementação em Portugal desta solução de hipoteca e analisar do ponto de vista actuarial as diferentes variáveis associadas a este produto, nomeadamente os montantes a receber pelo mutuário.
Resumo:
Nesta dissertação é realizado o estudo de um motor em disco polifásico com armadura convencional e rotor que pode ser convencional, em alumínio, ou composto por material supercondutor de alta temperatura multi‐semente. O motor com o rotor em alumínio apresenta um comportamento assíncrono bem definido, baseado na lei geral de indução de eletromotrizes no induzido. Contudo, ao ser mergulhado em azoto líquido, evidencia melhores características eléctricas, tanto do induzido como do indutor, mesmo que o núcleo ferromagnético convencional possa exibir degradação magnética. O motor com o rotor SAT exibe um comportamento distinto, evidenciando ambos os regimes síncrono e assíncrono estáveis. O regime síncrono fica caracterizado pelo fenómeno de aprisionamento de campo, que garante que o rotor gire síncrono com o campo girante do estator. Em regime assíncrono, para um determinado valor de binário resistente aplicado superior ao electromagnético máximo desenvolvido pelo motor, o fenómeno de escoamento de campo está presente, sendo o binário electromagnético motor reforçado por um binário extra de perdas de carácter resistivo desenvolvidas no rotor devido à interacção da densidade de corrente a campos eléctricos que se estabelecem no rotor. Neste caso, o fenómeno de escoamento de campo não é devido a forças de Lorentz que se definem na matriz de Abrikosov, mas sim devido a esta ser “puxada” pelo campo girante do estator, ficando a matriz a deslizar sobre o rotor. De modo a obter as características dos sistemas electromecânicos em estudo é realizada uma análise teórica, baseada na teoria convencional das máquinas eléctricas, com o objectivo de compreender alguns dos fenómenos do motor de fluxo axial, e uma análise baseada num programa comercial de elementos finitos onde o fenómeno da supercondutividade é simulado com base na relação entre o campo elétrico e a densidade de corrente pela lei da potenciação (E‐J power law). O ensaio dos motores referidos é realizado para comparar ambos os sistemas e de realçar o princípio de funcionamento e as características mais relevantes de cada um. Da análise realizada é desenvolvido um modelo que caracteriza o funcionamento da máquina com o rotor com SAT.
Resumo:
Most of today’s systems, especially when related to the Web or to multi-agent systems, are not standalone or independent, but are part of a greater ecosystem, where they need to interact with other entities, react to complex changes in the environment, and act both over its own knowledge base and on the external environment itself. Moreover, these systems are clearly not static, but are constantly evolving due to the execution of self updates or external actions. Whenever actions and updates are possible, the need to ensure properties regarding the outcome of performing such actions emerges. Originally purposed in the context of databases, transactions solve this problem by guaranteeing atomicity, consistency, isolation and durability of a special set of actions. However, current transaction solutions fail to guarantee such properties in dynamic environments, since they cannot combine transaction execution with reactive features, or with the execution of actions over domains that the system does not completely control (thus making rolling back a non-viable proposition). In this thesis, we investigate what and how transaction properties can be ensured over these dynamic environments. To achieve this goal, we provide logic-based solutions, based on Transaction Logic, to precisely model and execute transactions in such environments, and where knowledge bases can be defined by arbitrary logic theories.
Resumo:
This dissertation aims to guarantee the integration of a mobile autonomous robot equipped with many sensors in a multi-agent distributed and georeferenced surveillance system. The integration of a mobile autonomous robot in this system leads to new features that will be available to clients of surveillance system may use. These features may be of two types: using the robot as an agent that will act in the environment or by using the robot as a mobile set of sensors. As an agent in the system, the robot can move to certain locations when alerts are received, in order to acknowledge the underlying events or take to action in order to assist in resolving this event. As a sensor platform in the system, it is possible to access information that is read from the sensors of the robot and access complementary measurements to the ones taken by other sensors in the multi-agent system. To integrate this mobile robot in an effective way it is necessary to extend the current multi-agent system architecture to make the connection between the two systems and to integrate the functionalities provided by the robot into the multi-agent system.
Resumo:
Double degree. A Work Project presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA- School of Business and Economics and Warsaw School of Economics
Resumo:
Environmental pollution is one of the major and most important problems of the modern world. In order to fulfill the needs and demands of the overgrowing human population, developments in agriculture, medicine, energy sources, and all chemical industries are necessary (Ali 2010). Over the last century, the increased industrialization and continued population growth led to an augmented production of environmental pollutants that are released into air, water, and soil, with significant impact in the degradation of various ecosystems (Ali 2010, Khan et al. 2013).(...)
Resumo:
A potentially renewable and sustainable source of energy is the chemical energy associated with solvation of salts. Mixing of two aqueous streams with different saline concentrations is spontaneous and releases energy. The global theoretically obtainable power from salinity gradient energy due to World’s rivers discharge into the oceans has been estimated to be within the range of 1.4-2.6 TW. Reverse electrodialysis (RED) is one of the emerging, membrane-based, technologies for harvesting the salinity gradient energy. A common RED stack is composed by alternately-arranged cation- and anion-exchange membranes, stacked between two electrodes. The compartments between the membranes are alternately fed with concentrated (e.g., sea water) and dilute (e.g., river water) saline solutions. Migration of the respective counter-ions through the membranes leads to ionic current between the electrodes, where an appropriate redox pair converts the chemical salinity gradient energy into electrical energy. Given the importance of the need for new sources of energy for power generation, the present study aims at better understanding and solving current challenges, associated with the RED stack design, fluid dynamics, ionic mass transfer and long-term RED stack performance with natural saline solutions as feedwaters. Chronopotentiometry was used to determinate diffusion boundary layer (DBL) thickness from diffusion relaxation data and the flow entrance effects on mass transfer were found to avail a power generation increase in RED stacks. Increasing the linear flow velocity also leads to a decrease of DBL thickness but on the cost of a higher pressure drop. Pressure drop inside RED stacks was successfully simulated by the developed mathematical model, in which contribution of several pressure drops, that until now have not been considered, was included. The effect of each pressure drop on the RED stack performance was identified and rationalized and guidelines for planning and/or optimization of RED stacks were derived. The design of new profiled membranes, with a chevron corrugation structure, was proposed using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling. The performance of the suggested corrugation geometry was compared with the already existing ones, as well as with the use of conductive and non-conductive spacers. According to the estimations, use of chevron structures grants the highest net power density values, at the best compromise between the mass transfer coefficient and the pressure drop values. Finally, long-term experiments with natural waters were performed, during which fouling was experienced. For the first time, 2D fluorescence spectroscopy was used to monitor RED stack performance, with a dedicated focus on following fouling on ion-exchange membrane surfaces. To extract relevant information from fluorescence spectra, parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC) was performed. Moreover, the information obtained was then used to predict net power density, stack electric resistance and pressure drop by multivariate statistical models based on projection to latent structures (PLS) modeling. The use in such models of 2D fluorescence data, containing hidden, but extractable by PARAFAC, information about fouling on membrane surfaces, considerably improved the models fitting to the experimental data.