15 resultados para Dipl.-Ing. Olaf Figgener


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Dissertação apresentada para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Línguas Literatura e Cultura

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Dissertação apresentada na Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade Nova de Lisboa para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Energia e Bioenergia

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Podi a fazer hoje os mesmos comentários que fiz num artigo publicado no n°.3 da Re vista da Faculdade, em 1989, em que comecei citando um título de Jackendoff (1988) - "Why are they say ing these things ab out us?". Então como agora a incompreensão manifestada por muitos sobre o trabalho desenvol vido em gramática generativa resulta, creio eu, da impossibilidade de acompanhar os avanços teóricos que se têm vindo a processar a um ritmo acelerado. Os sucessivos modelos introduziram uma linguagem sofisticada só compreensível para os que com ela trabalham . Nos últimos anos, poucos meses de afastamento podem ser suficientes para que surjam sérias dificuldades no entendimento de hipóteses teóricas novas. E nós, os que aqui estamos interessados na teoria linguística, é com esforço que seguimos o que vai acontecendo lá fora, dadas as muitas dificuldades que ainda temos nesta extremidade da Europa. Por curiosidade, recordo que, enquanto no início do séc ulo XIII, em Inglaterra, Roger Bacon (Some rset, 1214?-Oxford, 1294) reflectia sobre gramática considerando que "Grammar is substantia lIy the sarne in alI langu ages, even thou gh it may va ry accide nta lIy", aqui, pela mesma altura (1214?) , alguém escrevia o que se julga ser o mais antigo texto em português - a Noticia de Torto - , um relato terrível de acontecimentos violentos: "E ora inista tregua fura - a Veraci- amazaru-li os omeess errnaru- Ii X casaes seu torto al rec ."

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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Economics from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics

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Based on the presentation and discussion at the 3rd Winter School on Technology Assessment, December 2012, Universidade Nova de Lisboa (Portugal), Caparica Campus, PhD programme on Technology Assessment

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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Química Sustentável

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Seismic events are a major factor to consider in structural design of buildings in many countries. With the purpose of saving lives, most of the design codes lead to structural solutions that withstand large seismic actions without collapsing, but without taking into account a possible usage of the structures after the earthquake. As a result, it is necessary to consider the time needed to repair/retrofit the damaged structures (i.e. the downtime) since this period of inactivity may result in huge financial implications for the occupants of the buildings. In order to minimise the damages and simplify repair operations, structural solutions with rocking systems and negligible residual displacements have been developed during the last two decades. Systems with precast concrete rocking walls were studied with the aim of investigat- ing suitable and convenient structural alternatives to minimise the damage in case of an earthquake. Experimental, numerical and analytical analyses on post-tensioned solutions, with and without energy dissipation devices, were carried out in this research. The energy dissipation devices were made from steel angles that were further developed during the research. Different solutions for these devices were experimentally tested under cyclic loading and the results are presented. Numerical and analytical work on steel angles was also carried out. Regarding the concrete rocking wall systems, two concrete rocking wall systems were studied: post-tensioned walls and post-tensioned walls with energy dissipation devices. In the latter, the solution was to fix them externally to the wall, allowing their easy replacement after an earthquake. It is shown that the dissipaters are a viable solution for use in precast concrete rocking wall systems. A building case study is presented. The comparison between a traditional monolithic system and a hybrid solution was carried out, allowing the evaluation of the efficiency of the solution that was developed.

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Diffusion Kurtosis Imaging (DKI) is a fairly new magnetic resonance imag-ing (MRI) technique that tackles the non-gaussian motion of water in biological tissues by taking into account the restrictions imposed by tissue microstructure, which are not considered in Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI), where the water diffusion is considered purely gaussian. As a result DKI provides more accurate information on biological structures and is able to detect important abnormalities which are not visible in standard DTI analysis. This work regards the development of a tool for DKI computation to be implemented as an OsiriX plugin. Thus, as OsiriX runs under Mac OS X, the pro-gram is written in Objective-C and also makes use of Apple’s Cocoa framework. The whole program is developed in the Xcode integrated development environ-ment (IDE). The plugin implements a fast heuristic constrained linear least squares al-gorithm (CLLS-H) for estimating the diffusion and kurtosis tensors, and offers the user the possibility to choose which maps are to be generated for not only standard DTI quantities such as Mean Diffusion (MD), Radial Diffusion (RD), Axial Diffusion (AD) and Fractional Anisotropy (FA), but also DKI metrics, Mean Kurtosis (MK), Radial Kurtosis (RK) and Axial Kurtosis (AK).The plugin was subjected to both a qualitative and a semi-quantitative analysis which yielded convincing results. A more accurate validation pro-cess is still being developed, after which, and with some few minor adjust-ments the plugin shall become a valid option for DKI computation

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This thesis reports the work performed in the optimization of deposition parameters of Multi – Walled Carbon Nanotubes (MWCNT) targeting the development of a Field Effect Transistors (FET) on paper substrates. The CNTs were dispersed in a water solution with sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) through ultrasonication, ultrasonic bath and a centrifugation to remove the supernatant and have a homogeneous solution. Several deposition tests were performed using different types of CNTs, dis-persants, papers substrates and deposition techniques, such as spray coating and inkjet printing. The characterization of CNTs was made by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Hall Effect. The most suitable CNT coatings able to be used as semiconductor in FETs were deposited by spray coat-ing on a paper substrate with hydrophilic nanoporous surface (FS2) at 100 ºC, 4 bar, 10 cm height, 5 second of deposition time and 90 seconds of drying between steps (4 layers of CNTs were deposited). Planar electrolyte gated FETs were produced with these layers using gold-nickel gate, source and drain electrodes. Despite the small current modulation (Ion/Ioff ratio of 1.8) one of these devices have p-type conduction with a field effect mobility of 1.07 cm2/V.s.

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The main results presented in this PhD Dissertation have been published in interna-tional journals included in the Science Citation Index (SCI)

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Based on the report for the unit “Project IV” of the PhD programme on Technology Assessment under the supervision of Dr.-Ing. Marcel Weil and Prof. Dr. António Brandão Moniz. The report was presented and discussed at the Doctorate Conference on Technologogy Assessment in July 2013 at the University Nova Lisboa, Caparica campus.

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Neurological disorders are a major concern in modern societies, with increasing prevalence mainly related with the higher life expectancy. Most of the current available therapeutic options can only control and ameliorate the patients’ symptoms, often be-coming refractory over time. Therapeutic breakthroughs and advances have been hampered by the lack of accurate central nervous system (CNS) models. The develop-ment of these models allows the study of the disease onset/progression mechanisms and the preclinical evaluation of novel therapeutics. This has traditionally relied on genetically engineered animal models that often diverge considerably from the human phenotype (developmentally, anatomically and physiologically) and 2D in vitro cell models, which fail to recapitulate the characteristics of the target tissue (cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, cell polarity). The in vitro recapitulation of CNS phenotypic and functional features requires the implementation of advanced culture strategies that enable to mimic the in vivo struc-tural and molecular complexity. Models based on differentiation of human neural stem cells (hNSC) in 3D cultures have great potential as complementary tools in preclinical research, bridging the gap between human clinical studies and animal models. This thesis aimed at the development of novel human 3D in vitro CNS models by integrat-ing agitation-based culture systems and a wide array of characterization tools. Neural differentiation of hNSC as 3D neurospheres was explored in Chapter 2. Here, it was demonstrated that human midbrain-derived neural progenitor cells from fetal origin (hmNPC) can generate complex tissue-like structures containing functional dopaminergic neurons, as well as astrocytes and oligodendrocytes. Chapter 3 focused on the development of cellular characterization assays for cell aggregates based on light-sheet fluorescence imaging systems, which resulted in increased spatial resolu-tion both for fixed samples or live imaging. The applicability of the developed human 3D cell model for preclinical research was explored in Chapter 4, evaluating the poten-tial of a viral vector candidate for gene therapy. The efficacy and safety of helper-dependent CAV-2 (hd-CAV-2) for gene delivery in human neurons was evaluated, demonstrating increased neuronal tropism, efficient transgene expression and minimal toxicity. The potential of human 3D in vitro CNS models to mimic brain functions was further addressed in Chapter 5. Exploring the use of 13C-labeled substrates and Nucle-ar Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy tools, neural metabolic signatures were evaluated showing lineage-specific metabolic specialization and establishment of neu-ron-astrocytic shuttles upon differentiation. Chapter 6 focused on transferring the knowledge and strategies described in the previous chapters for the implementation of a scalable and robust process for the 3D differentiation of hNSC derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC). Here, software-controlled perfusion stirred-tank bioreactors were used as technological system to sustain cell aggregation and dif-ferentiation. The work developed in this thesis provides practical and versatile new in vitro ap-proaches to model the human brain. Furthermore, the culture strategies described herein can be further extended to other sources of neural phenotypes, including pa-tient-derived hiPSC. The combination of this 3D culture strategy with the implemented characterization methods represents a powerful complementary tool applicable in the drug discovery, toxicology and disease modeling.

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A tese que de seguida se esboça assenta sobre uma inquietação fundamental: o facto de cada um dar por si atirado na vida, de, quando cada um dá por si, dar por si a ser vida, etc. Acontece que, logo que se tenta focar mais precisamente de que é de que se trata quando se trata da “vida”, nota-se que esse fenómeno tem habitualmente a forma de um acontecimento anónimo: não se sabe bem a que é que corresponde, que conteúdos tem, que estruturas fundamentais a suportam, etc. Isto é: somos levados pela vida (passamos pela vida, atravessamo-la, estamos expostos a ela, etc.) sem saber exactamente a que é que estamos expostos, o que é que nos leva, sobre que pilares assenta a nossa vivência e a nossa compreensão dela, etc. A tese que se segue não tem a pretensão de deixar definitivamente respondidas estas perguntas; tudo o que faz, na verdade, é meramente proceder a um breve levantamento ou a um registo de algumas das estruturas fundamentais da vida a partir do ângulo da experiência da vida. E, como se espera deixar claro, procurar a resposta a partir do ângulo da experiência (do ângulo da experiência da vida) não é algo acidental ou fortuito. O que se procurará apurar é se não haverá tais laços de afinidade entre “vida” e “experiência” que todas as operações próprias da experiência têm lugar numa vinculação e estão subordinadas às estruturas fundamentais da vida (estruturas que ultrapassam o âmbito da “experiência”) e que, assim também, a vida tenha, de raiz, no modo como nela somos levados e conduzidos, a estrutura ou a forma da “experiência”.