892 resultados para VHDL ATLAS FPGA PROGETTO DI SISTEMI ELETTRONICI BEAM TEST LUCID CERN DIGITALE QUARTUS MODELSIM
Resumo:
Il seguente elaborato nasce per venire incontro ad una richiesta di aiuto partita dalla comunità di St. Albert, un centro missionario nel nord dello Zimbabwe. In questo stato ogni giorno milioni di persone lottano per sopravvivere contro fame ed epidemie, la comunità di St. Albert nata attorno all’omonimo ospedale combatte contro queste calamità cercando di fornire medicinali, cibo e un istruzione. Purtroppo alcuni anni fa, a causa del perdurare di condizioni siccitose, i pozzi da cui la missione prelevava acqua si sono quasi completamente prosciugati facendo sì che l’intera missione rischiasse di non poter proseguire la sua attività. Nel 2008 si sono verificate precipitazioni più intense che hanno determinato una ricarica di falda e la ripresa dell’utilizzo di parte dei pozzi, ma questi accadimenti anno messo a nudo la non completa affidabilità di questa fonte di approvvigionamento, così si è evidenziata la necessità di creare un bacino imbrifero artificiale. In situazioni di insicurezza sulla disponibilità idrica la diversificazione delle fonti di approvvigionamento diventa indispensabile. Così nel 2004 si iniziò a costruire una diga per creare un bacino di riserva idrica nelle vicinanze, oggi i lavori sono quasi ultimati ma manca un impianto di potabilizzazione che renda adatta l’acqua prelevata dall’invaso per il consumo umano. Con questa tesi si vuole dare un supporto progettuale alla creazione del potabilizzatore, cercando di ridisegnare il funzionamento della rete per permettere un uso più razionale possibile delle risorse idriche. Facendo ciò però ci si dovrà calare in una serie di problematiche di contesto economiche e sociali di un paese in profonda crisi, dove può risultare un problema reperire i materiali e le risorse più basilari, anche quelle più strettamente organizzative e logistiche, che richiedono la valutazione dello stato di know-how locale in relazione alle capacità di gestire apparecchiature di un certo livello tecnologico.
Resumo:
Recent developments in piston engine technology have increased performance in a very significant way. Diesel turbocharged/turbo compound engines, fuelled by jet fuels, have great performances. The focal point of this thesis is the transformation of the FIAT 1900 jtd diesel common rail engine for the installation on general aviation aircrafts like the CESSNA 172. All considerations about the diesel engine are supported by the studies that have taken place in the laboratories of the II Faculty of Engineering in Forlì. This work, mostly experimental, concerns the transformation of the automotive FIAT 1900 jtd – 4 cylinders – turbocharged – diesel common rail into an aircraft engine. The design philosophy of the aluminium alloy basement of the spark ignition engine have been transferred to the diesel version while the pistons and the head of the FIAT 1900 jtd are kept in the aircraft engine. Different solutions have been examined in this work. A first V 90° cylinders version that can develop up to 300 CV and whose weight is 30 kg, without auxiliaries and turbocharging group. The second version is a development of e original version of the diesel 1900 cc engine with an optimized crankshaft, that employ a special steel, 300M, and that is verified for the aircraft requirements. Another version with an augmented stroke and with a total displacement of 2500 cc has been examined; the result is a 30% engine heavier. The last version proposed is a 1600 cc diesel engine that work at 5000 rpm, with a reduced stroke and capable of more than 200 CV; it was inspired to the Yamaha R1 motorcycle engine. The diesel aircraft engine design keeps the bore of 82 mm, while the stroke is reduced to 64.6 mm, so the engine size is reduced along with weight. The basement weight, in GD AlSi 9 MgMn alloy, is 8,5 kg. Crankshaft, rods and accessories have been redesigned to comply to aircraft standards. The result is that the overall size is increased of only the 8% when referred to the Yamaha engine spark ignition version, while the basement weight increases of 53 %, even if the bore of the diesel version is 11% lager. The original FIAT 1900 jtd piston has been slightly modified with the combustion chamber reworked to the compression ratio of 15:1. The material adopted for the piston is the aluminium alloy A390.0-T5 commonly used in the automotive field. The piston weight is 0,5 kg for the diesel engine. The crankshaft is verified to torsional vibrations according to the Lloyd register of shipping requirements. The 300M special steel crankshaft total weight is of 14,5 kg. The result reached is a very small and light engine that may be certified for general aviation: the engine weight, without the supercharger, air inlet assembly, auxiliary generators and high pressure body, is 44,7 kg and the total engine weight, with enlightened HP pump body and the titanium alloy turbocharger is less than 100 kg, the total displacement is 1365 cm3 and the estimated output power is 220 CV. The direct conversion of automotive piston engine to aircrafts pays too huge weight penalties. In fact the main aircraft requirement is to optimize the power to weight ratio in order to obtain compact and fast engines for aeronautical use: this 1600 common rail diesel engine version demonstrates that these results can be reached.
Resumo:
Self-organisation is increasingly being regarded as an effective approach to tackle modern systems complexity. The self-organisation approach allows the development of systems exhibiting complex dynamics and adapting to environmental perturbations without requiring a complete knowledge of the future surrounding conditions. However, the development of self-organising systems (SOS) is driven by different principles with respect to traditional software engineering. For instance, engineers typically design systems combining smaller elements where the composition rules depend on the reference paradigm, but typically produce predictable results. Conversely, SOS display non-linear dynamics, which can hardly be captured by deterministic models, and, although robust with respect to external perturbations, are quite sensitive to changes on inner working parameters. In this thesis, we describe methodological aspects concerning the early-design stage of SOS built relying on the Multiagent paradigm: in particular, we refer to the A&A metamodel, where MAS are composed by agents and artefacts, i.e. environmental resources. Then, we describe an architectural pattern that has been extracted from a recurrent solution in designing self-organising systems: this pattern is based on a MAS environment formed by artefacts, modelling non-proactive resources, and environmental agents acting on artefacts so as to enable self-organising mechanisms. In this context, we propose a scientific approach for the early design stage of the engineering of self-organising systems: the process is an iterative one and each cycle is articulated in four stages, modelling, simulation, formal verification, and tuning. During the modelling phase we mainly rely on the existence of a self-organising strategy observed in Nature and, hopefully encoded as a design pattern. Simulations of an abstract system model are used to drive design choices until the required quality properties are obtained, thus providing guarantees that the subsequent design steps would lead to a correct implementation. However, system analysis exclusively based on simulation results does not provide sound guarantees for the engineering of complex systems: to this purpose, we envision the application of formal verification techniques, specifically model checking, in order to exactly characterise the system behaviours. During the tuning stage parameters are tweaked in order to meet the target global dynamics and feasibility constraints. In order to evaluate the methodology, we analysed several systems: in this thesis, we only describe three of them, i.e. the most representative ones for each of the three years of PhD course. We analyse each case study using the presented method, and describe the exploited formal tools and techniques.