990 resultados para ENERGY DEPENDENCE
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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Engenharia do Ambiente Perfil de Gestão e Sistemas Ambientais
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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Genética Molecular e Biomedicina
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Heterogeneous multicore platforms are becoming an interesting alternative for embedded computing systems with limited power supply as they can execute specific tasks in an efficient manner. Nonetheless, one of the main challenges of such platforms consists of optimising the energy consumption in the presence of temporal constraints. This paper addresses the problem of task-to-core allocation onto heterogeneous multicore platforms such that the overall energy consumption of the system is minimised. To this end, we propose a two-phase approach that considers both dynamic and leakage energy consumption: (i) the first phase allocates tasks to the cores such that the dynamic energy consumption is reduced; (ii) the second phase refines the allocation performed in the first phase in order to achieve better sleep states by trading off the dynamic energy consumption with the reduction in leakage energy consumption. This hybrid approach considers core frequency set-points, tasks energy consumption and sleep states of the cores to reduce the energy consumption of the system. Major value has been placed on a realistic power model which increases the practical relevance of the proposed approach. Finally, extensive simulations have been carried out to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm. In the best-case, savings up to 18% of energy are reached over the first fit algorithm, which has shown, in previous works, to perform better than other bin-packing heuristics for the target heterogeneous multicore platform.
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Coarse Grained Reconfigurable Architectures (CGRAs) are emerging as enabling platforms to meet the high performance demanded by modern applications (e.g. 4G, CDMA, etc.). Recently proposed CGRAs offer time-multiplexing and dynamic applications parallelism to enhance device utilization and reduce energy consumption at the cost of additional memory (up to 50% area of the overall platform). To reduce the memory overheads, novel CGRAs employ either statistical compression, intermediate compact representation, or multicasting. Each compaction technique has different properties (i.e. compression ratio, decompression time and decompression energy) and is best suited for a particular class of applications. However, existing research only deals with these methods separately. Moreover, they only analyze the compaction ratio and do not evaluate the associated energy overheads. To tackle these issues, we propose a polymorphic compression architecture that interleaves these techniques in a unique platform. The proposed architecture allows each application to take advantage of a separate compression/decompression hierarchy (consisting of various types and implementations of hardware/software decoders) tailored to its needs. Simulation results, using different applications (FFT, Matrix multiplication, and WLAN), reveal that the choice of compression hierarchy has a significant impact on compression ratio (up to 52%), decompression energy (up to 4 orders of magnitude), and configuration time (from 33 n to 1.5 s) for the tested applications. Synthesis results reveal that introducing adaptivity incurs negligible additional overheads (1%) compared to the overall platform area.
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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Engenharia Civil
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4th International Conference on Climbing and Walking Robots - From Biology to Industrial Applications
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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Energias Renováveis – Conversão Eléctrica e Utilização Sustentáveis
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Paper presented at the 5th European Conference Economics and Management of Energy in Industry, Vilamoura, Algarve. Apr. 14-17, 2009, 11p. URL: http:// www.cenertec.pt/ecemei/
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In this study, energy production for autonomous underwater vehicles is investigated. This project is part of a bigger project called TURTLE. The autonomous vehicles perform oceanic researches at seabed for which they are intended to be kept operational underwater for several months. In order to ful l a long-term underwater condition, powerful batteries are combined with \micro- scale" energy production on the spot. This work tends to develop a system that generates power up to a maximum of 30 W. Latter energy harvesting structure consists basically of a turbine combined with a generator and low-power electronics to adjust the achieved voltage to a required battery charger voltage. Every component is examined separately hence an optimum can be de ned for all, and subsequently also an overall optimum. Di erent design parameters as e.g. number of blades, solidity ratio and cross-section area are compared for di erent turbines, in order to see what is the most feasible type. Further, a generator is chosen by studying how ux distributions might be adjusted to low velocities, and how cogging torque can be excluded by adapted designs. Low-power electronics are con gured in order to convert and stabilize heavily varying three-phase voltages to a constant, recti ed voltage which is usable for battery storage. Clearly, di erent component parameters as maximum power and torque are matched here to increase the overall power generation. Furthermore an overall maximum power is set up for achieving a maximum power ow at load side. Due to among others typical low velocities of about 0.1 to 0.5 m/s, and constructing limits of the prototype, the vast range of components is restricted to only a few that could be used. Hence, a helical turbine is combined in a direct drive mode to a coreless-stator axial- ux permanent-magnet generator, from which the output voltage is adjusted subsequently by a recti er, impedance matching unit, upconverter circuit and an overall control unit to regulate di erent component parameters. All these electronics are combined in a closed-loop design to involve positive feedback signals. Furthermore a theoretical con guration for the TURTLE vehicle is described in this work and a solution is proposed that might be implemented, for which several design tests are performable in a future study.
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A presente tese tem como principal objectivo abordar o tema da eficiência energética em edifícios, no que se refere aos sistemas de climatização. O desenvolvimento deste projecto realizou-se em torno dos consumos energéticos dos diferentes sistemas de climatização estudados (e por conseguinte da envolvente do edifício), focando o cumprimento dos requisitos térmico e energéticos das normas vigentes (RCCTE e RSECE) em Portugal, tendo como objectivo identificar os parâmetros com maior impacto e a relação tendencial entre as soluções construtivas e tecnológicas adoptadas, sempre com o horizonte de maximizar a eficiência energética e diminuir a dependência face à energia primária e consequentemente a emissão de gases que provocam o efeito de estufa. É âmbito desta tese comparar diferentes tipos de sistemas de climatização a nível energético e torná-los os mais eficientes possíveis, para que também se possam tornar monetariamente aliciantes e aumentar o rácio entre benefício/custo. Para tal, numa primeira fase foi feito um estudo térmico da envolvente do edifício, tendo sido utilizado um software de simulação energética de edifícios acreditado pela norma ASHRAE 140-2004 para se poder compreender como o edifício se comportava ao longo do ano, e introduzir algumas correcções na respectiva envolvente, para baixar as potências térmicas/eléctricas dos equipamentos do sistema de AVAC. De seguida foram estudados três sistemas possíveis de climatização para o edifício, de modo a identificar o mais eficiente numa base anual, bem como a possibilidade de combinar o uso de fontes de energia renováveis com o intuito de satisfazer ao máximo as necessidades térmicas do edifício e, ainda, de minimizar o consumo de energia de origem não renovável. Por fim, para avaliar as diferentes potencialidades de cada sistema de climatização estudado, fez-se o respectivo estudo à sua viabilidade económica. Nas considerações finais da presente tese é realizado um estudo aos benefícios que uma possível alteração da arquitectura do edifício pode trazer no aumento da iluminação natural do mesmo integrado com um controlo da iluminação artificial necessária para os diferentes espaços climatizados. Os resultados obtidos foram comparados entre si e corrigir a envolvente exterior reduz os consumos energéticos do edifício em cerca de 11%. As medidas correctivas propostas no sistema de climatização base originam uma redução energética igual a 43%. A nível ambiental, é possível a redução do número de emissões de CO2 em cerca de 72.1%.
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Presented at Work in Progress Session, IEEE Real-Time Systems Symposium (RTSS 2015). 1 to 4, Dec, 2015. San Antonio, U.S.A..
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Dissertação apresentada na Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade Nova de Lisboa Para a obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Energia e Bioenergia
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Dissertação apresentada como requisito parcial para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Gestão de Informação