2,374 research outputs found

    The design research pyramid: a three layer framework

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    To support knowledge-based design development, considerable research has been conducted from various perspectives at different levels. The research on knowledge-based design support systems, generic design artefact and design process modelling, and the inherent quality of design knowledge itself are some examples of these perspectives. The structure underneath the research is not a disparate one but ordered. This paper provides an overview of some ontologies of design knowledge and a layered research framework of knowledge-based engineering design support. Three layers of research are clarified in this pattern: knowledge ontology, design knowledge model, and application. Specifically, the paper highlights ontologies of design knowledge by giving a set of classifications of design knowledge from different points of view. Within the discussion of design knowledge content ontology, two topologies, i.e., teleology and evolutionary, are identified

    Maintenance strategy optimisation for infrastructure assets through cost modelling

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    In infrastructure asset management, maintenance strategies in terms of cost modelling is normally adopted to achieve two broad strategic objectives: to ensure that sufficient funding is available to maintain the portfolio of assets; and to ensure that a minimum cost is achieved while maintaining safety. The data and information required for carrying out cost modelling are often not sufficient in quantity and quality. Even if the data is available, the uncertainty associated with the data and the assessment of the assets’ condition remain a challenge to be dealt with. We report in this paper that cost modelling can be carried out at the initial stage instead of delaying it due to data insufficiency. Subjective experts’ knowledge is elicited and utilised together with some information which is gathered only for a small sample of assets. Linear Bayes methods is adopted to combine the sample data with the subjective experts’ knowledge to estimate unknown model parameters of the cost model. We use a case study from the rail industry to demonstrate the methods proposed in this paper. The assets are metal girders on bridges from a rail company. The optimal maintenance strategy is obtained via simulation based on estimated model parameters

    Enhancing competitive advantage for European maritime sector

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    This poster presentation explores the topic of enhancing competitive advantage for the European maritime sector

    Dialkylaluminium 2-imidazolylphenolates: Synthesis, characterization and ring-opening polymerization behavior towards lactides

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    The stoichiometric reaction of the 2-imidazolylphenols (L1–L9) with the trialkylaluminium reagents AlR₃ (R = Me, Et and iBu), afforded the corresponding dialkylaluminium 2-imidazolylphenolate complexes [R₂Al(L1–L9)] (C1–C11), which were characterized by ÂčH/ÂčÂłC NMR spectroscopy and by elemental analysis. The molecular structures of the representative complexes C1, C2, C4, C6 and C11 were determined by single-crystal X-Ray diffraction, and revealed a distorted tetrahedral geometry at aluminum. These dialkylaluminium 2-imidazolylphenolates (C1–C11) could efficiently catalyze the ring-opening polymerization of lactides to afford high molecular weight polylactide, both in the presence and absence of BnOH, and as such represent rare examples of the use of bi-dentate ligation at aluminum in such lactide polymerization systems. On the basis of the polymerization results for l-lactide, d-lactide and rac-lactide, the nature of the ligands and the aluminum bound alkyls were found to significantly affect the catalytic activity as well as the properties of the resultant polylactides

    Large-scale forest landscape model, design, validation, and application in management of oak decline

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    Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on June 11, 2014).Forest landscape models (FLMs) have increasingly become important tools for exploring forest landscape changes by predicting forest vegetation dynamics over large spatial scales. However, two challenges confronting FLMs have persisted: how to simulate fine, site-scale processes while making large-scale (landscape and regional) simulation feasible, and how to fully take advantage of extensive U.S. Forest Service Inventory and Analysis (FIA) data to initialize and constraint model parameters. In this dissertation, first, a new FLM, LANDIS PRO was developed. In LANDIS PRO, forest succession and dynamics are simulated by incorporating species-, stand-, and landscape-scale processes by tracking number of trees by species age cohort. Because stand-scale resource competition is achieved by implementing rather than simulating the emergent properties of stand development, LANDIS PRO is computationally efficient, which makes large-scale simulation feasible. Since model parameters and simulation results are comparatively straightforward to forest inventory data, current intensive forest inventory data can be directly applied for model initialization and to constrain model parameters. Validation of FLMs is essential to ensure users’ confidence in model predictions and achieve reliable management decision making. To date, validation of FLMs has been limited due to lack of suitable data. However, recent advances in FLMs, together with increasingly available spatiotemporal data make FLM validation feasible. In this dissertation, second, I proposed a framework for validating forest landscape projections from LANDIS PRO using Forest Inventory Analysis (FIA) data. The proposed framework incorporated data assimilation techniques to constrain model parameters and the initial state of the landscape by verifying the initialized landscape and iteratively calibrating the model parameters. The model predictions were rigorously validated against independent FIA data at multiple scales, and the long-term natural successional pattern was also verified against empirical studies. Results showed model predictions were able to capture much of the variation overtime in species basal area and tree density at stand-, landtype- , and landscape-scales. Subsequent long-term predictions of natural succession patterns were consistent with expected changes in tree species density of oak-dominated forests in the absence of disturbance. Lastly, I used LANDIS PRO, a forest landscape model that includes stand-scale species density and basal area to evaluate the potential landscape-scale effects of alternative harvest methods (thinning, clearcutting and group selection) on oak decline mitigation. Projections indicated that forest harvesting can be effective in mitigating oak decline. Group selection and clearcutting were the most effective methods in the management of oak decline in the short-term (20 years) and mid-term (50 years), respectively. However, in the long-run (100 years), there was no significant difference predicted among the three methods

    A triangulation approach for design research

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    Triangulation has been adopted in social science in the study of the same phenomenon through applying and combining several data sources, research methods, investigators, and theoretical schemes. From a post-positivism view point, this paper presents a triangulation approach in design research from two perspectives, data sources and research methods. Data triangulation was achieved through collecting data from multiple sources including company design documents, student design projects, and company design projects. Different research methods, e.g. interview, content analysis, protocol analysis, and questionnaire, were used to conduct data collection and analysis into a particular aspect of design, the nature of coupling design artefact and process knowledge. It was found that triangulation can provide an effective means for design research
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