88,825 research outputs found
Effect of hydrogel particle additives on water-accessible pore structure of sandy soils: A custom pressure plate apparatus and capillary bundle model
To probe the effects of hydrogel particle additives on the water-accessible
pore structure of sandy soils, we introduce a custom pressure plate method in
which the volume of water expelled from a wet granular packing is measured as a
function of applied pressure. Using a capillary bundle model, we show that the
differential change in retained water per pressure increment is directly
related to the cumulative cross-sectional area distribution of the
water-accessible pores with radii less than . This is validated by
measurements of water expelled from a model sandy soil composed of 2 mm
diameter glass beads. In particular, the expelled water is found to depend
dramatically on sample height and that analysis using the capillary bundle
model gives the same pore size distribution for all samples. The distribution
is found to be approximately log-normal, and the total cross-sectional area
fraction of the accessible pore space is found to be . We then report
on how the pore distribution and total water-accessible area fraction are
affected by superabsorbent hydrogel particle additives, uniformly mixed into a
fixed-height sample at varying concentrations. Under both fixed volume and free
swelling conditions, the total area fraction of water-accessible pore space in
a packing decreases exponentially as the gel concentration increases. The size
distribution of the pores is significantly modified by the swollen hydrogel
particles, such that large pores are clogged while small pores are formed
Rain water transport and storage in a model sandy soil with hydrogel particle additives
We study rain water infiltration and drainage in a dry model sandy soil with
superabsorbent hydrogel particle additives by measuring the mass of retained
water for non-ponding rainfall using a self-built 3D laboratory set-up. In the
pure model sandy soil, the retained water curve measurements indicate that
instead of a stable horizontal wetting front that grows downward uniformly, a
narrow fingered flow forms under the top layer of water-saturated soil. This
rain water channelization phenomenon not only further reduces the available
rain water in the plant root zone, but also affects the efficiency of soil
additives, such as superabsorbent hydrogel particles. Our studies show that the
shape of the retained water curve for a soil packing with hydrogel particle
additives strongly depends on the location and the concentration of the
hydrogel particles in the model sandy soil. By carefully choosing the particle
size and distribution methods, we may use the swollen hydrogel particles to
modify the soil pore structure, to clog or extend the water channels in sandy
soils, or to build water reservoirs in the plant root zone
Subject-specific finite element modelling of the human hand complex : muscle-driven simulations and experimental validation
This paper aims to develop and validate a subject-specific framework for modelling the human hand. This was achieved by combining medical image-based finite element modelling, individualized muscle force and kinematic measurements. Firstly, a subject-specific human hand finite element (FE) model was developed. The geometries of the phalanges, carpal bones, wrist bones, ligaments, tendons, subcutaneous tissue and skin were all included. The material properties were derived from in-vivo and in-vitro experiment results available in the literature. The boundary and loading conditions were defined based on the kinematic data and muscle forces of a specific subject captured from the in-vivo grasping tests. The predicted contact pressure and contact area were in good agreement with the in-vivo test results of the same subject, with the relative errors for the contact pressures all being below 20%. Finally, sensitivity analysis was performed to investigate the effects of important modelling parameters on the predictions. The results showed that contact pressure and area were sensitive to the material properties and muscle forces. This FE human hand model can be used to make a detailed and quantitative evaluation into biomechanical and neurophysiological aspects of human hand contact during daily perception and manipulation. The findings can be applied to the design of the bionic hands or neuro-prosthetics in the future
Generalised additive multiscale wavelet models constructed using particle swarm optimisation and mutual information for spatio-temporal evolutionary system representation
A new class of generalised additive multiscale wavelet models (GAMWMs) is introduced for high dimensional spatio-temporal evolutionary (STE) system identification. A novel two-stage hybrid learning scheme is developed for constructing such an additive wavelet model. In the first stage, a new orthogonal projection pursuit (OPP) method, implemented using a particle swarm optimisation(PSO) algorithm, is proposed for successively augmenting an initial coarse wavelet model, where relevant parameters of the associated wavelets are optimised using a particle swarm optimiser. The resultant network model, obtained in the first stage, may however be a redundant model. In the second stage, a forward orthogonal regression (FOR) algorithm, implemented using a mutual information method, is then applied to refine and improve the initially constructed wavelet model. The proposed two-stage hybrid method can generally produce a parsimonious wavelet model, where a ranked list of wavelet functions, according to the capability of each wavelet to represent the total variance in the desired system output signal is produced. The proposed new modelling framework is applied to real observed images, relative to a chemical reaction exhibiting a spatio-temporal evolutionary behaviour, and the associated identification results show that the new modelling framework is applicable and effective for handling high dimensional identification problems of spatio-temporal evolution sytems
Time-varying signal processing using multi-wavelet basis functions and a modified block least mean square algorithm
This paper introduces a novel parametric modeling and identification method for linear time-varying systems using a modified block least mean square (LMS) approach where the time-varying parameters are approximated using multi-wavelet basis functions. This approach can be used to track rapidly or even sharply varying processes and is more suitable for recursive estimation of process parameters by combining wavelet approximation theory with a modified block LMS algorithm. Numerical examples are provided to show the effectiveness of the proposed method for dealing with severely nonstatinoary processes
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