225,215 research outputs found
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Integrated fibre-optic sensor networks as tools for monitoring strain development in bridges during construction
Long-term asset management and maintenance of civil infrastructure relies on having access to reliable performance data in order to inform critical decision-making processes. This paper discusses the development and implementation of a robust, innovative and highly distributed fibre-optic sensor network for use as a bridge monitoring and performance evaluation tool. The main steel girders of a new 26.8 metre span half-through steel railway bridge were each instrumented with 80 fibre Bragg grating (FBG) based sensors (spaced at 1 metre) prior to the casting of the concrete deck. Two major challenges with implementing fibre-optic monitoring systems remain prominent: appropriately compensating for strain changes due to temperature, and designing the system to be sufficiently robust to survive installation and continuous long-term operation. This study addresses these challenges through the implementation of a new temperature compensation sensor cable packaging and the deployment of glass-fibre reinforced strain FBG sensor cables with the aim of improving overall network reliability. The completed system is capable of measuring the dynamic strain of all installed FBG sensors simultaneously at sampling rates of 250 Hz to strain resolutions within ±10 microstrain. Data was collected and initial results are presented for the strain developed within the main girders during the casting and curing of the concrete deck. The sensor readings captured the quasi-distributed profile of strains developed along the main girders due to the casting and curing of the concrete deck and have provided insights into understanding the complex thermal response of the structure. This study demonstrates that integrated structural health monitoring systems installed at the time of construction can provide a complete record of the entire load history of a structure. Performance data of this type is invaluable for understanding the behaviour of composite concrete decks, evaluating future structural capacity, establishing long term monitoring programmes, and allowing performance-based asset management decision making
Design methodology for smart actuator services for machine tool and machining control and monitoring
This paper presents a methodology to design the services of smart actuators for machine tools. The smart actuators aim at replacing the traditional drives (spindles and feed-drives) and enable to add data processing abilities to implement monitoring and control tasks. Their data processing abilities are also exploited in order to create a new decision level at the machine level. The aim of this decision level is to react to disturbances that the monitoring tasks detect. The cooperation between the computational objects (the smart spindle, the smart feed-drives and the CNC unit) enables to carry out functions for accommodating or adapting to the disturbances. This leads to the extension of the notion of smart actuator with the notion of agent. In order to implement the services of the smart drives, a general design is presented describing the services as well as the behavior of the smart drive according to the object oriented approach. Requirements about the CNC unit are detailed. Eventually, an implementation of the smart drive services that involves a virtual lathe and a virtual turning operation is described. This description is part of the design methodology. Experimental results obtained thanks to the virtual machine are then presented
Multi-agent framework based on smart sensors/actuators for machine tools control and monitoring
Throughout the history, the evolutions of the requirements for manufacturing equipments have depended on the changes in the customers' demands. Among the present trends in the requirements for new manufacturing equipments, there are more flexible and more reactive machines. In order to satisfy those requirements, this paper proposes a control and monitoring framework for machine tools based on smart sensor, on smart actuator and on agent concepts. The proposed control and monitoring framework achieves machine monitoring, process monitoring and adapting functions that are not usually provided by machine tool control systems. The proposed control and monitoring framework has been evaluated by the means of a simulated operative part of a machine tool. The communication between the agents is achieved thanks to an Ethernet network and CORBA protocol. The experiments (with and without cooperation between agents for accommodating) give encouraging results for implementing the proposed control framework to operational machines. Also, the cooperation between the agents of control and monitoring framework contributes to the improvement of reactivity by adapting cutting parameters to the machine and process states and to increase productivity
Energy Efficiency in the ICT - Profiling Power Consumption in Desktop Computer Systems
Energy awareness in the ICT has become an important issue. Focusing on software, recent work suggested the existence of a relationship between power consumption, software configuration and usage patterns in computer systems. The aim of this work was collecting and analysing power consumption data of general-purpose computer systems, simulating common usage scenarios, in order to extract a power consumption profile for each scenario. We selected two desktop systems of different generations as test machines. Meanwhile, we developed 11 usage scenarios, and conducted several test runs of them, collecting power consumption data by means of a power meter. Our analysis resulted in an estimation of a power consumption value for each scenario and software application used, obtaining that each single scenario introduced an overhead from 2 to 11 Watts, which corresponds to a percentage increase that can reach up to 20% on recent and more powerful systems. We determined that software and its usage patterns impact consistently on the power consumption of computer systems. Further work will be devoted to evaluate how power consumption is affected by the usage of specific system resource
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Diagnostic Applications for Micro-Synchrophasor Measurements
This report articulates and justifies the preliminary selection of diagnostic applications for data from micro-synchrophasors (µPMUs) in electric power distribution systems that will be further studied and developed within the scope of the three-year ARPA-e award titled Micro-synchrophasors for Distribution Systems
Power quality and electromagnetic compatibility: special report, session 2
The scope of Session 2 (S2) has been defined as follows by the Session Advisory Group and the Technical Committee: Power Quality (PQ), with the more general concept of electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and with some related safety problems in electricity distribution systems.
Special focus is put on voltage continuity (supply reliability, problem of outages) and voltage quality (voltage level, flicker, unbalance, harmonics). This session will also look at electromagnetic compatibility (mains frequency to 150 kHz), electromagnetic interferences and electric and magnetic fields issues. Also addressed in this session are electrical safety and immunity concerns (lightning issues, step, touch and transferred voltages).
The aim of this special report is to present a synthesis of the present concerns in PQ&EMC, based on all selected papers of session 2 and related papers from other sessions, (152 papers in total). The report is divided in the following 4 blocks:
Block 1: Electric and Magnetic Fields, EMC, Earthing systems
Block 2: Harmonics
Block 3: Voltage Variation
Block 4: Power Quality Monitoring
Two Round Tables will be organised:
- Power quality and EMC in the Future Grid (CIGRE/CIRED WG C4.24, RT 13)
- Reliability Benchmarking - why we should do it? What should be done in future? (RT 15
Bridges Structural Health Monitoring and Deterioration Detection Synthesis of Knowledge and Technology
INE/AUTC 10.0
Technical support for Life Sciences communities on a production grid infrastructure
Production operation of large distributed computing infrastructures (DCI)
still requires a lot of human intervention to reach acceptable quality of
service. This may be achievable for scientific communities with solid IT
support, but it remains a show-stopper for others. Some application execution
environments are used to hide runtime technical issues from end users. But they
mostly aim at fault-tolerance rather than incident resolution, and their
operation still requires substantial manpower. A longer-term support activity
is thus needed to ensure sustained quality of service for Virtual Organisations
(VO). This paper describes how the biomed VO has addressed this challenge by
setting up a technical support team. Its organisation, tooling, daily tasks,
and procedures are described. Results are shown in terms of resource usage by
end users, amount of reported incidents, and developed software tools. Based on
our experience, we suggest ways to measure the impact of the technical support,
perspectives to decrease its human cost and make it more community-specific.Comment: HealthGrid'12, Amsterdam : Netherlands (2012
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A survey on online monitoring approaches of computer-based systems
This report surveys forms of online data collection that are in current use (as well as being the subject of research to adapt them to changing technology and demands), and can be used as inputs to assessment of dependability and resilience, although they are not primarily meant for this use
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