34 research outputs found

    Women in Science 2014

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    Women in Science 2014 summarizes research done by Smith College’s Summer Research Fellowship (SURF) Program participants. Ever since its 1967 start, SURF has been a cornerstone of Smith’s science education. In 2014, 150 students participated in SURF (141 hosted on campus and nearby eld sites), supervised by 61 faculty mentor-advisors drawn from the Clark Science Center and connected to its eighteen science, mathematics, and engineering departments and programs and associated centers and units. At summer’s end, SURF participants were asked to summarize their research experiences for this publication.https://scholarworks.smith.edu/clark_womeninscience/1003/thumbnail.jp

    Improving driver comfort in commercial vehicles : modeling and control of a low-power active cabin suspension system

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    Comfort enhancement of commercial vehicles has been an engineering topic ever since the first trucks emerged around 1900. Since then, significant improvements have been made by implementing cabin (secondary) and seat suspensions. Moreover, the invention of the air spring and its application to the various vehicle's suspension systems also greatly enhanced driver comfort. However, despite these improvements many truck drivers have health related Problems, which are expected to be caused by their exposure to the environmental vibrations over longer periods of time. The most recent suspension improvements in commercial vehicles date back more than a decade and the possibilities for further improvements using passive devices (springs and dampers) seem nearly exhausted. Consequently, in line with developments in passenger cars, truck manufacturers are now investigating semi-active and active suspension systems. Herein, active suspensions are expected to give the best performance, but also come at the highest cost. Especially the high power consumption of market-ready devices is problematic in a branch where all costs need to be minimized. In this dissertation the field of secondary suspension design and controllable suspensions for heavy vehicles is addressed. More specifically, the possibilities for a low power active cabin suspension design are investigated. The open literature on this topic is very limited in comparison to that of passenger cars. However, as heavy vehicle systems are dynamically more challenging, with many vibration modes below 20 Hz, there is great research potential. The dynamic complexity becomes clear when considering the developed 44 degrees of freedom (DOF) tractor semi-trailer simulation model. This model is a vital tool for suspension analysis and evaluation of various control strategies. Moreover, as it is modular it can also be easily adapted for other related research. The main vehicle components all have their own modules. So, for example, when evaluating a new cabin suspension design, only the cabin module needs to be replaced. The model has been validated using extensive tests on a real tractor semi-trailer test-rig. The control strategy is a key aspect of any active suspension system. However, the 44 DOF tractor semi-trailer model is too complex for controller design. Therefore, reduced order models are required which describe the main dynamic properties. A quarter truck heave-, half truck roll-, and half truck pitch-heave model are developed and validated using a frequency-domain validation technique and the test-rig measurements. The technique is based on a recently developed frequency domain validation method for robust control and adapted for non-synchronous inputs, with noise on the input and output measurements. The models are shown to give a fair representation of the complex truck dynamics. Furthermore, the proposed validation method may be a valuable tool to obtain high quality vehicle models. As a first step, in search of a low power active cabin suspension system, various suspension concepts are evaluated under idealized conditions. From this evaluation, it follows that the variable geometry active suspension has great potential. However, the only known physical realization - the Delft Active Suspension - suffers from packaging issues, nonlinear stiffness characteristics, fail-safe issues and high production cost. Recently, a redesign - the electromechanical Low-Power Active Suspension (eLPAS) - was presented, which is expected to overcome most of these issues. This design is modeled, analyzed and a controller is designed, which can be used to manipulate the suspension force. Feasibility of the design is demonstrated using tests on a hardware prototype. Finally, the validated reduced order models are used to design suitable roll and pitch-heave control strategies. These are evaluated using a combination of the 44 DOF tractor semi-trailer and eLPAS models. Four eLPAS devices are placed at the lower corners of the cabin and modal input-output decoupling is applied for the controller implementation. It is shown, that driver comfort and cabin attitude behavior (roll, pitch and heave when braking, accelerating or steering) can be greatly improved without consuming excessive amounts of energy. So, overall these results enforce the notion that the variable geometry active suspension can be effectively used as low power active cabin suspension. However, there are still some open questions that need to be addressed before this design can be implemented in the next generation commercial vehicles. Durability and failsafe behavior of the eLPAS system, as well as controller robustness to variations in the vehicle parameters and environmental conditions, are some of the topics that require further study

    Proceedings of the 9th Arab Society for Computer Aided Architectural Design (ASCAAD) international conference 2021 (ASCAAD 2021): architecture in the age of disruptive technologies: transformation and challenges.

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    The ASCAAD 2021 conference theme is Architecture in the age of disruptive technologies: transformation and challenges. The theme addresses the gradual shift in computational design from prototypical morphogenetic-centered associations in the architectural discourse. This imminent shift of focus is increasingly stirring a debate in the architectural community and is provoking a much needed critical questioning of the role of computation in architecture as a sole embodiment and enactment of technical dimensions, into one that rather deliberately pursues and embraces the humanities as an ultimate aspiration

    Power Electronics in Renewable Energy Systems

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