7,904 research outputs found
Energy and economic analysis of a residential Solar Organic Rankine plant
To answer the actual energy, water, economic, social and environmental challenges, renewable, distributed power plants need to
be developed. Among renewables, solar tri-generative power plants can be a solution where there is big low temperature
heating/cooling demand and small electricity demand, like many residential and industrial utilities. In this case, solar thermal
plants can produce thermal energy with low cost and high efficiency. The higher temperature heat not needed by the user can be
exploited via Organic Rankine Cycle to produce electrical energy and desalinized water via reverse osmosis. The present paper
analyses, via TRNSYS simulation, a system composed of 50 m2
of CPC solar thermal collectors, 3 m3
of thermal storage, a
synthetic heat transfer fluid, 3 kWe ORC, 8 kWth absorber, 200 l/h direct reverse osmosis desalination device. The system is able
to produce power, heating/cooling and fresh water needs for a residential house. Although system’s components are well known
technologies, the integration to a efficient and economic working system is still a challenge. Global energy and economic
analyses have been performed. Low temperature heating/cooling terminals allow to increase not only the use of thermal energy
but also the ORCand absorber efficiency. ORC-Absorber configuration and relative fluids and temperatures are central.
Government support and/or cost reduction of 30% are necessary to have positive NPV and acceptable PBT and IR
Case study: the implementation of a data-driven industrial analytics methodology and platform for smart manufacturing
Integrated, real-time and open approaches relating to the development of industrial analytics capabilities are needed to support smart manufacturing. However, adopting industrial analytics can be challenging due to its multidisciplinary and cross-departmental (e.g. Operation and Information Technology) nature. These challenges stem from the significant effort needed to coordinate and manage teams and technologies in a connected enterprise. To address these challenges, this research presents a formal industrial analytics methodology that may be used to inform the development of industrial analytics capabilities. The methodology classifies operational teams that comprise the industrial analytics ecosystem, and presents a technology agnostic reference architecture to facilitate the industrial analytics lifecycle. Finally, the proposed methodology is demonstrated in a case study, where an industrial analytics platform is used to identify an operational issue in a largescale Air Handling Unit (AHU)
Flexible Integration and Efficient Analysis of Multidimensional Datasets from the Web
If numeric data from the Web are brought together, natural scientists can compare climate measurements with estimations, financial analysts can evaluate companies based on balance sheets and daily stock market values, and citizens can explore the GDP per capita from several data sources. However, heterogeneities and size of data remain a problem. This work presents methods to query a uniform view - the Global Cube - of available datasets from the Web and builds on Linked Data query approaches
A proof-of-concept for semantically interoperable federation of IoT experimentation facilities
The Internet-of-Things (IoT) is unanimously identified as one of the main pillars of future smart scenarios. The potential of IoT technologies and deployments has been already demonstrated in a number of different application areas, including transport, energy, safety and healthcare. However, despite the growing number of IoT deployments, the majority of IoT applications tend to be self-contained, thereby forming application silos. A lightweight data centric integration and combination of these silos presents several challenges that still need to be addressed. Indeed, the ability to combine and synthesize data streams and services from diverse IoT platforms and testbeds, holds the promise to increase the potentiality of smart applications in terms of size, scope and targeted business context. In this article, a proof-of-concept implementation that federates two different IoT experimentation facilities by means of semantic-based technologies will be described. The specification and design of the implemented system and information models will be described together with the practical details of the developments carried out and its integration with the existing IoT platforms supporting the aforementioned testbeds. Overall, the system described in this paper demonstrates that it is possible to open new horizons in the development of IoT applications and experiments at a global scale, that transcend the (silo) boundaries of individual deployments, based on the semantic interconnection and interoperability of diverse IoT platforms and testbeds.This work is partially funded by the European projectzFederated Interoperable Semantic
IoT/cloud Testbeds and Applications (FIESTA-IoT) from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Programme with
the Grant Agreement No. CNECT-ICT-643943. The authors would also like to thank the FIESTA-IoT consortium
for the fruitful discussions
Smart Manufacturing as a framework for Smart Mining
Based on the analogy between manufacturing and mining (i.e. ore 'production'), smart mining has four dimensions: (i) advanced digital-oriented technologies (such as Cloud computing and the Internet of things) with automated Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs), adaptable production processes (dependent on working conditions) and production volume control (with optimal resource consumption); (ii) smart maintenance of CPSs; (iii) new ways for workers to perform their activities, using advanced digital-oriented technologies; and (iv) smart supply-chain (procurement of materials and spare parts / products delivery). This paper presents a case study on the smart mining approach implemented at a coal mining system in Serbia
Smart Manufacturing as a framework for Smart Mining
Based on the analogy between manufacturing and mining (i.e. ore 'production'), smart mining has four dimensions: (i) advanced digital-oriented technologies (such as Cloud computing and the Internet of things) with automated Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs), adaptable production processes (dependent on working conditions) and production volume control (with optimal resource consumption); (ii) smart maintenance of CPSs; (iii) new ways for workers to perform their activities, using advanced digital-oriented technologies; and (iv) smart supply-chain (procurement of materials and spare parts / products delivery). This paper presents a case study on the smart mining approach implemented at a coal mining system in Serbia
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Next Steps for Hydrogen - physics, technology and the future
Hydrogen has been proposed as a future energy carrier for more than 40 years. In recent decades, impetus has been given by the need to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles. In addition, hydrogen has the potential to facilitate the large-scale deployment of variable renewables in the electricity system. Despite such drivers, the long-anticipated hydrogen economy is proving to be slow to emerge. This report stresses the role that physics and physics-based technology could play in accelerating the large-scale deployment of hydrogen in the energy system.
Emphasis is given to the potential of cryogenic liquid hydrogen and the opportunities afforded by developments in nanoscience for hydrogen storage and use. The use of low-temperature liquid hydrogen opens up a technological opportunity separate from, but complementary with, energy applications. The new opportunity is the ability to cool novel materials into the superconducting state without the need to use significant quantities of expensive liquid helium. Two of the authors have previously coined the term “hydrogen cryomagnetics” for when liquid hydrogen is utilised in high-field and high-efficiency magnets. The opportunity for liquid hydrogen to displace liquid helium may be a relatively small business opportunity compared to global transport energy
demands, but it potentially affords an opportunity to kick-start the wider commercial use of hydrogen.
The report considers various important factors shaping the future for hydrogen, such as competing production methods and the importance of safety, but throughout it is clear that science and engineering are of central importance to hydrogen innovation and physics has an important role to play
Proceedings of the 2012 Workshop on Ambient Intelligence Infrastructures (WAmIi)
This is a technical report including the papers presented at the Workshop on Ambient Intelligence Infrastructures (WAmIi) that took place in conjunction with the International Joint Conference on Ambient Intelligence (AmI) in Pisa, Italy on November 13, 2012. The motivation for organizing the workshop was the wish to learn from past experience on Ambient Intelligence systems, and in particular, on the lessons learned on the system architecture of such systems. A significant number of European projects and other research have been performed, often with the goal of developing AmI technology to showcase AmI scenarios. We believe that for AmI to become further successfully accepted the system architecture is essential
Compact semantic representations of observational data
Das Konzept des Internet der Dinge (IoT) ist in mehreren Bereichen weit verbreitet, damit Geräte miteinander interagieren und bestimmte Aufgaben erfüllen können. IoT-Geräte umfassen verschiedene Konzepte, z.B. Sensoren, Programme, Computer und Aktoren. IoT-Geräte beobachten ihre Umgebung, um Informationen zu sammeln und miteinander zu kommunizieren, um gemeinsame Aufgaben zu erfüllen. Diese Vorrichtungen erzeugen kontinuierlich Beobachtungsdatenströme, die zu historischen Daten werden, wenn diese Beobachtungen gespeichert werden. Durch die Zunahme der Anzahl der IoT-Geräte wird eine große Menge an Streaming- und historischen Beobachtungsdaten erzeugt. Darüber hinaus wurden mehrere Ontologien, wie die Semantic Sensor Network (SSN) Ontologie, für die semantische Annotation von Beobachtungsdaten vorgeschlagen - entweder Stream oder historisch. Das Resource Description Framework (RDF) ist ein weit verbreitetes Datenmodell zur semantischen Beschreibung der Datensätze. Semantische Annotation bietet ein gemeinsames Verständnis für die Verarbeitung und Analyse von Beobachtungsdaten. Durch das Hinzufügen von Semantik wird die Datengröße jedoch weiter erhöht, insbesondere wenn die Beobachtungswerte von mehreren Geräten redundant erfasst werden. So können beispielsweise mehrere Sensoren Beobachtungen erzeugen, die den gleichen Wert für die relative Luftfeuchtigkeit in einem bestimmten Zeitstempel und einer bestimmten Stadt anzeigen. Diese Situation kann in einem RDF-Diagramm mit vier RDF-Tripel dargestellt werden, wobei Beobachtungen als Tripel dargestellt werden, die das beobachtete Phänomen, die Maßeinheit, den Zeitstempel und die Koordinaten beschreiben. Die RDF-Tripel einer Beobachtung sind mit dem gleichen Thema verbunden. Solche Beobachtungen teilen sich die gleichen Objekte in einer bestimmten Gruppe von Eigenschaften, d.h. sie entsprechen einem Sternmuster, das sich aus diesen Eigenschaften und Objekten zusammensetzt. Wenn die Anzahl dieser Subjektentitäten oder Eigenschaften in diesen Sternmustern groß ist, wird die Größe des RDF-Diagramms und der Abfrageverarbeitung negativ beeinflusst; wir bezeichnen diese Sternmuster als häufige Sternmuster. Diese Arbeit befasst sich mit dem Problem der Identifizierung von häufigen Sternenmustern in RDF-Diagrammen und entwickelt Berechnungsmethoden, um häufige Sternmuster zu identifizieren und ein faktorisiertes RDF-Diagramm zu erzeugen, bei dem die Anzahl der häufigen Sternmuster minimiert wird. Darüber hinaus wenden wir diese faktorisierten RDF-Darstellungen über historische semantische Sensordaten an, die mit der SSN-Ontologie beschrieben werden, und präsentieren tabellarische Darstellungen von faktorisierten semantischen Sensordaten, um Big Data-Frameworks auszunutzen. Darüber hinaus entwickelt diese Arbeit einen wissensbasierten Ansatz namens DESERT, der in der Lage ist, bei Bedarf Streamdaten zu faktorisieren und semantisch anzureichern (on-Demand factorizE and Semantically Enrich stReam daTa). Wir bewerten die Leistung unserer vorgeschlagenen Techniken anhand mehrerer RDF-Diagramm-Benchmarks. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass unsere Techniken in der Lage sind, häufige Sternmuster effektiv und effizient zu erkennen, und die Größe der RDF-Diagramme kann um bis zu 66,56% reduziert werden, während die im ursprünglichen RDF-Diagramm dargestellten Daten erhalten bleiben. Darüber hinaus sind die kompakten Darstellungen in der Lage, die Anzahl der RDF-Tripel um mindestens 53,25% in historischen Beobachtungsdaten und bis zu 94,34% in Beobachtungsdatenströmen zu reduzieren. Darüber hinaus reduzieren die Ergebnisse der Anfrageauswertung über historische Daten die Ausführungszeit der Anfrage um bis zu drei Größenordnungen. In Beobachtungsdatenströmen wird die Größe der zur Beantwortung der Anfrage benötigten Daten um 92,53% reduziert, wodurch der Speicherplatzbedarf zur Beantwortung der Anfragen reduziert wird. Diese Ergebnisse belegen, dass IoT-Daten mit den vorgeschlagenen kompakten Darstellungen effizient dargestellt werden können, wodurch die negativen Auswirkungen semantischer Annotationen auf das IoT-Datenmanagement reduziert werden.The Internet of Things (IoT) concept has been widely adopted in several domains to enable devices to interact with each other and perform certain tasks. IoT devices encompass different concepts, e.g., sensors, programs, computers, and actuators. IoT devices observe their surroundings to collect information and communicate with each other in order to perform mutual tasks. These devices continuously generate observational data streams, which become historical data when these observations are stored. Due to an increase in the number of IoT devices, a large amount of streaming and historical observational data is being produced. Moreover, several ontologies, like the Semantic Sensor Network (SSN) Ontology, have been proposed for semantic annotation of observational data-either streams or historical. Resource Description Framework (RDF) is widely adopted data model to semantically describe the datasets. Semantic annotation provides a shared understanding for processing and analysis of observational data. However, adding semantics, further increases the data size especially when the observation values are redundantly sensed by several devices. For example, several sensors can generate observations indicating the same value for relative humidity in a given timestamp and city. This situation can be represented in an RDF graph using four RDF triples where observations are represented as triples that describe the observed phenomenon, the unit of measurement, the timestamp, and the coordinates. The RDF triples of an observation are associated with the same subject. Such observations share the same objects in a certain group of properties, i.e., they match star patterns composed of these properties and objects. In case the number of these subject entities or properties in these star patterns is large, the size of the RDF graph and query processing are negatively impacted; we refer these star patterns as frequent star patterns. This thesis addresses the problem of identifying frequent star patterns in RDF graphs and develop computational methods to identify frequent star patterns and generate a factorized RDF graph where the number of frequent star patterns is minimized. Furthermore, we apply these factorized RDF representations over historical semantic sensor data described using the SSN ontology and present tabular-based representations of factorized semantic sensor data in order to exploit Big Data frameworks. In addition, this thesis devises a knowledge-driven approach named DESERT that is able to on-Demand factorizE and Semantically Enrich stReam daTa. We evaluate the performance of our proposed techniques on several RDF graph benchmarks. The outcomes show that our techniques are able to effectively and efficiently detect frequent star patterns and RDF graph size can be reduced by up to 66.56% while data represented in the original RDF graph is preserved. Moreover, the compact representations are able to reduce the number of RDF triples by at least 53.25% in historical observational data and upto 94.34% in observational data streams. Additionally, query evaluation results over historical data reduce query execution time by up to three orders of magnitude. In observational data streams the size of the data required to answer the query is reduced by 92.53% reducing the memory space requirements to answer the queries. These results provide evidence that IoT data can be efficiently represented using the proposed compact representations, reducing thus, the negative impact that semantic annotations may have on IoT data management
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