5,159 research outputs found

    Characterizing the performance of low impact development under changes in climate and urbanization

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    Over the past decades, climate change and urbanization have altered the regional hydro-environments, causing a series of stormwater management problems including urban flood and non-point pollution. Low impact development (LID) has been identified as a sustainable strategy for stormwater management. However, given the complex impacts of climate change and urbanization on hydro-environments, the performance of LID strategy under future changes remains largely unexplored. Accordingly, this research characterized the LID performance under changes in climate and urbanization. To provide an additional reference to sustainable stormwater management, the following specific topics were addressed: (1) Through hydraulic and water quality modeling, the LID performances of flood mitigation and pollution removal were systematically evaluated at the city scale. (2) Through uncertainty analysis, the impact of model parameter uncertainty on the LID performance was taken into account. (3) Through sensitivity analysis, the impact of LID technical parameters (e.g., surface features, soil textures) on the LID performance was quantified. (4) Through scenario analysis, the LID performances under different hydrological patterns were compared. (5) Through spatial analysis, the distribution of LID performance on different land-cover types was determined. (6) Through adopting general circulation model (GCM) projections, the LID performance under future climate scenarios with different representative concentration pathways (RCPs) was investigated. (7) Through adopting integrated assessment model (IAM) projections, the LID performance under future urbanization scenarios with different shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs) was explored. (8) By coupling climate and urbanization projections with land-cover distribution, the spatiotemporal trends of LID performance in the future were characterized.:Table of Contents List of Abbreviations VII List of Peer-Reviewed Publications on the Ph.D. Topic IX List of Co-authored Peer-Reviewed Publications on the Ph.D. Topic X 1 General Introduction 1 1.1 Background 1 1.2 Objectives 3 1.3 Innovation and Contribution to the Knowledge 3 1.4 Outline of the Dissertation 4 1.5 References 5 2 Literature Review 9 2.1 Hydraulic and Water Quality Modeling 9 2.1.1 Hydraulic Model 9 2.1.2 Water Quality Model 10 2.2 Low Impact Development (LID) 10 2.2.1 LID Practice 10 2.2.2 LID Performance 11 2.3 Performance Evaluation 13 2.3.1 Scenario Analysis 13 2.3.2 Spatial Analysis 13 2.3.3 Uncertainty Analysis 14 2.3.4 Sensitivity Analysis 14 2.4 Future Changes in Climate and Urbanization 15 2.4.1 Climate Change 15 2.4.2 Future Urbanization 16 2.5 References 17 3 Impact of Technical Factors on LID Performance 27 3.1 Introduction 28 3.2 Methods 30 3.2.1 Study Area 30 3.2.2 Model Description 31 3.2.2.1 Model Theory 31 3.2.2.2 Model Construction 31 3.2.2.3 Model Calibration and Validation 32 3.2.2.4 Model Uncertainty Analysis by GLUE Method 34 3.2.3 Hydrological Pattern Design 35 3.2.4 LID Strategy Design 35 3.2.4.1 Implementation of LID Practices 35 3.2.4.2 Sensitivity Analysis by Sobol’s Method 36 3.2.5 Correlation Analysis Using a Self-Organizing Map 37 3.2.6 Description of the RDS Load Components 37 3.3 Results 38 3.3.1 RDS Migration and Distribution in Baseline Strategy 38 3.3.1.1 RDS Migration under Hydrological Scenarios 38 3.3.1.2 RDS Distribution on Land-Cover Types 39 3.3.2 RDS Removal in LID Strategies 40 3.3.2.1 RDS Removal by LID Strategies 40 3.3.2.2 Spatial Distribution of the RDS Removal 42 3.3.2.3 LID Parameter Sensitivity Analysis Result 43 3.4 Discussion 45 3.4.1 Factors Influencing RDS Migration in the Baseline Strategy 45 3.4.2 RDS Removal Performance by LID Strategy 46 3.5 Conclusions 47 3.6 References 47 4 Impact of Hydro-Environmental Factors on LID Performance 53 4.1 Introduction 54 4.2 Methods 56 4.2.1 Study Area 56 4.2.2 Modeling Approach 56 4.2.2.1 Model Theory 56 4.2.2.2 Model Construction 56 4.2.2.3 Model Calibration and Validation 57 4.2.2.4 Model Uncertainty Analysis 57 4.2.3 LID Performance Analysis 58 4.2.3.1 LID Practice Implementation 58 4.2.3.2 LID Performance Evaluation 58 4.2.4 Hydrological Pattern Analysis 59 4.2.4.1 Scenario of ADP Length 59 4.2.4.2 Scenario of Rainfall Magnitude 59 4.2.4.3 Scenario of Long-Term pre-Simulation 60 4.2.5 Sensitivity Analysis of Hydrological Scenarios 60 4.3 Results 61 4.3.1 LID Performance under Different ADP Lengths 61 4.3.2 LID Performance under Different Rainfall Magnitudes 62 4.3.3 Spatial Distribution of LID Performance 63 4.3.4 Sensitivities of LID Performance to ADP Length and Rainfall Magnitude 66 4.4 Discussion 68 4.4.1 Impact of ADP Length and Rainfall Magnitude on LID Performance 68 4.4.2 Spatial Heterogeneity of LID Performance 68 4.4.3 Research Implications 69 4.5 Conclusions 70 4.6 References 71 5 Impact of Future Climate Patterns on LID Performance 77 5.1 Introduction 78 5.2 Methods 80 5.2.1 Study Area 80 5.2.2 Hydraulic and Water Quality Model 80 5.2.2.1 Model Development 80 5.2.2.2 Model Calibration and Validation 81 5.2.3 Climate Change Scenario Analysis 81 5.2.3.1 GCM Evaluation 81 5.2.3.2 Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Concentration Scenario 82 5.2.3.3 GCM Downscaling 83 5.2.4 LID Performance Analysis 83 5.2.4.1 Implementation of LID Practices 83 5.2.4.2 Evaluation of LID Performance 84 5.2.4.3 Sensitivity Analysis on LID Performance 86 5.3 Results 86 5.3.1 Hydrological Characteristics under Future Climate Scenarios 86 5.3.2 LID Performance under Future Climate Scenarios 87 5.3.2.1 LID Short-Term Performance 87 5.3.2.2 LID Long-Term Performance 90 5.3.3 Impact of ADP Length and Rainfall Magnitude on LID Performance 92 5.3.3.1 LID Performance Uncertainty 92 5.3.3.2 Spatial Distribution of LID Performance 93 5.3.3.3 Sensitivity of LID Performance to Climate Change 95 5.4 Discussion 97 5.4.1 LID Performance in Short-Term Extremes and Long-Term Events 97 5.4.2 Impact of Climate Change on LID Performance 97 5.4.3 Research Implications 99 5.5 Conclusions 100 5.6 References 100 6 Impact of Climate and Urbanization Changes on LID Perfor-mance 109 6.1 Introduction 110 6.2 Methods 112 6.2.1 Study Area 112 6.2.2 Modeling Approach 112 6.2.2.1 Model Development 112 6.2.2.2 Model Calibration and Validation 113 6.2.3 Future Scenario Derivation 113 6.2.3.1 Climate Change Scenario 113 6.2.3.2 Urbanization Scenario 115 6.2.4 Flood Exposure Assessment 115 6.2.5 Implementation and Evaluation of LID Strategy 117 6.2.5.1 Implementation Scheme of LID Strategy 117 6.2.5.2 Performance Evaluation of LID Strategy 117 6.3 Results 118 6.3.1 Flood Exposure in Baseline and Future Scenarios 118 6.3.1.1 Hydrological Change in Future Climate Scenarios 118 6.3.1.2 Catchment Change in Future Urbanization Scenarios 118 6.3.1.3 Population and GDP Exposures to Flood in Future 121 6.3.2 Flood Exposure with Consideration of LID Strategy 123 6.3.2.1 Runoff Mitigation Performance of LID Strategy 123 6.3.2.2 Peak Mitigation Performance of LID Strategy 124 6.3.2.3 Population and GDP Exposures to Flood under LID Strategy 125 6.4 Discussion 126 6.4.1 Climate Change and Urbanization Exacerbated Flood Exposure Risk 126 6.4.2 LID Strategy Mitigated Flood Exposure Risk 126 6.5 Conclusions 127 6.6 References 127 7 Discussion and General Conclusions 133 7.1 Stormwater Management Performance of LID Strategy 133 7.2 Impact of Influencing Factors on LID Performance 134 7.3 LID Performance under Future Changes 135 7.4 Research Implications 136 7.5 References 137 8 Outlook of Future Research 139 8.1 Optimization of LID Performance 139 8.2 Cross-regional Study on Future Changes 139 8.3 Macro-scale Flood Risk Management 140 8.4 References 141 9 Appendices 143 9.1 Appendix for Chapter 3 143 9.1.1 The Determination of the GLUE Criteria 143 9.1.2 Model Uncertainty Analysis 143 9.1.3 The LID Installation Location 144 9.1.4 Figures 145 9.1.5 Tables 147 9.2 Appendix for Chapter 4 153 9.2.1 Scenario of Long-term pre-Simulation 153 9.2.2 Figures 153 9.2.3 Tables 158 9.3 Appendix for Chapter 5 164 9.3.1 Tables 164 9.4 Appendix for Chapter 6 169 9.4.1 Figures 169 9.4.2 Tables 170 9.5 Data Source 177 9.6 References 17

    Analysis and monitoring of single HaCaT cells using volumetric Raman mapping and machine learning

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    No explorer reached a pole without a map, no chef served a meal without tasting, and no surgeon implants untested devices. Higher accuracy maps, more sensitive taste buds, and more rigorous tests increase confidence in positive outcomes. Biomedical manufacturing necessitates rigour, whether developing drugs or creating bioengineered tissues [1]–[4]. By designing a dynamic environment that supports mammalian cells during experiments within a Raman spectroscope, this project provides a platform that more closely replicates in vivo conditions. The platform also adds the opportunity to automate the adaptation of the cell culture environment, alongside spectral monitoring of cells with machine learning and three-dimensional Raman mapping, called volumetric Raman mapping (VRM). Previous research highlighted key areas for refinement, like a structured approach for shading Raman maps [5], [6], and the collection of VRM [7]. Refining VRM shading and collection was the initial focus, k-means directed shading for vibrational spectroscopy map shading was developed in Chapter 3 and exploration of depth distortion and VRM calibration (Chapter 4). “Cage” scaffolds, designed using the findings from Chapter 4 were then utilised to influence cell behaviour by varying the number of cage beams to change the scaffold porosity. Altering the porosity facilitated spectroscopy investigation into previously observed changes in cell biology alteration in response to porous scaffolds [8]. VRM visualised changed single human keratinocyte (HaCaT) cell morphology, providing a complementary technique for machine learning classification. Increased technical rigour justified progression onto in-situ flow chamber for Raman spectroscopy development in Chapter 6, using a Psoriasis (dithranol-HaCaT) model on unfixed cells. K-means-directed shading and principal component analysis (PCA) revealed HaCaT cell adaptations aligning with previous publications [5] and earlier thesis sections. The k-means-directed Raman maps and PCA score plots verified the drug-supplying capacity of the flow chamber, justifying future investigation into VRM and machine learning for monitoring single cells within the flow chamber

    Proceedings of the 10th International congress on architectural technology (ICAT 2024): architectural technology transformation.

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    The profession of architectural technology is influential in the transformation of the built environment regionally, nationally, and internationally. The congress provides a platform for industry, educators, researchers, and the next generation of built environment students and professionals to showcase where their influence is transforming the built environment through novel ideas, businesses, leadership, innovation, digital transformation, research and development, and sustainable forward-thinking technological and construction assembly design

    Sustainable Approach to Weed Management: The Role of Precision Weed Management

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    In the last few decades, the increase in the world’s population has created a need to produce more food, generating, consequently, greater pressure on agricultural production. In addition, problems related to climate change, water scarcity or decreasing amounts of arable land have serious implications for farming sustainability. Weeds can affect food production in agricultural systems, decreasing the product quality and productivity due to the competition for natural resources. On the other hand, weeds can also be considered to be valuable indicators of biodiversity because of their role in providing ecosystem services. In this sense, there is a need to carry out an effective and sustainable weed management process, integrating the various control methods (i.e., cultural, mechanical and chemical) in a harmonious way, without harming the entire agrarian ecosystem. Thus, intensive mechanization and herbicide use should be avoided. Herbicide resistance in some weed biotypes is a major concern today and must be tackled. On the other hand, the recent development of weed control technologies can promote higher levels of food production, lower the amount of inputs needed and reduce environmental damage, invariably bringing us closer to more sustainable agricultural systems. In this paper, we review the most common conventional and non-conventional weed control strategies from a sustainability perspective, highlighting the application of the precision and automated weed control technologies associated with precision weed management (PWM).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Enhancement of Cavitation Intensity in Co-Flow and Ultrasonic Cavitation Peening

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    Water cavitation peening is a surface treatment process used to generate beneficial compressive residual stresses while being environmentally sustainable. Compressive residual stresses generated by the collapse of the cavitation cloud at the workpiece surface result in enhanced high cycle fatigue and wear performance. Co-flow water cavitation peening, a variant of cavitation peening involves injection of a high-speed jet into a low-speed jet of water, which makes the process amenable to automation and imparts the variant with the ability to process large structural components. Ultrasonic cavitation peening, another variant of cavitation peening, is used for peening small areas. However, an increase in cavitation intensity is needed to reduce the processing time for practical applications and to enhance process capabilities for a wide range of materials in both these variants. An experimental investigation along with numerical modelling is presented to demonstrate cavitation intensity enhancement through suitable modifications to the inner jet nozzle design in co-flow water cavitation peening. Particularly, the effects of upstream inner jet organ pipe nozzle geometry, inner jet nozzle orifice taper, and inner jet nozzle orifice length are studied to show enhanced cavitation intensity, measured via extended mass loss tests, strip curvature and residual stress measurements, high-speed videography, and impulse pressure measurements. It is found that the optimum inner jet organ pipe nozzle design, which generates enhanced pressure fluctuations through the introduction of a resonating chamber in the upstream section of the inner jet nozzle, generates 61% greater mass loss compared to the unexcited inner jet nozzle. Strip curvature, high speed imaging, and impulse pressure measurements support the mass loss results. Finally, residual stresses generated with the optimum organ pipe nozzle are shown to be deeper and more compressive than those generated with the unexcited nozzle design. The inner jet nozzle variants with diverging, zero and converging tapers are investigated experimentally and numerically to understand their influence on cavitation intensity. It is shown that the converging taper nozzle generates greater cavitation intensity, measured via mass loss and strip curvature measurements, than the zero and diverging taper nozzles. Impulse pressure measurements show the greater frequency of high-intensity events generated by the converging taper nozzle compared to the zero and diverging taper nozzles. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations help explain the experimental findings. Four nozzle variants with varying inner jet nozzle orifice length to orifice diameter ratios of 1,2,5 and 10 are investigated experimentally and numerically. The inner jet nozzle with an orifice length to orifice diameter ratio of 2 is shown to generate greater cavitation intensity than the other inner jet nozzles. A PEO aqueous solution (cavitation media) with 1000 parts per million by weight (wppm) polymer concentration is shown to enhance cavitation intensity by 69% over cavitation media with only water. High speed videography, impulse force, and surface roughness measurements confirm the greater cavitation activity in the 1000 wppm PEO aqueous solution. This demonstrates that suitable modifications can be engineered in the cavitation media to enhance cavitation intensity in ultrasonic cavitation peening. Thus, this thesis presents experimental and numerical investigations leading to superior inner jet nozzle design in co-flow cavitation peening and an experimental investigation of the role of polymer additives for suitable modification of cavitation media to enhance cavitation intensity in ultrasonic cavitation peening.Ph.D

    Digitalization and real-time control to mitigate environmental impacts along rivers: Focus on artificial barriers, hydropower systems and European priorities

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    Hydropower globally represents the main source of renewable energy, and provides several benefits, e.g., water storage and flexibility; on the other hand, it may cause significant impacts on the environment. Hence sustainable hydropower needs to achieve a balance between electricity generation, impacts on ecosystems and benefits on society, supporting the achievement of the Green Deal targets. The implementation of digital, information, communication and control (DICC) technologies is emerging as an effective strategy to support such a trade-off, especially in the European Union (EU), fostering both the green and the digital transitions. In this study, we show how DICC can foster the environmental integration of hydropower into the Earth spheres, with focus on the hydrosphere (e.g., on water quality and quantity, hydropeaking mitigation, environmental flow control), biosphere (e.g., improvement of riparian vegetation, fish habitat and migration), atmosphere (reduction of methane emissions and evaporation from reservoirs), lithosphere (better sediment management, reduction of seepages), and on the anthroposphere (e.g., reduction of pollution associated to combined sewer overflows, chemicals, plastics and microplastics). With reference to the abovementioned Earth spheres, the main DICC applications, case studies, challenges, Technology Readiness Level (TRL), benefits and limitations, and transversal benefits for energy generation and predictive Operation and Maintenance (O&M), are discussed. The priorities for the European Union are highlighted. Although the paper focuses primarly on hydropower, analogous considerations are valid for any artificial barrier, water reservoir and civil structure which interferes with freshwater systems.Digitalization and real-time control to mitigate environmental impacts along rivers: Focus on artificial barriers, hydropower systems and European prioritiespublishedVersio

    The impact of cover crops on carbon cycling as part of an agricultural rotation

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    Sustainably providing food for a growing population whilst maintaining a healthy soil is currently a large challenge for agriculture. Integral to the provision of a healthy soil is the input of carbon. The government’s 25 Year Environment Plan (2018) includes measures to increase carbon in soil, and cover crops have been put forward as a sustainable solution for agricultural. A cover crop is a crop grown in between cash crops, either over winter or as part of a rotation. Typically, cover crops have been used as a green manure, allowing the plant to be turned into the soil to decompose, but their impact on the flow of carbon is not well understood, especially when used alongside other farming practices such as weed eradication using herbicides (glyphosate) and use of plant growth promoters such as microbial inoculants. The overarching aim of this research was to understand the impact of cover crops on soil carbon and the soil microbial community. An in-field experiment was carried out over a three year period. A replicated experiment was used to investigate the impact of cover crops, glyphosate, and a commercial inoculant. The soil’s microbial community and organic matter were analysed. Results showed that no treatments alone, or in combination, increased the soil organic matter above the pre-treatment baseline level. However, there was an increased presence of the phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) fungal group of biomarkers. An increase in fungi could lead to an increase of stabilized carbon in soil. Inoculants used together with cover crops had a negative impact on microbial activity, and the yield of above ground biomass. Glyphosate showed an increase of gram- negative bacteria nearly 3 years after it was applied. A pot trial using a solution of plant materials from 7 different plant species dosed into either a clay, or sandy soil, showed significant differences across all soil types and within each soil type. Turnips and mustard showed higher levels of microbes associated with high carbon:nitrogen, including fungal and gram-positive functional groups, whereas clover and phacelia (nitrogen fixing legumes), showed higher levels of gram-negative bacterial groups. A survey on the use of cover crops by farmers, the barriers and difficulties encountered, and how farmers source information about this or any new farming techniques showed that of the farmers surveyed, 94 % of respondents used cover crops and many felt that although it was an additional expense, they were beneficial. The main issues arising were lack of knowledge about which crop species to plant, and the timing of sowing ii and destroying the crop. Information gathering is a combination of word of mouth, agronomists, Farmers Weekly and the internet. Although cover crops did not increase soil organic matter, other benefits were apparent. Further work needs to be carried out to get a better understanding of the long term effect of a mix of agricultural chemical and biological interventions over a harvest year. Specifically, an understanding about microbial activity in the rhizosphere of a standing cover crop, and the effect of the cover crop biomass as it is incorporated into the soil over several harvest. This information could assist farmers in deciding cover crop mixes and timings within the whole farm scheme

    Conceive and Control: Cultural-Legal Narratives of American Privacy and Reproductive Politics

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    Law and literature share a foundation in narrative. The literary turn in legal scholarship recognizes that the law itself is a form of narrative, one that simultaneously reflects socio-cultural norms and creates social and political regulations with a complex matrix of power. Cultural narratives from the 1950s to the mid-1970s pertaining to reproductive politics, domesticity, and national identity both produce and are productive of legal rulings that govern and restrict private acts of sexuality and speech. The Supreme Court used cases concerning sex and reproduction to enumerate, explicate, and complicate the right to privacy, which appears nowhere in the U.S. Constitution or the Bill of Rights yet formed perhaps the most crucial legal issue of the second half of the twentieth century. But with the Court’s continuous “refinement” and clarification of the right to privacy, the Court has demonstrated how privacy is a Lyotardian differend which, in dividing the inside from the outside, dismantles the logic of both through deconstruction of the margin. Law-determining rulings protecting this right demonstrate a logical impossibility: the Court has made privacy a “right” in such a way that the conditions for exercising it are subject to state surveillance. To be a subject of the law is to relinquish privacy, and privacy requires that the individual subject him/herself to the law by placing the right to privacy within the public domain. Rules-governed practices are entangled in ways both inextricable and unresolvable with notions of privacy. Legal narratives of the right to privacy, therefore, provide a genealogy of failed supplementation, consistent with an array of cultural narratives reflected in contemporaneous literature, film, drama, and political discourse. The Supreme Court’s continual “refinements” of privacy expose the tenuousness of the authority upon which it is based, with the female body positioned as the site of contradiction upon which narratives of domesticity, sexuality, and subjectivity are made legible

    In-line quality control for Zero Defect Manufacturing: design, development and uncertainty analysis of vision-based instruments for dimensional measurements at different scales

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    Lo scopo di questo progetto di dottorato industriale finanziato attraverso una borsa di studio della Regione Marche è stato quello di sviluppare ricerca con potenziale impatto su un settore industriale, promuovere il coinvolgimento delle fabbriche e delle imprese locali nella ricerca e innovazione svolta in collaborazione con l'università e produrre ricerca in linea con le esigenze dell'ambiente industriale, non solo a livello regionale. Quindi, attraverso la collaborazione con una torneria locale (Zannini SpA) e una piccola azienda high-tech focalizzata sull'introduzione dell'innovazione meccatronica nel settore della tornitura (Z4Tec srl), e anche grazie a una collaborazione internazionale con l'Università di Anversa, abbiamo progettato e sviluppato nuovi strumenti per il controllo qualità in linea, basati su tecnologie senza contatto, in particolare tecnologie elettro-ottiche. Portando anche l'attenzione sull'importanza di prendere in considerazione l'incertezza, poiché è fondamentale nel processo decisionale basato sui dati che sono alla base di una strategia di Zero Defect Manufacturing. Infatti, la scarsa qualità delle misure può pregiudicare la qualità dei dati. In particolare, questo lavoro presenta due strumenti di misura che sono stati progettati e sviluppati con lo scopo di effettuare controllo qualità in linea di produzione e l’incertezza di misura di ogni strumento è stata analizzata in confronto ad altri strumenti presenti sul mercato. Nella parte finale di questo lavoro si è valutata l’incertezza di un profilometro a triangolazione di linea laser. Pertanto, la ricerca condotta in questa tesi può essere organizzata in due obiettivi principali: lo sviluppo di nuovi sistemi di misura dimensionale basati sulla visione da implementare in linea di produzione e l'analisi dell'incertezza di questi strumenti di misura. Per il primo obiettivo ci siamo concentrati su due tipi di misure dimensionali imposte dall'industria manifatturiera: macroscopiche (misure in mm) e microscopiche (misure in µm). Per le misure macroscopiche l'obiettivo era il controllo in linea della qualità dimensionale di pezzi torniti attraverso la profilometria ottica telecentrica. Il campione da ispezionare è stato posto tra l'illuminatore e l'obiettivo per ottenere la proiezione dell'ombra del campione. Le misure sono state eseguite mediante analisi grafica dell'immagine. Abbiamo discusso le disposizioni meccaniche mirate a ottimizzare le immagini acquisite e i problemi che eventuali disallineamenti meccanici dei componenti potrebbero introdurre nella qualità delle immagini. Per le misure microscopiche abbiamo progettato un sistema di misurazione della rugosità superficiale basato sulla visione retroilluminata, con l'obiettivo di determinare le condizioni ottimali di imaging utilizzando la modulation transfer function e l'uso di una electrically tunable lens. Un campione tornito (un cilindro) è posto di fronte a una telecamera ed è retroilluminato da una sorgente di luce collimata; tale configurazione ottica fornisce l'immagine del bordo del campione. Per testare la sensibilità del sistema di misura è stata utilizzata una serie di campioni di acciaio torniti con diverse rugosità superficiali. Per il secondo obiettivo, le tecniche di valutazione dell'incertezza di misura utilizzate in questo lavoro sono state un'analisi dell'incertezza statistica di tipo A e un'analisi Gage R&R. Nel caso del profilometro telecentrico, l'analisi è stata eseguita in confronto con altri dispositivi presenti sul mercato con un'analisi di tipo A e una Gage R&R. L'incertezza di misura del profilometro si è rivelata sufficiente per ottenere risultati nell'intervallo di tolleranza richiesto. Per il sistema di visione retroilluminato, il confronto dei risultati è stato effettuato con altri strumenti allo stato dell'arte, con un'analisi di Tipo A. Il confronto ha mostrato che le prestazioni dello strumento retroilluminato dipendono dai valori di rugosità superficiale considerati; mentre a valori maggiori di rugosità l'offset aumenta, per valori inferiori di rugosità i risultati sono compatibili con quelli dello strumento di riferimento (a stilo). Infine, sono state valutate la ripetibilità e la riproducibilità di un profilometro a triangolazione di linea laser, attraverso uno studio Gage R&R. Ogni punto di misura è stato ispezionato da tre operatori e l'insieme dei dati è stato elaborato con un'analisi dell'incertezza di Tipo A. Successivamente, uno studio Gage R&R ha contribuito a indagare la ripetibilità, la riproducibilità e la variabilità del sistema. Questa analisi ha dimostrato un'incertezza accettabile.The purpose of this industrial PhD project financed through a scholarship from the Regione Marche was to develop research with potential impact on an industrial sector, to promote the involvement of local factories and companies in research and innovation performed jointly with the university and to produce research in line with the needs of the industrial environment, not only at regional level. Hence, through collaborating with a local turning factory (Zannini SpA) and a small high-tech company focused on introducing mechatronic innovation in the turning sector (Z4Tec srl), and also thanks to an international collaboration with the University of Antwerp, we designed and developed new instruments for in-line quality control, based on non-contact technologies, specifically electro-optical technologies. While also bringing attention to the importance of taking uncertainty into consideration, since it is pivotal in data-based decision making which are at the base of a Zero Defect Manufacturing strategy. This means that poor quality of measurements can prejudice the quality of the data. In particular, this work presents two measurement instruments that were designed and developed for the purpose of in-line quality control and the uncertainty of each of the two instruments was evaluated and analyzed in comparison with instruments already present on the market. In the last part of this work, the uncertainty of a hand-held laser-line triangulation profilometer is estimated. Hence, the research conducted in this thesis can be organized in two main objectives: the development of new vision-based dimensional measurement systems to be implemented in production line and the uncertainty analysis of these measurement instruments. For the first objective we focused on two types of dimensional measurements imposed by the manufacturing industry: macroscopic (measuring dimensions in mm) and microscopic (measuring roughness in µm). For macroscopic measurements the target was the in-production dimensional quality control of turned parts through telecentric optical profilometry. The sample to be inspected was placed between illuminator and objective in order to obtain the projection of the shadow of the sample over a white background. Dimensional measurements were then performed by means of image processing over the image obtained. We discussed the mechanical arrangements targeted to optimize images acquired as well as the main issues that eventual mechanical misalignments of components might introduce in the quality of images. For microscopic measurements we designed a backlit vision-based surface roughness measurement system with a focus on smart behaviors such as determining the optimal imaging conditions using the modulation transfer function and the use of an electrically tunable lens. A turned sample (a cylinder) is placed in front of a camera and it is backlit by a collimated source of light; such optical configuration provides the image of the edge of the sample. A set of turned steel samples with different surface roughness was used to test the sensitivity of the measurement system. For the second objective, the measurement uncertainty evaluation techniques used in this work were a Type A statistical uncertainty analysis and a Gage R&R analysis. In the case of the telecentric profilometer, the analysis was performed in comparison with other on-the-market devices with a Type A analysis and a Gage R&R analysis. The measurement uncertainty of the profilometer proved to be sufficient to obtain results within the tolerance interval required. For the backlit vision system, the comparison of the results was made with other state-of-the-art instruments, with a Type A analysis. The comparison showed that the performance of the backlit instrument depends on the values of surface roughness considered; while at larger values of roughness the offset increases, the results are compatible with the ones of the reference instrument (stylus-based) at lower values of roughness. Lastly, the repeatability and reproducibility of a laser-line triangulation profilometer were assessed, through a Gage R&R study. Each measuring point was inspected by three different operators and the data set has been, at first, processed by a Type A uncertainty analysis. Then, a Gage R&R study helped investigate repeatability, reproducibility and the system variability. This analysis showed that the presented laser-line triangulation system has an acceptable uncertainty
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