1,818 research outputs found
LIPIcs, Volume 251, ITCS 2023, Complete Volume
LIPIcs, Volume 251, ITCS 2023, Complete Volum
Proceedings of SIRM 2023 - The 15th European Conference on Rotordynamics
It was our great honor and pleasure to host the SIRM Conference after 2003 and 2011 for the third time in Darmstadt. Rotordynamics covers a huge variety of different applications and challenges which are all in the scope of this conference. The conference was opened with a keynote lecture given by Rainer Nordmann, one of the three founders of SIRM “Schwingungen in rotierenden Maschinen”. In total 53 papers passed our strict review process and were presented. This impressively shows that rotordynamics is relevant as ever. These contributions cover a very wide spectrum of session topics: fluid bearings and seals; air foil bearings; magnetic bearings; rotor blade interaction; rotor fluid interactions; unbalance and balancing; vibrations in turbomachines; vibration control; instability; electrical machines; monitoring, identification and diagnosis; advanced numerical tools and nonlinearities as well as general rotordynamics. The international character of the conference has been significantly enhanced by the Scientific Board since the 14th SIRM resulting on one hand in an expanded Scientific Committee which meanwhile consists of 31 members from 13 different European countries and on the other hand in the new name “European Conference on Rotordynamics”. This new international profile has also been
emphasized by participants of the 15th SIRM coming from 17 different countries out of three continents. We experienced a vital discussion and dialogue between industry and academia at the conference where roughly one third of the papers were presented by industry and two thirds by academia being an excellent basis to follow a bidirectional transfer what we call xchange at Technical University of Darmstadt. At this point we also want to give our special thanks to the eleven industry sponsors for their great support of the conference. On behalf of the Darmstadt Local Committee I welcome you to read the papers of the 15th SIRM giving you further insight into the topics and presentations
Beam scanning by liquid-crystal biasing in a modified SIW structure
A fixed-frequency beam-scanning 1D antenna based on Liquid Crystals (LCs) is designed for application in 2D scanning with lateral alignment. The 2D array environment imposes full decoupling of adjacent 1D antennas, which often conflicts with the LC requirement of DC biasing: the proposed design accommodates both. The LC medium is placed inside a Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) modified to work as a Groove Gap Waveguide, with radiating slots etched on the upper broad wall, that radiates as a Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA). This allows effective application of the DC bias voltage needed for tuning the LCs. At the same time, the RF field remains laterally confined, enabling the possibility to lay several antennas in parallel and achieve 2D beam scanning. The design is validated by simulation employing the actual properties of a commercial LC medium
University of Windsor Graduate Calendar 2023 Spring
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/universitywindsorgraduatecalendars/1027/thumbnail.jp
BDS GNSS for Earth Observation
For millennia, human communities have wondered about the possibility of observing
phenomena in their surroundings, and in particular those affecting the Earth on which they live.
More generally, it can be conceptually defined as Earth observation (EO) and is the collection of
information about the biological, chemical and physical systems of planet Earth. It can be undertaken
through sensors in direct contact with the ground or airborne platforms (such as weather balloons and
stations) or remote-sensing technologies. However, the definition of EO has only become significant
in the last 50 years, since it has been possible to send artificial satellites out of Earth’s orbit.
Referring strictly to civil applications, satellites of this type were initially designed to provide
satellite images; later, their purpose expanded to include the study of information on land
characteristics, growing vegetation, crops, and environmental pollution. The data collected are used
for several purposes, including the identification of natural resources and the production of accurate
cartography. Satellite observations can cover the land, the atmosphere, and the oceans.
Remote-sensing satellites may be equipped with passive instrumentation such as infrared or
cameras for imaging the visible or active instrumentation such as radar. Generally, such satellites are
non-geostationary satellites, i.e., they move at a certain speed along orbits inclined with respect to the
Earth’s equatorial plane, often in polar orbit, at low or medium altitude, Low Earth Orbit (LEO) and
Medium Earth Orbit (MEO), thus covering the entire Earth’s surface in a certain scan time (properly
called ’temporal resolution’), i.e., in a certain number of orbits around the Earth.
The first remote-sensing satellites were the American NASA/USGS Landsat Program;
subsequently, the European: ENVISAT (ENVironmental SATellite), ERS (European Remote-Sensing
satellite), RapidEye, the French SPOT (Satellite Pour l’Observation de laTerre), and the Canadian
RADARSAT satellites were launched. The IKONOS, QuickBird, and GeoEye-1 satellites were
dedicated to cartography. The WorldView-1 and WorldView-2 satellites and the COSMO-SkyMed
system are more recent. The latest generation are the low payloads called Small Satellites, e.g., the
Chinese BuFeng-1 and Fengyun-3 series.
Also, Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSSs) have captured the attention of researchers
worldwide for a multitude of Earth monitoring and exploration applications. On the other hand,
over the past 40 years, GNSSs have become an essential part of many human activities. As is widely
noted, there are currently four fully operational GNSSs; two of these were developed for military
purposes (American NAVstar GPS and Russian GLONASS), whilst two others were developed for
civil purposes such as the Chinese BeiDou satellite navigation system (BDS) and the European
Galileo. In addition, many other regional GNSSs, such as the South Korean Regional Positioning
System (KPS), the Japanese quasi-zenital satellite system (QZSS), and the Indian Regional Navigation
Satellite System (IRNSS/NavIC), will become available in the next few years, which will have
enormous potential for scientific applications and geomatics professionals.
In addition to their traditional role of providing global positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT)
information, GNSS navigation signals are now being used in new and innovative ways. Across the
globe, new fields of scientific study are opening up to examine how signals can provide information
about the characteristics of the atmosphere and even the surfaces from which they are reflected before
being collected by a receiver.
EO researchers monitor global environmental systems using in situ and remote monitoring tools.
Their findings provide tools to support decision makers in various areas of interest, from security
to the natural environment. GNSS signals are considered an important new source of information
because they are a free, real-time, and globally available resource for the EO community
Ultra-Wideband Trained Artificial Neural Networks for Bluetooth Proximity Detection in Small Crowded Areas
Estimating the distance between indoor users is increasingly important in unexpected ways. One specific example is the need for electronic contact tracing demonstrated during the recent global pandemic. Smartphones are now routinely equipped with Bluetooth Low Energy radios, among other sensors, and these can be used for proximity detection based on received signal strength that is subject to errors due to poor modelling of the indoor propagation environment. Some high-end smartphones have now also been equipped with ultra-wideband ranging radios that provide a much more precise range measurement. This thesis demonstrates the concept of using a limited number of UWB-equipped smartphones to gather data to train Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) to improve short-range distance estimation among Bluetooth users. The trained RSSI to range model can be used for proximity determination by other Bluetooth users in small, crowded areas. Two ANN algorithms were trained using RSSI measurements from three BLE advertising channels and UWB range as ground truth and training data. The initial training and testing were conducted in a semi-empty office laboratory with 2130 observations. The RF model used 1917 samples (90% of data) for training and 213 samples (10%) for testing, while the CNN method used 1704 samples (80% of data) for training and 426 samples (20%) for evaluation. The trained neural network models were tested in two other office environments under different user conditions. The results indicate that the ANN models can estimate proximity in a new environment without further training with a mean error of less than 1.2 metres, within a range of up to 6 metres at line-of-sight (LOS). In highly constrained non-line-of-sight (NLOS) areas in the first office room, the proposed models provided proximity accuracy better than 2.9 metres. Furthermore, during testing across two adjacent office environments, each containing a single BLE device with complex furniture arrangements, the ANN models showed the proximity between the BLE devices with an error of less than 2-3 metres
Recommended from our members
Operational modal analysis and prediction of remaining useful life for rotating machinery
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University LondonThe significance of rotating machinery spans areas from household items to vital industry sectors, such as aerospace, automotive, railway, sea transport, resource extraction, and manufacturing. Hence, our technologised society depends on efficient and reliable operation of rotating machinery. To contribute to this aim, this thesis leverages measurable quantities during its operation for structural-mechanical evaluation employing Operational Modal Analysis (OMA) and the prediction of Remaining Useful Life (RUL). Modal parameters determined by OMA are central for the design, test, and validation of rotating machinery. This thesis introduces the first open parametric simulation dataset of rotating machinery during an acceleration run. As there is a lack of similar open datasets suitable for OMA, it lays a foundation for improved reproducibility and comparability of future research. Based on this, the Averaged Order-Based Modal Analysis (AOBMA) method is developed. The novel addition of scaling and weighted averaging of individual machine orders in AOBMA alleviates the analysis effort of the existing Order-Based Modal Analysis (OBMA) method by providing a unified set of modal parameters with higher accuracy. As such, AOBMA showed a lower mean absolute relative error of 0.03 for damping ratio estimations across compared modes while OBMA provided an error value of 0.32 depending on the processed order. At excitation with high harmonic contributions, AOBMA also resulted in the highest number of accurately identified modes among the compared methods. At a harmonic ratio of 0.8, for example, AOBMA identified an average of 11.9 modes per estimation, while OBMA and baseline OMA followed with 9.5 and 9 modes, respectively. Moreover, it is the first study, which systematically evaluates the impact of excitation conditions on the compared methods and finds an advantage of OBMA and AOBMA over traditional OMA regarding mode shape estimation accuracy. While OMA can be used to evaluate significant structural changes, Machine Learning (ML) methods have seen substantially greater success in condition monitoring, including RUL prediction. However, as these methods often require large amounts of time and cost-
intensive training data, a novel data-efficient RUL prediction methodology is introduced, taking advantage of distinct healthy and faulty condition data. When the number of training sequences from an open dataset is reduced to 5%, an average prediction Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) of 24.9 operation cycles is achieved, outperforming the baseline method with an RMSE of 28.1. Motivated by environmental considerations, the impact of data reduction on the training duration of several method variants is quantified. When the full training set is
utilised, the most resource-saving variant of the proposed approach achieves an average training duration of 8.9% compared to the baseline method
- …