19 research outputs found
Development of an impact- and solvent-resistant thermoplastic composite matrix, phase 3
The polyimide from BTDA 1,6-hexanediamine and m-phenylenediamine was selected from a prior study for the present study. Methods to prepare prepreg which would provide low void composites at low molding pressures from the thermoplastic polyimide were studied. Cresol solutions of the polyimide were applied to a balanced weave carbon fabric and the cresol removed prior to composite molding. Low void composites were prepared from smoothed prepregs at high pressures (34.5 MPa) and temperatures as low as 260 C. Lower molding pressures lead to higher void composites. Need for a lower melt viscosity in the neat resin is suggested as a requirement to achieve low void composites at low pressures. Some mechanical properties are included
Development of an impact- and solvent-resistant thermoplastic composite matrix
Synthesis, moldability and chloroform, acetone and tricresyl phosphate resistance of 16 polymer compositions are described. These aliphatic heterocyclic polymers include polyimides, polybenzimidazoles, and N-arylenepolybenzimidazoles. A solution condensation (cresol) method to prepare imidized aliphaic polyimides is described. Two polyimides and one polybenzimidazole demonstrate no crazing or cracking during 500 hr exposure to the cited solvents under stress. Modification of one aliphatic polyimide with several aromatic amines suggests that m-phenylenediamine is singular in its behavior to improve the chloroform resistance of that class of polyimides
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Robust stabilisation of multivariable systems: A super-optimisation approach
The work aims to derive extended robust stability results for the case of unstructured uncertainty models of multivariable systems. More specifically, throughout the thesis, additive and coprime unstructured perturbation models are considered. Refined robust stabilisation problems of MIMO systems are defined and maximally robust controllers are synthesised in a state-space form.
Unstructured perturbations which destabilise the feedback system for every optimal (maximally robust) controller are identified on the boundary of the optimal ball, i.e. the set of all admissible perturbations with norm equal to the maximum robust stability radius. Boundary perturbations are termed "uniformly destabilising" if they destabilise the closed-loop system for every optimal controller and it is shown that they all share a common characteristic, i.e. a projection of magnitude equal to the maximal robust stability radius, along a fixed direction defined by a pair of maximising vectors (scaled Schmidt pair) of a Hankel operator related to the problem. By imposing a directionality constraint it is shown that it is possible to increase the robust stability radius in every other direction by a subset of all optimal controllers.
In order to solve this problem, super-optimisation techniques are developed. Independently a natural extension of Hankel norm approximations, the so-called super optimisation problem is posed and solved explicitly for the case of one-block problems in a state-space setting. It is thus shown that a subset of all maximally robust controllers, namely the class of super-optimal controllers, stabilises all perturbed plants within an extended stability radius 11,*(b), subject to a directionality constraint.
In addition, the work is related to robust stabilisation subject to structured perturbations. The notions of structured robust stabilisation problem, and structured set approximation are defined in connection with the maximised set of permissible perturbations. It is further shown that µ*(J) can serve as an upper bound the structured robust stabilisation problem.
The effect of µ*(J) as an upper bound depends on the compatibility between the two structures, the true structure and the artificial structure of the extended permissible set.
[Look inside the thesis' abstract for an exact version of formulas and equations
Detection potential of the KM3NeT detector for high-energy neutrinos from the Fermi bubbles
A recent analysis of the Fermi Large Area Telescope data provided evidence for a high-intensity emission of high-energy gamma rays with a E 2 spectrum from two large areas, spanning 50 above and below the
Galactic centre (the ‘‘Fermi bubbles’’). A hadronic mechanism was proposed for this gamma-ray emission making the Fermi bubbles promising source candidates of high-energy neutrino emission. In this work Monte Carlo simulations regarding the detectability of high-energy neutrinos from the Fermi bubbles
with the future multi-km3 neutrino telescope KM3NeT in the Mediterranean Sea are presented. Under the hypothesis that the gamma-ray emission is completely due to hadronic processes, the results indicate
that neutrinos from the bubbles could be discovered in about one year of operation, for a neutrino spectrum with a cutoff at 100 TeV and a detector with about 6 km3 of instrumented volume. The effect of a
possible lower cutoff is also considered.Published7–141.8. Osservazioni di geofisica ambientaleJCR Journalrestricte
Expansion cone for the 3-inch PMTs of the KM3NeT optical modules
[EN] Detection of high-energy neutrinos from distant astrophysical sources will open a new window on the Universe. The detection principle exploits the measurement of Cherenkov light emitted by charged particles resulting from neutrino interactions in the matter containing the telescope. A novel multi-PMT digital optical module (DOM) was developed to contain 31 3-inch photomultiplier tubes (PMTs). In order to maximize the detector sensitivity, each PMT will be surrounded by an expansion cone which collects photons that would otherwise miss the photocathode. Results for various angles of incidence with respect to the PMT surface indicate an increase in collection efficiency by 30% on average for angles up to 45 degrees with respect to the perpendicular. Ray-tracing calculations could reproduce the measurements, allowing to estimate an increase in the overall photocathode sensitivity, integrated over all angles of incidence, by 27% (for a single PMT). Prototype DOMs, being built by the KM3NeT consortium, will be equipped with these expansion cones.This work is supported through the EU, FP6 Contract no. 011937, FP7 grant agreement no. 212252, and the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science.Adrián Martínez, S.; Ageron, M.; Aguilar, JA.; Aharonian, F.; Aiello, S.; Albert, A.; Alexandri, M.... (2013). Expansion cone for the 3-inch PMTs of the KM3NeT optical modules. Journal of Instrumentation. 8(3):1-19. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/8/03/T03006S1198
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An explicit state-space approach to the one-block super-optimal distance problem
An explicit state-space approach is presented for solving the super-optimal Nehari-extension problem. The approach is based on the all-pass dilation technique developed in (Jaimoukha and Limebeer in SIAM J Control Optim 31(5):1115–1134, 1993) which offers considerable advantages compared to traditional methods relying on a diagonalisation procedure via a Schmidt pair of the Hankel operator associated with the problem. As a result, all derivations presented in this work rely only on simple linear-algebraic arguments. Further, when the simple structure of the one-block problem is taken into account, this approach leads to a detailed and complete state-space analysis which clearly illustrates the structure of the optimal solution and allows for the removal of all technical assumptions (minimality, multiplicity of largest Hankel singular value, positive-definiteness of the solutions of certain Riccati equations) made in previous work (Halikias et al. in SIAM J Control Optim 31(4):960–982, 1993; Limebeer et al. in Int J Control 50(6):2431–2466, 1989). The advantages of the approach are illustrated with a numerical example. Finally, the paper presents a short survey of super-optimization, the various techniques developed for its solution and some of its applications in the area of modern robust control
NESTOR experiment in 2003
NESTOR is a submarine high-energy muon and neutrino telescope, now under construction for deployment in the Mediterranean close to Greek shores. The first floor of NESTOR with 12 optical modules was deployed successfully in March 2003 together with the electronics system. All systems and the associated environmental monitoring units are operating properly and data are being recorded. The status of the NESTOR project is presented. We outline briefly the construction of the deepwater neutrino telescope, properties of the NESTOR site, infrastructure of the project, the deployment of the first floor, and its current operation. The first data are presented and plans for the next steps are summarized. © 2004 MAIK "Nauka/Interperiodica"
The New Small Wheel electronics
The increase in luminosity, and consequent higher backgrounds, of the LHC
upgrades require improved rejection of fake tracks in the forward region of the
ATLAS Muon Spectrometer. The New Small Wheel upgrade of the Muon Spectrometer
aims to reduce the large background of fake triggers from track segments that
are not originated from the interaction point. The New Small Wheel employs two
detector technologies, the resistive strip Micromegas detectors and the "small"
Thin Gap Chambers, with a total of 2.45 Million electrodes to be sensed. The
two technologies require the design of a complex electronics system given that
it consists of two different detector technologies and is required to provide
both precision readout and a fast trigger. It will operate in a high background
radiation region up to about 20 kHz/cm at the expected HL-LHC luminosity
of =7.5cms. The architecture of the
system is strongly defined by the GBTx data aggregation ASIC, the
newly-introduced FELIX data router and the software based data handler of the
ATLAS detector. The electronics complex of this new detector was designed and
developed in the last ten years and consists of multiple radiation tolerant
Application Specific Integrated Circuits, multiple front-end boards, dense
boards with FPGA's and purpose-built Trigger Processor boards within the ATCA
standard. The New Small Wheel has been installed in 2021 and is undergoing
integration within ATLAS for LHC Run 3. It should operate through the end of
Run 4 (December 2032). In this manuscript, the overall design of the New Small
Wheel electronics is presented.Comment: 61 page