35,149 research outputs found
Sustainability best practice in PPP: Case study of a hospital project in the UK
Globally, sustainable development has been given high priority for the Government agenda in order to achieve a balance of social, economic and environmental factors. The UK government realise the importance and criticality of sustainable development and they intend to use the public procurement power to demand more sustainable public building development to improve energy efficiency and reduce carbon emissions. Public Private Partnership (PPP) is an effective procurement tool for the government to deliver the provision of public services. In the UK, the most common PPP form is Private Finance Initiative (PFI). Up until March 2012, a total of 717 PFI projects have been delivered to sustain social and economic development in the UK (HM Treasury, 2012). There is potential to use PPP to incorporate the sustainability agenda and support low carbon economic development. However, little research has been conducted to demonstrate the benefits and advantages of the PPP procurement system incorporating sustainable development. This paper aims to demonstrate best practice in sustainable development through PPP (PFI) procurement system in the UK. It initially illustrates the relationship between PPP and sustainable development and then uses a case study of one of the largest PPP hospital projects in the UK, utilising interviews and secondary data to show evidence of how the sustainability issues have been addressed within the procurement process and the advantage and limitations of using the PPP procurement system in delivering sustainable development. The results show best practice across different strands of sustainability through contribution to local employment and the local economy, a high percentage of waste recycling, dust and noise reduction and technical innovations such as green roofs, natural ventilation and a focus on occupant comfort
Vortex-like surface wave and its role in the transient phenomena of meta-material focusing
We show that a slab of meta-material (with )
possesses a vortex-like surface wave with no ability to transport energy, whose
nature is completely different from a localized mode or a standing wave.
Through computations based on a rigorous time-dependent Green's function
approach, we demonstrate that such a mode inevitably generates characteristic
image oscillations in two dimensional focusing with even a monochromatic
source, which were observed in many numerical simulations, but such
oscillations are weak in three dimensional focusing.Comment: To appear in the March 7th issue of Appl. Phys. Let
Convergence of Online Mirror Descent
In this paper we consider online mirror descent (OMD) algorithms, a class of
scalable online learning algorithms exploiting data geometric structures
through mirror maps. Necessary and sufficient conditions are presented in terms
of the step size sequence for the convergence of an OMD
algorithm with respect to the expected Bregman distance induced by the mirror
map. The condition is in the case of positive variances. It is
reduced to in the case of zero variances for
which the linear convergence may be achieved by taking a constant step size
sequence. A sufficient condition on the almost sure convergence is also given.
We establish tight error bounds under mild conditions on the mirror map, the
loss function, and the regularizer. Our results are achieved by some novel
analysis on the one-step progress of the OMD algorithm using smoothness and
strong convexity of the mirror map and the loss function.Comment: Published in Applied and Computational Harmonic Analysis, 202
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