346 research outputs found
Identifying Appliances using NIALM with Minimum Features
Government of India has decided to install smart meters in fourteen states. Smart meters are required to identify home appliances to fulfill various tasks in the smart grid environment. Both intrusive and non-intrusive methods have been suggested for identification. However, intrusive method is not suitable for cost and privacy reasons. On the other hand, techniques using non-intrusive appliance load monitoring (NIALM) are yet to result in meaningful practical implementation. Two major challenges in NIALM research are the choice of features (load signatures of appliances), and the appropriate algorithm. Both have a direct impact on the cost of the smart meter. In this paper, we address the two issues and propose a procedure with only four features and a simple algorithm to identify appliances. Our experimental setup, on the recommended specifications of the internal electrical wiring in Indian residences, used common household appliancesā load signatures of active and reactive powers, harmonic components and their magnitudes. We show that these four features are essential and sufficient for implementation of NIALM with a simple algorithm. We have introduced a new approach of āmulti point sensingā and āgroup controlā rather than the āsingle point sensingā and āindividual controlā, used so far in NIALM techniques.DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.11591/ijece.v4i6.671
Mushroom: Natureās Treasure in Ethiopia
Mushroom is a form of fungus having distinct fruit body produced either above ground or below ground. It can be easily noticed in moist habitat in and around forest, grassland, on tree trunks due to their peculiar appearance. Present communication discusses important habit and habitats, medicinal and culinary uses, status of mushrooms in Ethiopia, and sustainable use for sustenance and food security.Keywords: Mushroom, Fungus, Status, Tigray, Ethiopia
Diode-pumped Nd:YAG eye-safe laser
181-183Nd:YAG laser is pumped with two-dimensional side pumping diode-laser array. The wavelength from the Nd:YAG is 1064 nm, which is not safe for the eye. Here this eye hazardous laser is converted into the eye safe region using a singly resonant extra cavity KTP OPO. The output energy is an eye safe radiation at 1525 nm, with 8 mJ, corresponding to an energy conversion efficiency of 21 % at phase matching angle 210, in a type-II, NCPM x-cut KTP crystal (15 Ć 10 Ć 10 mm) placed in a plane-parallel resonator
Evaluation of the response rate of chemo-radiation and brachytherapy in patients with locally advanced carcinoma cervix in a tertiary care center
Background: Incidence and mortality estimates are used to measure the burden of cancer in a population and survival estimates are ideal for evaluating the outcome of cancer control activities. Survival studies evaluate the quality and quantity of life of a group of patients after diagnosing the disease. The patient survival after the diagnosis of cervical cancer is indirectly influenced by socio-economic factors. The present study was carried out with an aim to evaluate the success rate of chemo-radiation followed by brachytherapy to the patients of locally advanced carcinoma (Ca.) cervix in a tertiary care center.Methods: All cases were staged according to the International Federation of Gynaecologists and Oncologists (FIGO) staging system. To illustrate the observed survival of cancer patients Kaplan-Meier curve was plotted. All the patients, except one, completed chemo-radiation and were retrospectively analyzed for the presence of local residual disease, local recurrence, distant metastases, radiation reactions, disease-free survival, and overall survival.Results: There were 22 patients of Carcinoma cervix reported in the radiation oncology department in the year 2018 and 2019. The overall treatment time ranged from 30 days to 178 days, with a median of 63 days. All the patients had a complete response after the treatment. The median follow-up time for all the patients was 15 months. Three patients had a metastatic recurrence and one patient developed distant metastases as well as local recurrence. Overall survival rate was 100% while the disease-free survival rate was 81.82%.Conclusions: The response to chemo-radiation in the treatment of locally advanced Carcinoma cervix is comparable to historic data and is well tolerated
Climate smart rice innovations to reduce the impact of climate change on the livelihood of value chain actors
Introduction
Rice is a major source of nutrients, largely contributing to the food and nutrition security for millions of
people in Africa although most countries still rely on huge imports to meet local demand. Extreme
temperatures, drought, flooding, and high salinity are climate change related stresses that negatively
affect rice yield and grain quality. Thus, tackling these constraints is a critical action to increasing rice self sufficiency in Cameroon and Africa in general.
Methods
The Africa Rice Center in partnership with the National Agricultural Research and Extension Services of its
28 member States operating within the framework of the Africa-wide Taskforces has developed, tested,
validated, and are deploying breeding, agronomic and post-harvest approaches to mitigate the negative
impacts of climate change on rice yield and quality in Africa.
Results
Breeding approaches have led to the development of drought, cold, submergence, stagnation flood,
salinity, and anaerobic germination tolerant varieties that are also resistant or tolerant to biotic stresses.
These have demonstrated better yields and grain quality under stressed conditions compared to
counterparts lacking those specific traits. The system of rice intensification and alternate wetting and
drying, mid-season drainage, smart-valleys approach for inland development, solar-powered irrigation
system, no-till and rice straw mulching are agronomic approaches developed and these approaches have
demonstrated significant increase in yield and grain quality compared to alternative approached under
climate change stress conditions. Post-harvest approaches have focused on reducing grain breakages,
chalkiness, mycotoxin contamination, insecticide and fungicide use, deforestation and value addition to
broken rice and rice milling byproducts using environmentally friendly methods. Post-harvest innovations
here include using improved rice parboiling fueled by rice husk, solar-powered hermetic storage systems,
processing of fine broken rice into flour for porridges and bakery products and use of rice husk fan-assisted
stoves for household cooking and the cottage processing industry.
Conclusions and recommendations
Although climate change is a serious threat to rice production affecting both yield and quality, African
governments will have to implement policy measures that enhance the scaling and adoption of climate
smart rice innovation developed by AfricaRice to mitigate the impact of climate change if they aspire to
reduce rice imports
- ā¦