1,358 research outputs found

    Sustainable Clean Coal Technology with Power and Methanol Production

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    The coal-based chemical process is still indispensable in modern society due to the worldwide vast reserves and popular price of coal. Power generation and chemical production from coal still play an important role in the global chemical industrial market. Electricity generation and chemical production from coal is still the trend as long as the coal is plentiful and inexpensive. Modern chemical industry aims at sustainability and hence the development of clean coal technologies is critical. Coal-based methanol economy, as an attractive liquid transportation fuel as well as an essential intermediate chemical feedstock, can fill a possible gap between declining fossil fuel supplies and movement toward the hydrogen economy. The integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) power plant with methanol production is simulated by Aspen Plus. Within the plant, firstly, the coal is fed to a pyrolysis reactor, and the volatile matter is fed into an oxy-combustion reactor, while the char is gasified in an entrained flow gasifier. The heat is used to produce electricity, while the syngas is converted to methanol. The integral plant consisting of an air separation unit, oxy-combustion of coal, gasification of char, electric power production, carbon capture and conversion to methanol has been designed and optimized by using the Aspen Plus package. The optimization includes the design specification, process heat integration using energy analyzer toward a more efficient clean-coal technology with methanol production. Multiple methods including life cycle assessment, sustainability metrics, and multi-criteria decision matrices are applied to analyze the sustainability of a certain clean-coal based IGCC power plant with methanol production. The focus of this study is the kinetic study of a clean coal energy technology with power and methanol production. As an alternative method, chemical looping technology is discussed briefly. Chemical looping technology is a new method utilizing inherent CO2 capture to address the concerns of growing levels of atmospheric CO2. The studied IGCC plant is compared with a conventional IGCC power plant to better understand the feasibility of the technology. A multi-criteria decision matrix consisting of economic indicators as well as the sustainability metrics shows that methanol and steam productions besides the power production may improve the overall feasibility of clean coal technology. The goal of this work aims at developing the use of abundant resources of coal energy in the following aspects: energy security, reduction of Greenhouse Gas emission, co-production and kinetics study in coal-based chemical processes and sustainability analysis. Advisor: YaĹźar Demire

    DHC: Dual-debiased Heterogeneous Co-training Framework for Class-imbalanced Semi-supervised Medical Image Segmentation

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    The volume-wise labeling of 3D medical images is expertise-demanded and time-consuming; hence semi-supervised learning (SSL) is highly desirable for training with limited labeled data. Imbalanced class distribution is a severe problem that bottlenecks the real-world application of these methods but was not addressed much. Aiming to solve this issue, we present a novel Dual-debiased Heterogeneous Co-training (DHC) framework for semi-supervised 3D medical image segmentation. Specifically, we propose two loss weighting strategies, namely Distribution-aware Debiased Weighting (DistDW) and Difficulty-aware Debiased Weighting (DiffDW), which leverage the pseudo labels dynamically to guide the model to solve data and learning biases. The framework improves significantly by co-training these two diverse and accurate sub-models. We also introduce more representative benchmarks for class-imbalanced semi-supervised medical image segmentation, which can fully demonstrate the efficacy of the class-imbalance designs. Experiments show that our proposed framework brings significant improvements by using pseudo labels for debiasing and alleviating the class imbalance problem. More importantly, our method outperforms the state-of-the-art SSL methods, demonstrating the potential of our framework for the more challenging SSL setting. Code and models are available at: https://github.com/xmed-lab/DHC.Comment: Accepted at MICCAI202

    A Biologically Motivated Software Retina for Robotic Sensors Based on Smartphone Technology

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    A key issue in designing robotics systems is the cost of an integrated camera sensor that meets the bandwidth/processing requirement for many advanced robotics applications, especially lightweight robotics applications, such as visual surveillance or SLAM in autonomous aerial vehicles. There is currently much work going on to adapt smartphones to provide complete robot vision systems, as the phone is so exquisitely integrated having camera(s), inertial sensing, sound I/O and excellent wireless connectivity. Mass market production makes this a very low-cost platform and manufacturers from quadrotor drone suppliers to children’s toys, such as the Meccanoid robot, employ a smartphone to provide a vision system/control system. Accordingly, many research groups are attempting to optimise image analysis, computer vision and machine learning libraries for the smartphone platform. However current approaches to robot vision remain highly demanding for mobile processors such as the ARM, and while a number of algorithms have been developed, these are very stripped down, i.e. highly compromised in function or performance For example, the semi-dense visual odometry implementation of [1] operates on images of only 320x240pixels. In our research we have been developing biologically motivated foveated vision algorithms, potentially some 100 times more efficient than their conventional counterparts, based on a model of the mammalian retina we have developed. Vision systems based on the foveated architectures found in mammals have the potential to reduce bandwidth and processing requirements by about x100 - it has been estimated that our brains would weigh ~60Kg if we were to process all our visual input at uniform high resolution. We have reported a foveated visual architecture that implements a functional model of the retina-visual cortex to produce feature vectors that can be matched/classified using conventional methods, or indeed could be adapted to employ Deep Convolutional Neural Nets for the classification/interpretation stage, [2,3,4]. We are now at the early stages of investigating how best to port our foveated architecture onto a smartphone platform. To achieve the required levels of performance we propose to optimise our retina model to the ARM processors utilised in smartphones, in conjunction with their integrated GPUs, to provide a foveated smart vision system on a smartphone. Our current goal is to have a foveated system running in real-time to serve as a front-end robot sensor for tasks such as general purpose object recognition and reliable dense SLAM using a commercial off-the-shelf smartphone which communicates with conventional hardware performing back-end visual classification/interpretation. We believe that, as in Nature, space-variance is the key to achieving the necessary data reduction to be able to implement the complete visual processing chain on the smartphone itself

    A Biologically Motivated Software Retina for Robotic Sensors for ARM-Based Mobile Platform Technology

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    A key issue in designing robotics systems is the cost of an integrated camera sensor that meets the bandwidth/processing requirement for many advanced robotics applications, especially lightweight robotics applications, such as visual surveillance or SLAM in autonomous aerial vehicles. There is currently much work going on to adapt smartphones to provide complete robot vision systems, as the smartphone is so exquisitely integrated by having camera(s), inertial sensing, sound I/O and excellent wireless connectivity. Mass market production makes this a very low-cost platform and manufacturers from quadrotor drone suppliers to children’s toys, such as the Meccanoid robot [5], employ a smartphone to provide a vision system/control system [7,8]. Accordingly, many research groups are attempting to optimise image analysis, computer vision and machine learning libraries for the smartphone platform. However current approaches to robot vision remain highly demanding for mobile processors such as the ARM, and while a number of algorithms have been developed, these are very stripped down, i.e. highly compromised in function or performance. For example, the semi-dense visual odometry implementation of [1] operates on images of only 320x240pixels. In our research we have been developing biologically motivated foveated vision algorithms based on a model of the mammalian retina [2], potentially 100 times more efficient than their conventional counterparts. Accordingly, vision systems based on the foveated architectures found in mammals have also the potential to reduce bandwidth and processing requirements by about x100 - it has been estimated that our brains would weigh ~60Kg if we were to process all our visual input at uniform high resolution. We have reported a foveated visual architecture [2,3,4] that implements a functional model of the retina-visual cortex to produce feature vectors that can be matched/classified using conventional methods, or indeed could be adapted to employ Deep Convolutional Neural Nets for the classification/interpretation stage. Given the above processing/bandwidth limitations, a viable way forward would be to perform off-line learning and implement the forward recognition path on the mobile platform, returning simple object labels, or sparse hierarchical feature symbols, and gaze control commands to the host robot vision system and controller. We are now at the early stages of investigating how best to port our foveated architecture onto an ARM-based smartphone platform. To achieve the required levels of performance we propose to port and optimise our retina model to the mobile ARM processor architecture in conjunction with their integrated GPUs. We will then be in the position to provide a foveated smart vision system on a smartphone with the advantage of processing speed gains and bandwidth optimisations. Our approach will be to develop efficient parallelising compilers and perhaps propose new processor architectural features to support this approach to computer vision, e.g. efficient processing of hexagonally sampled foveated images. Our current goal is to have a foveated system running in real-time on at least a 1080p input video stream to serve as a front-end robot sensor for tasks such as general purpose object recognition and reliable dense SLAM using a commercial off-the-shelf smartphone. Initially this system would communicate a symbol stream to conventional hardware performing back-end visual classification/interpretation, although simple object detection and recognition tasks should be possible on-board the device. We propose that, as in Nature, foveated vision is the key to achieving the necessary data reduction to be able to implement complete visual recognition and learning processes on the smartphone itself

    Global existence of suitable weak solutions to the 3D chemotaxis-Navier-Stokes equations

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    In 2004, Dombrowski et al. showed that suspensions of aerobic bacteria often develop flows from the interplay of chemotaxis and buoyancy, which is described as the chemotaxis-Navier-Stokes model, and they observed self-concentration occurs as a turbulence by exhibiting transient, reconstituting, high-speed jets, which entrains nearby fluid to produce paired, oppositely signed vortices. In order to investigate the properties of these vortices (singular points), one approach is to follow the partial regularity theory of Caffarelli-Kohn-Nirenberg to study the singularity properties of suitable weak solutions. In this paper, we established the existence of suitable weak solution for the three dimensional chemotaxis-Navier-Stokes equations, where the main difficulty is to establish appropriate local energy inequalities

    Independent Asymmetric Embedding for Cascade Prediction on Social Networks

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    The prediction for information diffusion on social networks has great practical significance in marketing and public opinion control. Cascade prediction aims to predict the individuals who will potentially repost the message on the social network. One kind of methods either exploit demographical, structural, and temporal features for prediction, or explicitly rely on particular information diffusion models. The other kind of models are fully data-driven and do not require a global network structure. Thus massive diffusion prediction models based on network embedding are proposed. These models embed the users into the latent space using their cascade information, but are lack of consideration for the intervene among users when embedding. In this paper, we propose an independent asymmetric embedding method to learn social embedding for cascade prediction. Different from existing methods, our method embeds each individual into one latent influence space and multiple latent susceptibility spaces. Furthermore, our method captures the co-occurrence regulation of user combination in cascades to improve the calculating effectiveness. The results of extensive experiments conducted on real-world datasets verify both the predictive accuracy and cost-effectiveness of our approach
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