4,750 research outputs found
Linking design and manufacturing domains via web-based and enterprise integration technologies
The manufacturing industry faces many challenges such as reducing time-to-market and cutting costs. In order to meet these increasing demands, effective methods are need to support the early product development stages by bridging the gap of communicating early design ideas and the evaluation of manufacturing performance. This paper introduces methods of linking design and manufacturing domains using disparate technologies. The combined technologies include knowledge management supporting for product lifecycle management (PLM) systems, enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, aggregate process planning systems, workflow management and data exchange formats. A case study has been used to demonstrate the use of these technologies, illustrated by adding manufacturing knowledge to generate alternative early process plan which are in turn used by an ERP system to obtain and optimise a rough-cut capacity plan
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A novel technique to improve gain in transparent UWB antennas
A novel technique to improve the performance of AgHT-8 transparent polymer antennas is proposed in this paper. A spit-ring resonator is introduced on the radiating patch to enhance gain. The resonator basically concentrates the radiating energy to the central area of the patch thus improving gain. The designed antenna demonstrates good gain while maintaining the original transparency of the material. Such an antenna inscribed on the commercially available AgHT-8 sun shielding film material makes it a viable option for wireless applications like in-house base stations and applications requiring fast data rate transfers which can be mounted on windows and glass panels. © 2011 IEEE.Solutia Inc., St. Louis, Missouri, US
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The effect of the ground plane size and the height on small PIFA
This is the post-print version of the article - Copyright @ ISAP 201
A novel technique and soldering method to improve performance of transparent polymer antennas
This article is archived here with permission from IEEE - Copyright @ 2010 IEEEA novel technique and a non-thermal soldering method to improve the performance of AgHT-8 transparent polymer antennas are proposed in this paper. The proposed technique involves the removal of the coating layer at areas on the CPW ground and feed line where the connectors of the coaxial feed or legs of the SMA connectors will be attached, and applying a coat of silver paint on the exposed areas before cold soldering the coaxial connections or SMA connector legs. The non-thermal or cold soldering using electrically conductive paste enables direct soldering of the co-axial feed points or connector legs which cannot otherwise be done with hot or thermal soldering. This type of connection greatly enhances the performance of the AgHT-8 polymer antennas compared to coaxial feed point connections through hot soldered copper pads glued to the surface of the polymer coating. The proposed technique also gives a stronger connection bond than directly cold soldering the feed points or connectors to the smooth surface of the AgHT-8 material. Furthermore, the copper pad connection technique also introduces additional losses contributed by the adhesive properties of the glue used. This proposed novel technique and soldering method may be extended to enhance antenna performance made from other similar transparent conductive polymers like IT
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A non-thermal soldering technique to improve polymer based antenna performance
Copyright @ 2010 EuMCA non-thermal soldering technique using cold solder or electrically conductive epoxy for connecting SMA connectors to polymer based antennas is proposed in this paper. The proposed technique prevents damage to the polymer due to the solder iron heat and also the loss of efficiency through the use of indirect connections of the coaxial feed via copper pads glued to the antenna. The direct connection of the feed points via SMA connectors on to a transparent antenna designed on AgHT-8 material has been demonstrated. The method can also be applied to solder the coaxial feed points directly to the antenna instead of using copper pads which will introduce additional reflection losses. The technique involves the use of colder soldering instead of hot soldering so as to not damage the polymer based antenna as well as improve the efficiency of the antenna
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The effect of the mutual coupling on small reconfigurable antennas
Copyright @ ISAP 201
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Investigative study on the development of a green UWB antenna
Copyright @ 2010 ISA
A model for the formation of the active region corona driven by magnetic flux emergence
We present the first model that couples the formation of the corona of a
solar active region to a model of the emergence of a sunspot pair. This allows
us to study when, where, and why active region loops form, and how they evolve.
We use a 3D radiation MHD simulation of the emergence of an active region
through the upper convection zone and the photosphere as a lower boundary for a
3D MHD coronal model. The latter accounts for the braiding of the magnetic
fieldlines, which induces currents in the corona heating up the plasma. We
synthesize the coronal emission for a direct comparison to observations.
Starting with a basically field-free atmosphere we follow the filling of the
corona with magnetic field and plasma. Numerous individually identifiable hot
coronal loops form, and reach temperatures well above 1 MK with densities
comparable to observations. The footpoints of these loops are found where small
patches of magnetic flux concentrations move into the sunspots. The loop
formation is triggered by an increase of upwards-directed Poynting flux at
their footpoints in the photosphere. In the synthesized EUV emission these
loops develop within a few minutes. The first EUV loop appears as a thin tube,
then rises and expands significantly in the horizontal direction. Later, the
spatially inhomogeneous heat input leads to a fragmented system of multiple
loops or strands in a growing envelope.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, accepted to publication in A&
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