103 research outputs found
RFID: il primo passo verso l'Internet delle cose (RTLS, WSN, NFC)
2008-11-27Sardegna Ricerche, Edificio 2, Località Piscinamanna 09010 Pula (CA) - ItaliaPrima giornata sulle tecnologie RFID in Sardegn
Optimal Alignments for Designing Urban Transport Systems: Application to Seville
The achievement of some of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) from the recent
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development has drawn the attention of many countries towards
urban transport networks. Mathematical modeling constitutes an analytical tool for the formal
description of a transportation system whereby it facilitates the introduction of variables and the
definition of objectives to be optimized. One of the stages of the methodology followed in the
design of urban transit systems starts with the determination of corridors to optimize the population
covered by the system whilst taking into account the mobility patterns of potential users and the
time saved when the public network is used instead of private means of transport. Since the capture
of users occurs at stations, it seems reasonable to consider an extensive and homogeneous set of
candidate sites evaluated according to the parameters considered (such as pedestrian population
captured and destination preferences) and to select subsets of stations so that alignments can take
place. The application of optimization procedures that decide the sequence of nodes composing the
alignment can produce zigzagging corridors, which are less appropriate for the design of a single line.
The main aim of this work is to include a new criterion to avoid the zigzag effect when the alignment
is about to be determined. For this purpose, a curvature concept for polygonal lines is introduced,
and its performance is analyzed when criteria of maximizing coverage and minimizing curvature are
combined in the same design algorithm. The results show the application of the mathematical model
presented for a real case in the city of Seville in Spain.Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad MTM2015-67706-
Alternative Fuels for Combined Cycle Power Plants: An Analysis of Options for a Location in India
The Sustainable Development Goals 2030 Agenda of United Nations raises the need of
clean and a ordable energy. In the pathway for more e cient and environmentally friendly solutions,
new alternative power technologies and energy sources are developed. Among these, the use of
syngas fuels for electricity generation can be a viable alternative in areas with high biomass or coal
availability. This paper presents the energy, environmental and economic analyses of a modern
combined cycle plant with the aim to evaluate the potential for a combined power plant running with
alternative fuels. The goal is to identify the optimal design in terms of operating conditions and its
environmental impact. Two possible configurations are investigated in the power plant presented:
with the possibility to export or not export steam. An economic analysis is proposed to assess the
plant feasibility. The e ect of the di erent components in its performance is assessed. The impact of
using four di erent syngases as fuel is evaluated and compared with the natural gas fuelled power
cycle. The results show that a better e ciency is obtained for the syngas 1 (up to 54%), in respect to
the others. Concerning pollutant emissions, the syngas with a GHG impact and lower carbon dioxide
(CO2) percentage is syngas 2
Experimental techniques and numerical models to detect pollutant emission in the transport sector
25th International Conference on Urban Transport and the Environment, Urban Transport 2019; Aveiro; Portugal; 25 June 2019 through 27 June 2019; Code 155807In recent years, the growth of fossil fuel use and greenhouse gases emissions (GHGs) has been
promoted by the population increase and development of the industry sector. Due to the increasing
attention towards the effects of climate changes on quality of life, recent researches on pollutant
formation processes have been developed in different sectors, especially in transportation. The last
emission standards on pollutants impose limits on the dimensions and on the particle number of the
particulate matter emissions, because of the highly dangerous effect on human health. To fight high
concentrations of particulate matter (PM) emissions, a wide number of studies are addressed towards
the definition of the most important parameters in effective production of particulate matter,
especially in spark ignition engines. Physical processes such as mixture formation, engine operating
parameters and fuel chemical properties strongly affect the soot formation in gasoline engines. The
heat transfer process between the piston hot surface and the fuel gasoline during the post-injection
phase is a key aspect of soot emissions for an engine. This paper is devoted to analyzing
the fundamental parameters that are responsible for pollutant formation in the transport sector and the
actual experimental and numerical techniques used to predict the environmental impact of engines
Serious Games for Mobile Devices: the InTouch Project Case Study
The paper presents the InTouch project and discusses design principles, implementation and evaluation of serious mobile games for the development of soft skills. 30 serious games for mobile devices were produced to be tested and evaluated during Learning Labs participated by SMEs professionals operating in different business sectors from seven European countries. The games describe situational learning cases related to 10 non routine skills, and use different types of interaction. Evaluation results are described, showing an overall positive impact deriving from the choice of the serious game approach and the use of mobile devices. When analyzing the role of different dimensions of the games, the most relevant elements influencing players' satisfaction and their willingness to play again were found to be the levels of fun and difficulty associated with the games, the interest, the sense of reality and the adequacy of duration of the games
Design and evaluation of SIMpliLife, an NFC platform to ease day-to-day actions of people’s life
In this paper the authors describe the design, prototyping and evaluation of SIMpliLife, a framework for mobile phones with the aim of making people’s life easier, providing day-to-day services such as payment, ticketing and information retrieval by means of NFC (Near Field Communication) technology. It was developed via the collaboration between two research labs of Sapienza University of Rome: the RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) Lab and the Usability and Accessibility Lab (LUA), both belonging to CATTID (Centre for Applications of Teleservices and of Technologies for Innovation in Digital world) research centre. Technically, SIMpliLife is a SIM-based platform for NFC mobile phones that interfaces several applications able to manage the abovementioned services. The high-level User Interface has been developed by means of Smart Card Web Server (SCWS) technology, thus providing enhanced user experience if compared to traditional SIM-based implementations based on SIM Toolkit
Over-Ocean Validation of the Global Convective Diagnostic
The global convective diagnostic (GCD) is a bispectral (infrared and water vapor), day–night scheme for operationally mapping deep convection by means of geostationary satellite images. This article describes a test of GCD performance over tropical and subtropical waters near North America. The test consists of six cases, each involving a convective cloud complex. A seventh case treats convection over land. For each case, a map of deep convection was constructed from image pairs from Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-12 (GOES-12). Case by case and for all maritime cases together, the GCD map was compared with a convective parameter derived from the radar on the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), a polar-orbiting satellite. In general, each GCD map showed a bloblike feature. In each case, the radar convective pixels typically fell within the GCD blob. However, (except for the land case) the GCD predicted far too many convective pixels. In the maritime cases overprediction was reduced (without correspondingly impairing other measures of performance) by lowering the nominal GCD threshold. With this adjustment in place, for the six maritime cases taken individually, the GCD tended to yield more consistent results than did a monospectral (infrared) convective scheme. With the cases combined, at the lower threshold the GCD performed somewhat better than one of the more stable versions of the infrared scheme. Comparison with lightning events (also observed by TRMM) suggests the possibility of future improvement to the GCD through the incorporation of geostationary satellite observations of lightning
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