• Title/Summary/Keyword: phase-lag

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Effect of magnetic field and gravity on thermoelastic fiber-reinforced with memory-dependent derivative

  • Mohamed I.A. Othman;Samia M. Said;Elsayed M. Abd-Elaziz
    • Advances in materials Research
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.101-118
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    • 2023
  • The purpose of this paper is to study the effects of magnetic field and gravitational field on fiber-reinforced thermoelastic medium with memory-dependent derivative. Three-phase-lag model of thermoelasticity (3PHL) is used to study the plane waves in a fiber-reinforced magneto-thermoelastic material with memory-dependent derivative. A gravitating magneto-thermoelastic two-dimensional substrate is influenced by both thermal shock and mechanical loads at the free surface. Analytical expressions of the considered variables are obtained by using Laplace-Fourier transforms technique with the eigenvalue approach technique. A numerical example is considered to illustrate graphically the effects of the magnetic field, gravitational field and two types of mechanical loads(continuous load and impact load).

Influence of variable thermal conductivity on waves propagating through thermo-elastic medium

  • Abo-Dahab, Sayed M.;Jahangir, Adnan;Dar, Adiya
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.82 no.4
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    • pp.459-467
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    • 2022
  • We investigated the influence of variable thermal conductivity on waves propagating through the elastic medium. Infinitesimal deformation results in generation of thermal signal, and is analyzed by using dual phase lag heat (DPL) conduction model. The medium considered is homogenous, isotropic and bounded by thermal shock. The elastic waves propagating through the medium are considered to be harmonic in nature, and expressions for the physical variables are obtained accordingly. Analytically, we obtained the expressions for displacement components, temperature, micro-temperature component and stresses. The theoretical results obtained are computed graphically for the particular medium by using MATLAB.

Thermo-mechanical response of size-dependent piezoelectric materials in thermo-viscoelasticity theory

  • Ezzat, Magdy A.;Al-Muhiameed, Zeid I.A.
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.45 no.4
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    • pp.535-546
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    • 2022
  • The memory response of nonlocal systematical formulation size-dependent coupling of viscoelastic deformation and thermal fields for piezoelectric materials with dual-phase lag heat conduction law is constructed. The method of the matrix exponential, which constitutes the basis of the state-space approach of modern control theory, is applied to the non-dimensional equations. The resulting formulation together with the Laplace transform technique is applied to solve a problem of a semi-infinite piezoelectric rod subjected to a continuous heat flux with constant time rates. The inversion of the Laplace transforms is carried out using a numerical approach. Some comparisons of the impacts of nonlocal parameters and time-delay constants for various forms of kernel functions on thermal spreads and thermo-viscoelastic response are illustrated graphically.

Influence of gravity, locality, and rotation on thermoelastic half-space via dual model

  • Samia M. Said
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.89 no.4
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    • pp.375-381
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    • 2024
  • In this paper, Eringen's nonlocal thermoelasticity is constructed to study wave propagation in a rotating two-temperature thermoelastic half-space. The problem is applied in the context of the dual-phase-lag (Dual) model, coupled theory (CD), and Lord-Shulman (L-S) theory. Using suitable non-dimensional fields, the harmonic wave analysis is used to solve the problem. Comparisons are carried with the numerical values predicted in the absence and presence of the gravity field, a nonlocal parameter as well as rotation. The present study is valuable for the analysis of nonlocal thermoelastic problems under the influence of the gravity field, mechanical force, and rotation.

A novel of rotating nonlocal thermoelastic half-space with temperature-dependent properties and inclined load using the dual model

  • Samia M. Said
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.90 no.5
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    • pp.459-466
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    • 2024
  • Eringen's nonlocal thermoelasticity theory is used to study wave propagations in a rotating two-temperature thermoelastic half-space with temperature-dependent properties. Using suitable non-dimensional variables, the harmonic wave analysis is used to convert the partial differential equations to ordinary differential equations solving the problem. The modulus of elasticity is given as a linear function of the reference temperature. MATLAB software is used for numerical calculations. Comparisons are carried out with the results in the context of the dual-phase lag model for different values of rotation, a nonlocal parameter, an inclined load, and an empirical material constant. The distributions of physical fields showed that the nonlocal parameter, rotation, and inclined load have great effects. When a nonlocal thermoelastic media is swapped out for a thermoelastic one, this approach still holds true.

Control of a Flexible Link with Time Delays

  • Choi, Hyoun-Chul;Hong, Suk-Kyo
    • 제어로봇시스템학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2004.08a
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    • pp.1136-1141
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    • 2004
  • This paper presents a control method for time-delay systems and verifies the performance of the designed control system via real experiments. Specifically, the control method is applied to a flexible-link system with time delays. The method combines time- and frequency-domain controllers: linear quadratic optimal controller (or LQR) and lag compensator. The LQR is used to stabilize the system in optimal fashion, whereas the lag compensator is used to compensate time-delay effects by increasing the delay margin of the system. With this methodology, the maximum allowable time delay can be increased significantly. The proposed method is simple but quite practical for time-delay system control as it is based on the conventional loop-shaping method, which gives practical insights on delay-phase relationship. Simulation and experiment results show that the method presented in this paper is feasible and practical.

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Effects of chlorine and chlorine compounds on morphology and function of Caulobacter cells (Caulobacter의 세포(細胞)의 형태(形態) 및 기능(機能)의 분화(分化)에 대한 염소 및 염소화합물의 영향(影響))

  • Kim, Chi-Kyung;Park, Moon-Kook;Yum, Kon
    • Applied Microscopy
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.23-32
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    • 1982
  • Caulubacter is distinctive in the morphology and replication and ubiquitous in the biosphere, especially in every type of aquatic environment. In water and waste-water treatment processes, chlorine and chlorine compounds have been used as a main disinfectant throughout the world. Therefore, Caulobacter in the waters should be affected by chlorination of the waters. The objective of this study is to determine the effects of the disinfectants on Caulobacter cells and on the developmental processes of the cells. The Caulobacter swarmer cells were disinfected by chlorine at pH 7.0 minutes of the reaction with 2.0 mg/l of infected at pH 10.0. The swarmer cells treated with 2.0 or 4.0 mg/l of chlorine for 15 minutes lost their flagella and were observed by electron microscopy to be damaged on their cell surfaces, discharging some cellular materials. When the chlorinated swarmers and untreated control samples were recultivated in fresh PYE broth medium, the control swarmers multiplicated exponentially after one-hour lag phase, whereas the chlorinated swarmers extended the lag phase to about four hours. During the extended lag phase, the cells were proved by electron microscopy to be grown and be in predivisional step, but no swarmer cell was found. When the stalked cells were chlorinated, almost all the cells were observed to have their stalks broken and some cellular materials discharged. In those samples recultivated, many cells differentiated to possess an abnormally elongated stalk with several crossbands on it. This suggests that the chlorine-shocked Caulobacter cells can develope to abnormal morphology in water environments which they can survive and regrow in.

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Phase Error Variation of Timming Recovery Circuit in Optical Communication (광통신에서 타이밍 복원 회로의 위성 오차 변화)

  • 류흥균;안수길
    • Journal of the Korean Institute of Telematics and Electronics
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    • v.25 no.3
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    • pp.238-242
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    • 1988
  • It is analyzed how performance of phase-locked loop driven by photodetector current in optical receiver will be changed under the condition that Gaussian thermal noise, pattern noise and shot noise are present and the loop has the nonzero detuning frequency. The phase error variance cahnges with the circuit configuration and the produced noise models. The analyzed results are applied to the previously implemented 90.194Mbps optic system whose loop filter is the improved active noninverting 1-st order lag-lead type.

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Cadmium Detoxification Mechanism in Klebsiella aerogenes ATCC 10031 (Klebsiella aerogenes ATCC 10031의 카드뮴 해독기작)

  • 이기성;유순애;곽인영;박영식;최영길
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.28 no.2
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    • pp.134-144
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    • 1990
  • In order to examine that what kind of system correlated with cadmium detoxification mechanism in Klebsiella aerogenes ATCC 10031, we tried to investigate the effect of phosphate upon the detoxification and also elucidate whether the cadmium phosphate and/or polymeric Cd-Pi complex is formed actually in cell or not. As the results, it was shown that growing pattern had long lag adaptive phase of 12 hr to 24 hr, at the concentrations of 0.02 mM and 0.08 mM cadmium, respectively. Cadmium was accumulated more highly in the fraction of cell wall and membrane than in those of cytoplasm. In case of phosphate starving cells added cadmium, inorganic polyphosphate system was primarily correlated with Cd-detoxification during the lag phase for the accommodation to cadmium, on the other hand, Cd:Sulfide complex system secondarily correlated it during the stationary phase. These results implied that polyphosphate system and Cd:sulfide complex system, these two systems were operated compensatively each other. Considering the results obsdrved with EM and examined tha changes of sulfide and polyphosphate amount, it was reflected that Cd:S complex was located at the cell surface. In the results of $in-vivo^{31}$P NMR spectra in the cells with cadmium pressure, several phosphate signals arose newly from the polyphosphate region with moving chemical shift of it. This phinomenon strongly implied the actual existence of Dd:Pi comples and /or Cd:poly-P complex in the cell and also the cellular compartmentalization of cadmium detoxifying mechanism.

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