Current Search: Vibration (x)
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Title
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A study of Compressive Sensing for application to Structural Health Monitoring.
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Creator
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Ganesan, Vaahini, Das, Tuhin, Kauffman, Jeffrey, Raghavan, Seetha, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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One of the key areas that have attracted attention in the construction industry today is Structural Health Monitoring, more commonly known as SHM. It is a concept developed to monitor the quality and longevity of various engineering structures. The incorporation of such a system would help to continuously track health of the structure, indicate the occurrence/presence of any damage in real time and give us an idea of the number of useful years for the same. Being a recently conceived idea,...
Show moreOne of the key areas that have attracted attention in the construction industry today is Structural Health Monitoring, more commonly known as SHM. It is a concept developed to monitor the quality and longevity of various engineering structures. The incorporation of such a system would help to continuously track health of the structure, indicate the occurrence/presence of any damage in real time and give us an idea of the number of useful years for the same. Being a recently conceived idea, the state of the art technique in the field is straight forward - populating a given structure with sensors and extracting information from them. In this regard, instrumenting with too many sensors may be inefficient as this could lead to superfluous data that is expensive to capture and process.This research aims to explore an alternate SHM technique that optimizes the data acquisition process by eliminating the amount of redundant data that is sensed and uses this sufficient data to detect and locate the fault present in the structure. Efficient data acquisition requires a mechanism that senses just the necessary amount of data for detection and location of fault. For this reason Compressive Sensing (CS) is explored as a plausible idea. CS claims that signals can be reconstructed from what was previously believed to be incomplete information by Shannon's theorem, taking only a small amount of random and linear non - adaptive measurements. As responses of many physical systems contain a finite basis, CS exploits this feature and determines the sparse solution instead of the traditional least - squares type solution. As a first step, CS is demonstrated by successfully recovering the frequency components of a simple sinusoid. Next, the question of how CS compares with the conventional Fourier transform is analyzed. For this, recovery of temporal frequencies and signal reconstruction is performed using the same number of samples for both the approaches and the errors are compared. On the other hand, the FT error is gradually minimized to match that of CS by increasing the number of regularly placed samples. Once the advantages are established, feasibility of using CS to detect damage in a single degree of freedom system is tested under unforced and forced conditions. In the former scenario, damage is indicated when there is a change in natural frequency of vibration of the system after an impact. In the latter, the system is excited harmonically and damage is detected by a change in amplitude of the system's vibration. As systems in real world applications are predominantly multi-DOF, CS is tested on a 2-DOF system excited with a harmonic forcing. Here again, damage detection is achieved by observing the change in the amplitude of vibration of the system. In order to employ CS for detecting either a change in frequency or amplitude of vibration of a structure subjected to realistic forcing conditions, it would be prudent to explore the reconstruction of a signal which contains multiple frequencies. This is accomplished using CS on a chirp signal.Damage detection is clearly a spatio-temporal problem. Hence it is important to additionally explore the extension of CS to spatial reconstruction. For this reason, mode shape reconstruction of a beam with standard boundary conditions is performed and validated with standard/analytical results from literature. As the final step, the operation deflection shapes (ODS) are reconstructed for a simply supported beam using CS to establish that it is indeed a plausible approach for a less expensive SHM. While experimenting with the idea of spatio-temporal domain, the mode shape as well as the ODS of the given beam are examined under two conditions - undamaged and damaged. Damage in the beam is simulated as a decrease in the stiffness coefficient over a certain number of elements. Although the range of modes to be examined heavily depends on the structure in question, literature suggests that for most practical applications, lower modes are more dominant in indicating damage. For ODS on the other hand, damage is indicated by observing the shift in the recovered spatial frequencies and it is confirmed by the reconstructed response.
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Date Issued
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2014
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Identifier
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CFE0005334, ucf:50520
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0005334
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Title
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Cavity-Coupled Plasmonic Systems for Enhanced Light-Matter Interactions.
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Creator
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Vazquez-Guardado, Abraham, Chanda, Debashis, Christodoulides, Demetrios, Abouraddy, Ayman, Moharam, Jim, Leuenberger, Michael, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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Light-matter interaction is a pivotal effect that involves the synergetic interplay of electromag- netic fields with fundamental particles. In this regard localized surface plasmons (LSP) arise from coherent interaction of the electromagnetic field with the collective oscillation of free electrons in confined sub-wavelength environments. Their most attractive properties are strong field en- hancements at the near field, highly inhomogeneous, peculiar temporal and spatial distributions and...
Show moreLight-matter interaction is a pivotal effect that involves the synergetic interplay of electromag- netic fields with fundamental particles. In this regard localized surface plasmons (LSP) arise from coherent interaction of the electromagnetic field with the collective oscillation of free electrons in confined sub-wavelength environments. Their most attractive properties are strong field en- hancements at the near field, highly inhomogeneous, peculiar temporal and spatial distributions and unique polarization properties. LSP systems also offer a unique playground for fundamental electromagnetic physics where micro-scale systemic properties can be studied in the macro-scale. These important properties and opportunities are brought up in this work where I study hybrid cavity-coupled plasmonic systems in which the weak plasmonic element is far-field coupled with the photonic cavity by properly tuning its phase. In this work I preset the fundamental understand- ing of such a complex systems from the multi-resonance interaction picture along experimental demonstration. Using this platform and its intricate near fields I further demonstrate a novel mech- anism to generate superchiral light: a field polarization property that adds a degree of freedom to light-matter interactions at the nanoscale exploited in advanced sensing applications and surface effect processes. Finally, the detection of non-chiral analytes, such as proteins, neurotransmit- ters or nanoparticles, and more complex chiral analytes, such as proteins and its conformation states, amino acids or chiral molecules at low concentrations is demonstrated in several biosensing applications. The accompanied experiential demonstrations were accomplished using the nanoim- printing technique, which places the cavity-coupled hybrid plasmonic system as a unique platform towards realistic applications not limited by expensive lithographic techniques.
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Date Issued
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2018
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Identifier
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CFE0007418, ucf:52708
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0007418
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Title
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Continuous Oscillation: Vibrational Effects and Acceptable Frequency Ranges of Small Bore Piping in Field Applications.
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Creator
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Kasprzyk, Marie, Kauffman, Jeffrey L., Bai, Yuanli, Gordon, Ali, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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In turbomachinery, a common failure mode is cracking of welds at the equipment and piping connection point. Each incidence of these cracks causes a forced shutdown to perform repairs that cost millions of dollars. This type of failure is predominately seen in small bore piping, which has a nominal diameter of 2 inches and smaller. This thesis addresses the failure prediction analysis of small bore piping, specifically in turbomachinery applications. Performing failure analysis to predict the...
Show moreIn turbomachinery, a common failure mode is cracking of welds at the equipment and piping connection point. Each incidence of these cracks causes a forced shutdown to perform repairs that cost millions of dollars. This type of failure is predominately seen in small bore piping, which has a nominal diameter of 2 inches and smaller. This thesis addresses the failure prediction analysis of small bore piping, specifically in turbomachinery applications. Performing failure analysis to predict the potential cracking of welds will allow for replacement of the piping during a planned shutdown which in the long term saves money due to costs such as expediting materials, overtime pay, and extended downtime. This analysis uses real-world applications of a chemical plant in Louisiana. The piping analyzed was connected to centrifugal compressors. The data used from these pieces of equipment included the material of construction, the piping schedule, lengths, nominal diameter, and running speeds. Based on research that shows welding the connection point with a full penetration weld greatly increases the life expectancy of the connection, this thesis uses full penetration welds in the analysis. The piping was analyzed using the software ANSYS to perform a finite element analysis, specifically examining the stress due to the induced harmonic forces. It is a common fact that having fewer supports on a vibrating pipe induces greater stresses and strains on the weld connections. Supports installed 12" from the equipment only show one to two ranges of frequencies to avoid compared to the longer piping which has four to five ranges of unacceptable frequencies. Tables are developed to relay acceptable frequencies based on observed stresses of the welds in the model.
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Date Issued
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2017
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Identifier
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CFE0006749, ucf:51862
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0006749
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Title
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Measuring and Modeling NMR and Emission Spectra to Gain New Insight into Challenging Organic Compounds.
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Creator
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Powell, Jacob, Harper, James, Campiglia, Andres, Beazley, Melanie, Richardson, David, Blair, Richard, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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The advancement of theoretical methods in recent years has allowed the calculation of highly accurate spectroscopic parameters. Comparing these values to the corresponding experimental data can allow molecular structures to be elucidated. This dissertation details the use of experimental and theoretical data from nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and fluorescence spectroscopy to determine structure. Herein the NMR focus is on measuring (&) modeling chemical shift anisotropy and one-bond carbon...
Show moreThe advancement of theoretical methods in recent years has allowed the calculation of highly accurate spectroscopic parameters. Comparing these values to the corresponding experimental data can allow molecular structures to be elucidated. This dissertation details the use of experimental and theoretical data from nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and fluorescence spectroscopy to determine structure. Herein the NMR focus is on measuring (&) modeling chemical shift anisotropy and one-bond carbon-carbon J-coupling constants (1JCC). The fluorescence analysis models vibrationally resolved fluorescence spectra.Chemical shift anisotropy techniques were used to study two conflicting crystal structures of the n-alkyl fatty acid, lauric acid. These two crystal structures differ only in their COOH conformation. Lattice-including density functional theory (DFT) refinements of each crystal structure failed to match experimental data leading to the proposal of a third crystal structure with a hydrogen disordered COOH moiety. This disorder strengthens the hydrogen bond providing a new rationalization to the long observed non-monotonic melting behavior of fatty acids having even and odd numbers of carbons.The INADEQUATE is a NMR experiment that directly establishes the skeleton of organic compounds by measuring the 1JCC throughout a molecule. The low occurrence of 13C-13C pairs (1 in 10,000) and breaks in connectivity due to the presence of heteroatoms causes challenges to INADEQUATE analysis. Here, the insensitivity problem is overcome using analysis software that automatically processes data and identifies signals, even when they are comparable in magnitude to noise. When combined with DFT 1JCC predictions,configuration and confirmations of the natural products 5-methylmellein and hydroheptelidic acid are elucidated.Vibrationally resolved fluorescence spectra of high molecular weight PAHs can be accurately calculated through time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) methods. Here, the theoretical spectral profiles of certain PAHs are shown to match experimental high- resolution fluorescence spectra acquired at cryogenic temperatures. However, in all cases, theoretical spectra were systematically offset from experimental spectra. To decrease these uncertainties spectra were empirically corrected and an automated scheme employed to match theoretical spectra with all possible experimental spectra. In all cases the theoretical spectra were correctly matched to the experimental spectra.
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Date Issued
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2017
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Identifier
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CFE0006953, ucf:51680
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0006953
Pages