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Design For Reduction Of Noise Produced By Natural Gas Regulator, Britany L. Chamberlain
Design For Reduction Of Noise Produced By Natural Gas Regulator, Britany L. Chamberlain
Undergraduate Honors Capstone Projects
This document describes the design of a multi-stage restrictive orifice device (MSRO) that serves to reduce the noise produced by a regulator valve. The scope of this document explains the determination of the proper design through the development of analytical models, the design of a test fixture to obtain empirical data, and the corroboration of the models with empirical data to obtain a working solution.
Repeated Impressions, Shasta Krueger
Repeated Impressions, Shasta Krueger
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
MFA Shasta Krueger Creative Project
Negotiated Settlement And The Durability Of Peace: Agreement Design, Implementation, And Mediated Civil Wars, Chong Chen
Negotiated Settlement And The Durability Of Peace: Agreement Design, Implementation, And Mediated Civil Wars, Chong Chen
All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023
Since the end of the Cold War, outright military victories in civil wars have been rare. As a result, the number of peace agreements designed to end civil wars in the post-Cold War era has increased exponentially compared to the entire Cold War period. However, according to some statistics, about a third of those peace agreements failed to secure postwar peace. These failures to get warring parties to live up to their peace agreements not only restarted armed conflict, but they also escalated the violence. Therefore, this project is aimed to explore why some civil war settlements break down within …
Design Of Reliable And Secure Network-On-Chip Architectures, Dean Michael B Ancajas
Design Of Reliable And Secure Network-On-Chip Architectures, Dean Michael B Ancajas
All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023
The trend towards massive parallel computing has necessitated the need for an On-Chip communication framework that can scale well with the increasing number of cores. At the same time, technology scaling has made transistors susceptible to a multitude of reliability issues. This dissertation demonstrates design techniques that address both reliability and security issues facing modern NoC architectures. The reliability and security problem is tackled at different abstraction levels using a series of schemes that combine information from the architecture-level as well as hardware-level in order to combat aging effects and meet secure design stipulations while maintaining modest power-performance overheads.