Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Engineering Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Analysis Of Threaded Joint Behavior In An Airbag Module Assembly, Rustam Chemat Jan 1996

Analysis Of Threaded Joint Behavior In An Airbag Module Assembly, Rustam Chemat

Retrospective Theses and Dissertations

While some of think of our cars as simply "buckets of bolts", the proper design choices, applications, and assemblies of threaded fasteners/bolted joints play critical roles in automobile safety.

Supplemental Restraint Systems (SRS), more commonly known as airbags, help prevent vehicle occupants from being thrown forward into the dashboard or windshield in the event of a collision. The components comprising the airbag, the inflator, the backing plate, and the cover are connected to each other, and to the vehicle, through a series of threaded fasteners. Proper and timely deployment of the airbag depends largely on the selection of suitable threaded …


Semantic Correlation Of Behavior For The Interoperability Of Heterogeneous Simulations, Christopher James Dean Jan 1996

Semantic Correlation Of Behavior For The Interoperability Of Heterogeneous Simulations, Christopher James Dean

Retrospective Theses and Dissertations

A desirable goal of military simulation training is to provide large scale or joint exercises to train personnel at higher echelons. To help meet this goal, many of the lower echelon combatants must consist of computer generated forces with some of these echelons composed of units from different simulations. The object of the research described is to correlate the behaviors of entities in different simulations so that they can interoperate with one another to support simulation training. Specific source behaviors can be translated to a form in terms of general behaviors which can then be correlated to any desired specific …


The Effects Of Glucose And Fatty Acids On Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Removal Using A Sequencing Batch Reactor, Tarek Zaki Khouri Jan 1996

The Effects Of Glucose And Fatty Acids On Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Removal Using A Sequencing Batch Reactor, Tarek Zaki Khouri

Retrospective Theses and Dissertations

Two anaerobic/aerobic sequencing batch reactors (SBRs) were used to evaluate enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR). The first SBR, designated the Glucose SBR, was run for a period of four months. It received a synthetic wastewater plus glucose as a supplemental carbon source. The second SBR, the Isovaleric SBR, was run for three months. During the first month, isovaleric acid was its supplemental carbon source while for the remaining time period, no supplemental carbon source was added to the feed. Steady-state data from the SBR receiving isovalerate yielded the highest phosphorus (P) removals observed during the study, with a mixed liquor …


Analysis Of Frequency Selective Surfaces With Ferrite Substrates, Youcheng Liu Jan 1996

Analysis Of Frequency Selective Surfaces With Ferrite Substrates, Youcheng Liu

Retrospective Theses and Dissertations

Frequency selective surfaces (FSS) have numerous applications in several microwave and optical systems. Most frequency selective surface structures have one or more dielectric substrates. In this work, instead of traditional dielectric substrates, ferrite substrates are used under different dc bias conditions. By using ferrite materials, one can change the spectral properties of these structures without physically altering them. An applied magnetic field (dc bias) on the ferrite substrate changes its properties and hence the electrical dimensions of the elements comprising the periodic structure. Thus by simply applying a dc bias, the transmission and reflection properties of the periodic structure can …


Computing Optimal Cocomo Effort Multiplier Values And Optimal Casebase Subsets Using Monte Carlo Methods, Robert Joseph Maidhof Jan 1996

Computing Optimal Cocomo Effort Multiplier Values And Optimal Casebase Subsets Using Monte Carlo Methods, Robert Joseph Maidhof

Retrospective Theses and Dissertations

There have been many studies performed and techniques applied to solve the problem of estimating man-month effort for software projects. Despite all the effort expended to solving this problem the results achieved from the various techniques have not been embraced by the software community as very reliable or accurate. This thesis uses Monte Carlo methods to obtain optimal values for COCOMO effort multipliers which minimize the average of the absolute values of the relative errors (AARE) of man-month estimate for two industry supplied casebases. For example, when using three COCOMO cost drivers (complexity, language experience, application experience) and the COCOMO …


Approximate Trigonometric Expansions With Applications To Signal Decomposition And Coding, Qurban A. Memon Jan 1996

Approximate Trigonometric Expansions With Applications To Signal Decomposition And Coding, Qurban A. Memon

Retrospective Theses and Dissertations

Signal representation and data coding for multi-dimensional signals have recently received considerable attention due to their importance to several modern technologies. Many useful contributions have been reported that employ wavelets and transform methods. For signal representation, it is always desired that a signal be represented using minimum number of parameters. The transform efficiency and ease of its implementation are to a large extent mutually incompatible. If a stationary process is not periodic, then the coefficients of its Fourier expansion are not uncorrelated. With the exception of periodic signals the expansion of such a process as a superposition of exponentials, particularly …


Cavity Model Analysis Of Microstrip Ring Antennas Using Green's Functions, Javier Gomez Tagle Rangel Jan 1996

Cavity Model Analysis Of Microstrip Ring Antennas Using Green's Functions, Javier Gomez Tagle Rangel

Retrospective Theses and Dissertations

Microstrip ring antennas have been experimentally tested by several researchers due to their specific radiation characteristics that make them very suitable for many applications, from medical uses to mobile communications. Ring antennas have been found to have a larger bandwidth compared to other conventional types of microstrip patch antennas. Further more, their size is smaller when compared to circular and rectangular resonant structures. The TM1m modes (m = 2,4,6 .. , where m represents radial variations) radiate conical beams in the broadside direction, while TM nl modes (n = 2,4,6 .. , where n represents azimuthal variations) have a radiation …