@article{ZhuangHuangRabczuketal., author = {Zhuang, Xiaoying and Huang, Runqiu and Rabczuk, Timon and Liang, C.}, title = {A coupled thermo-hydro-mechanical model of jointed hard rock for compressed air energy storage}, series = {Mathematical Problems in Engineering}, journal = {Mathematical Problems in Engineering}, abstract = {A coupled thermo-hydro-mechanical model of jointed hard rock for compressed air energy storage}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @article{ZhuangHuangLiangetal., author = {Zhuang, Xiaoying and Huang, Runqiu and Liang, Chao and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {A coupled thermo-hydro-mechanical model of jointed hard rock for compressed air energy storage}, series = {Mathematical Problems in Engineering}, journal = {Mathematical Problems in Engineering}, doi = {10.1155/2014/179169}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170428-31726}, abstract = {Renewable energy resources such as wind and solar are intermittent, which causes instability when being connected to utility grid of electricity. Compressed air energy storage (CAES) provides an economic and technical viable solution to this problem by utilizing subsurface rock cavern to store the electricity generated by renewable energy in the form of compressed air. Though CAES has been used for over three decades, it is only restricted to salt rock or aquifers for air tightness reason. In this paper, the technical feasibility of utilizing hard rock for CAES is investigated by using a coupled thermo-hydro-mechanical (THM) modelling of nonisothermal gas flow. Governing equations are derived from the rules of energy balance, mass balance, and static equilibrium. Cyclic volumetric mass source and heat source models are applied to simulate the gas injection and production. Evaluation is carried out for intact rock and rock with discrete crack, respectively. In both cases, the heat and pressure losses using air mass control and supplementary air injection are compared.}, subject = {Energiespeicherung}, language = {en} } @article{ZhaoLuRabczuk, author = {Zhao, Jun-Hua and Lu, Lixin and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {Binding energy and mechanical stability of single- and multi-walled carbon nanotube serpentines}, series = {The Journal of Chemical Physics}, journal = {The Journal of Chemical Physics}, doi = {10.1063/1.4878115}, abstract = {Binding energy and mechanical stability of single- and multi-walled carbon nanotube serpentines}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @article{ZhaoKouJiangetal., author = {Zhao, Jun-Hua and Kou, Liangzhi and Jiang, Jin-Wu and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {Tension-induced phase transition of single-layer molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) at low temperatures}, series = {Nanotechnology}, journal = {Nanotechnology}, doi = {10.1088/0957-4484/25/29/295701}, abstract = {Tension-induced phase transition of single-layer molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) at low temperatures}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @article{ZhaoJiangJiaetal., author = {Zhao, Jun-Hua and Jiang, Jin-Wu and Jia, Yue and Guo, Wanlin and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {A theoretical analysis of cohesive energy between carbon nanotubes, graphene and substrates}, series = {Carbon}, journal = {Carbon}, doi = {10.1016/j.carbon.2013.01.041}, pages = {108 -- 119}, abstract = {Explicit solutions for the cohesive energy between carbon nanotubes, graphene and substrates are obtained through continuum modeling of the van der Waals interaction between them. The dependence of the cohesive energy on their size, spacing and crossing angles is analyzed. Checking against full atom molecular dynamics calculations and available experimental results shows that the continuum solution has high accuracy. The equilibrium distances between the nanotubes, graphene and substrates with minimum cohesive energy are also provided explicitly. The obtained analytical solution should be of great help for understanding the interaction between the nanostructures and substrates, and designing composites and nanoelectromechanical systems.}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @article{ZhaoJiangWangetal., author = {Zhao, Jiyun and Jiang, Jin-Wu and Wang, L. and Guo, Wanlin and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {Coarse-grained potentials of single-walled carbon nanotubes}, series = {Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids}, journal = {Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids}, abstract = {Coarse-grained potentials of single-walled carbon nanotubes}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @article{ZhangZhuangMuthuetal., author = {Zhang, Yancheng and Zhuang, Xiaoying and Muthu, Jacob and Mabrouki, Tarek and Fontaine, Micha{\"e}l and Gong, Yadong and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {Load transfer of graphene/carbon nanotube/polyethylene hybrid nanocomposite by molecular dynamics simulation}, series = {Composites Part B Engineering}, journal = {Composites Part B Engineering}, pages = {27 -- 33}, abstract = {Load transfer of graphene/carbon nanotube/polyethylene hybrid nanocomposite by molecular dynamics simulation}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @article{XuMourrainGalligoetal., author = {Xu, G. and Mourrain, B. and Galligo, A. and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {High-quality construction of analysis-suitable trivariate NURBS solids by reparameterization methods}, series = {Computational Mechanics}, journal = {Computational Mechanics}, abstract = {High-quality construction of analysis-suitable trivariate NURBS solids by reparameterization methods}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @article{VoelskeGollubHagenetal., author = {V{\"o}lske, Michael and Gollub, Tim and Hagen, Matthias and Stein, Benno}, title = {A keyquery-based classification system for CORE}, series = {D-Lib Magazine}, journal = {D-Lib Magazine}, doi = {10.1045/november14-voelske}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170426-31662}, abstract = {We apply keyquery-based taxonomy composition to compute a classification system for the CORE dataset, a shared crawl of about 850,000 scientific papers. Keyquery-based taxonomy composition can be understood as a two-phase hierarchical document clustering technique that utilizes search queries as cluster labels: In a first phase, the document collection is indexed by a reference search engine, and the documents are tagged with the search queries they are relevant—for their so-called keyqueries. In a second phase, a hierarchical clustering is formed from the keyqueries within an iterative process. We use the explicit topic model ESA as document retrieval model in order to index the CORE dataset in the reference search engine. Under the ESA retrieval model, documents are represented as vectors of similarities to Wikipedia articles; a methodology proven to be advantageous for text categorization tasks. Our paper presents the generated taxonomy and reports on quantitative properties such as document coverage and processing requirements.}, subject = {Massendaten}, language = {en} } @article{VoelkerMaempelKornadt, author = {V{\"o}lker, Conrad and M{\"a}mpel, Silvio and Kornadt, Oliver}, title = {Measuring the human body's micro-climate using a thermal manikin}, series = {Indoor Air}, journal = {Indoor Air}, number = {24, 6}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.3815}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20181025-38153}, pages = {567 -- 579}, abstract = {The human body is surrounded by a micro-climate which results from its convective release of heat. In this study, the air temperature and flow velocity of this micro-climate were measured in a climate chamber at various room temperatures, using a thermal manikin simulating the heat release of the human being. Different techniques (Particle Streak Tracking, thermography, anemometry, and thermistors) were used for measurement and visualization. The manikin surface temperature was adjusted to the particular indoor climate based on simulations with a thermoregulation model (UCBerkeley Thermal Comfort Model). We found that generally, the micro-climate is thinner at the lower part of the torso, but expands going up. At the head, there is a relatively thick thermal layer, which results in an ascending plume above the head. However, the micro-climate shape strongly depends not only on the body segment, but also on boundary conditions: the higher the temperature difference between the surface temperature of the manikin and the air temperature, the faster the air flow in the micro-climate. Finally, convective heat transfer coefficients strongly increase with falling room temperature, while radiative heat transfer coefficients decrease. The type of body segment strongly influences the convective heat transfer coefficient, while only minimally influencing the radiative heat transfer coefficient.}, subject = {Raumklima}, language = {en} }