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Year of publication
- 2020 (26) (remove)
The purpose of this study is to develop self-contained methods for obtaining smooth meshes which are compatible with isogeometric analysis (IGA). The study contains three main parts. We start by developing a better understanding of shapes and splines through the study of an image-related problem. Then we proceed towards obtaining smooth volumetric meshes of the given voxel-based images. Finally, we treat the smoothness issue on the multi-patch domains with C1 coupling. Following are the highlights of each part.
First, we present a B-spline convolution method for boundary representation of voxel-based images. We adopt the filtering technique to compute the B-spline coefficients and gradients of the images effectively. We then implement the B-spline convolution for developing a non-rigid images registration method. The proposed method is in some sense of “isoparametric”, for which all the computation is done within the B-splines framework. Particularly, updating the images by using B-spline composition promote smooth transformation map between the images. We show the possible medical applications of our method by applying it for registration of brain images.
Secondly, we develop a self-contained volumetric parametrization method based on the B-splines boundary representation. We aim to convert a given voxel-based data to a matching C1 representation with hierarchical cubic splines. The concept of the osculating circle is employed to enhance the geometric approximation, where it is done by a single template and linear transformations (scaling, translations, and rotations) without the need for solving an optimization problem. Moreover, we use the Laplacian smoothing and refinement techniques to avoid irregular meshes and to improve mesh quality. We show with several examples that the method is capable of handling complex 2D and 3D configurations. In particular, we parametrize the 3D Stanford bunny which contains irregular shapes and voids.
Finally, we propose the B´ezier ordinates approach and splines approach for C1 coupling. In the first approach, the new basis functions are defined in terms of the B´ezier Bernstein polynomials. For the second approach, the new basis is defined as a linear combination of C0 basis functions. The methods are not limited to planar or bilinear mappings. They allow the modeling of solutions to fourth order partial differential equations (PDEs) on complex geometric domains, provided that the given patches are G1
continuous. Both methods have their advantages. In particular, the B´ezier approach offer more degree of freedoms, while the spline approach is more computationally efficient. In addition, we proposed partial degree elevation to overcome the C1-locking issue caused by the over constraining of the solution space. We demonstrate the potential of the resulting C1 basis functions for application in IGA which involve fourth order PDEs such as those appearing in Kirchhoff-Love shell models, Cahn-Hilliard phase field application, and biharmonic problems.
Synergistic Framework for Analysis and Model Assessment in Bridge Aerodynamics and Aeroelasticity
(2020)
Wind-induced vibrations often represent a major design criterion for long-span bridges. This work deals with the assessment and development of models for aerodynamic and aeroelastic analyses of long-span bridges.
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and semi-analytical aerodynamic models are employed to compute the bridge response due to both turbulent and laminar free-stream. For the assessment of these models, a comparative methodology is developed that consists of two steps, a qualitative and a quantitative one. The first, qualitative, step involves an extension
of an existing approach based on Category Theory and its application to the field of bridge aerodynamics. Initially, the approach is extended to consider model comparability and completeness. Then, the complexity of the CFD and twelve semi-analytical models are evaluated based on their mathematical constructions, yielding a diagrammatic representation of model quality.
In the second, quantitative, step of the comparative methodology, the discrepancy of a system response quantity for time-dependent aerodynamic models is quantified using comparison metrics for time-histories. Nine metrics are established on a uniform basis to quantify the discrepancies in local and global signal features that are of interest in bridge aerodynamics. These signal features involve quantities such as phase, time-varying frequency and magnitude content, probability density, non-stationarity, and nonlinearity.
The two-dimensional (2D) Vortex Particle Method is used for the discretization of the Navier-Stokes equations including a Pseudo-three dimensional (Pseudo-3D) extension within an existing CFD solver. The Pseudo-3D Vortex Method considers the 3D structural behavior for aeroelastic analyses by positioning 2D fluid strips along a line-like structure. A novel turbulent Pseudo-3D Vortex Method is developed by combining the laminar Pseudo-3D VPM and a previously developed 2D method for the generation of free-stream turbulence. Using analytical derivations, it is shown that the fluid velocity correlation is maintained between the CFD strips.
Furthermore, a new method is presented for the determination of the complex aerodynamic admittance under deterministic sinusoidal gusts using the Vortex Particle Method. The sinusoidal gusts are simulated by modeling the wakes of flapping airfoils in the CFD domain with inflow vortex particles. Positioning a section downstream yields sinusoidal forces that are used for determining all six components of the complex aerodynamic admittance. A closed-form analytical relation is derived, based on an existing analytical model. With this relation, the inflow particles’ strength can be related with the target gust amplitudes a priori.
The developed methodologies are combined in a synergistic framework, which is applied to both fundamental examples and practical case studies. Where possible, the results are verified and validated. The outcome of this work is intended to shed some light on the complex wind–bridge interaction and suggest appropriate modeling strategies for an enhanced design.
Space is a social product and a social producer. The main aim of this thesis is to reveal ‘the process of totalitarian city making in Pyongyang’, especially in the light of the interaction between the power and urban space.
The totalitarian city of Pyongyang was born out of modernization in the process of masses formation. During the growth of colonial capitalism and Christian liberal ideas, Pyongyang was modernized and displayed the characteristics of a modern city with industrialization and urbanization. During the introduction of Japanese colonial capitalism, peasants, women, and slaves became the first masses and urban poor, and they later transformed into the mob; their violence was finally demonstrated during the Anti-Chinese Riot.
After the 1945 independence, Kim’s regime formed the one-party state with a cry for revolution. They produced an atmosphere of imminent war to instill fear and hatred into the psyche of Pyongyang citizens. The regime eliminated all political opponents in 1967 and finally declared the totalitarian ideology in 1974. During this process, Pyongyang demonstrated two main characteristics of a totalitarian city: the space of terror and of ideology. The space of terror produces the fear of death and the space of ideology controls the thought and life of citizens.
After entry to the market, to keep Kim’s controlling power, the regime used the strategy of location exchange. The camp, market, and Foreign Currency Shop were effective tools to prepare for executives’ gifts. However, the market also produces the desire not only for consumption but also for freedom and truth; it is tearing down the foundation of the totalitarian city of Pyongyang.
This research focuses primarily on the interaction between political power and urban space. In the process of making a totalitarian city, the power produced urban space and it influenced the psyche of Pyongyang citizens. Even though this spatial transition has created the totalitarian city and helped maintain political power, it also led and produced intended or unintended social variation in Pyongyang society.
The thesis concerns a work of urban history intended not to describe the city but rather to interpret it. By doing so, I have interpreted the city by means of the role played by the so-called ‘great property’ in the European city-making process during the last three decades of the 20th century, specifically focused on the concrete case of military properties in Italy. I have also considered the role played by other kinds of great properties, i.e. industries and railway, which previously acted in the production of the built environment in a different way respect to the military one. As all of them have as common denominator the fact of being ‘capital in land’, I analysed great industrial and railway properties in order to extrapolate a methodology which helped me to interpret the relationship between military properties and city-making process in Europe in the late 20th century.
I have analysed the relationship between the capital in land and the city-making process on the ground of the understanding the interrelation between the great property, the urban development, and the agents involved in the urban and territorial planning. Here I have showed that urban planning is not the decisive factor influencing the citymaking process, but instead the power held by the capital in land. I have found that is the great property the trigger of the creation of new ‘areas of centrality’ intended as large areas for consumerism. As far as the role played by great property is concerned, I have also discovered that it has evolved over time. Originally, industrial and railway properties have been regenerated into a wide range of new profit-driven spaces; successively, I have found out that most of the regeneration of military premises aimed to materialise areas of centrality. The way of interpreting this factor has been based on focusing my attention on the military premises in Italy: I have classified their typology when they have been built and, most importantly, when they have been regenerated into new areas of centrality.
The evolution of urbanism under dictatorship forms the core of the current research. This thesis is part of a research network at Bauhaus-Universität Weimar, which studies the 20th century's urbanism under different dictatorships. The network has provided a cross-cultural and cross-border environment and has enabled the author to communicate with other like-minded researchers. The 2015 published book of this group 'Urbanism and Dictatorship: A European Perspective' strengthens the foundation of this research's theoretical and methodological framework.
This thesis investigates urban policies and plans leading to the advancement of urbanization and the transformation of urban space in Iran during the second Pahlavi (1941-1979) when the country faced a milestone in its history: Nationalization of the Iranian oil industry. By reflecting the influence of economic and socio‐political determinants of the time on urbanism and the urbanization process, this work intends to critically trace the effect of dictatorship on evolved urbanism before and after the oil nationalization in 1951.
The research on the second Pahlavi's urbanism has been limitedly addressed and has only recently expanded. Most of the conducted studies date back to less than a decade ago and could not incorporate all the episodes of the second Pahlavi urbanism. These works have often investigated urbanism and architecture by focusing merely on the physical features and urban products in different years regardless of the importance of urbanism as a tool in the service of hegemony. In other words, the majority of the available literature does not intend to address the socio-economic and political roots of urban transformations and by questioning 'what has been built?' investigates the individual urban projects and plans designed by individual designers without interlinking these projects to the state's urban planning program and tracing the beneficiaries of those projects or questioning 'built for whom?'
Moreover, some chapters of this modern urbanism have rarely been investigated. For instance, scant research has looked into the works of foreign designers and consultants involved in the projects such as Peter Georg Ahrens or Constantinos A. Doxiadis. Similarly, the urbanism of the first decade of the second Pahlavi, including the government of Mossadegh, has mainly been overlooked.
Therefore, by critically analyzing the state's urban planning program and the process of urbanization in Iran during the second Pahlavi, this research aims to bridge the literature gap and to unravel the effect of the power structure on urban planning and products while seeking to find a pattern behind the regime's policies.
The main body of this work is concentrated on studying the history of urbanism in Iran, of which collecting data and descriptions played a crucial role. To prevent the limitations associated with singular methods, this research's methodology is based on methodological triangulation (Denzin, 2017). With the triangulation scheme, the data is gathered by combining different qualitative and quantitative methods such as the library, archival and media research, online resources, non-participatory observation, and photography. For the empirical part, the city of Tehran is selected as the case study. Moreover, individual non-structured interviews with the locals were conducted to gain more insights regarding urban projects.
Die Mahlung als Zerkleinerungsprozess stellt seit den Anfängen der Menschheit eine der wichtigsten Verarbeitungsformen von Materialien aller Art dar - von der Getreidemahlung, über das Aufschließen von Heilkräutern in Mörsern bis hin zur Herstellung von Tonern für Drucker und Kopierer. Besonders die Zementmahlung ist in modernen Gesellschaften sowohl ein wirtschaftlicher als auch ein ökologischer Faktor. Mehr als zwei Drittel der elektrischen Energie der Zementproduktion werden für Rohmehl- und Klinker- bzw. Kompositmaterialmahlung verbraucht. Dies ist nur ein Grund, warum der Mahlprozess zunehmend in den Fokus vieler Forschungs- und Entwicklungsvorhaben rückt. Die Komplexität der Zementmahlung steigt im zunehmenden Maße an. Die simple „Mahlung auf Zementfeinheit“ ist seit langem obsolet. Zemente werden maßgeschneidert, mit verschiedensten Kombinationsprodukten, getrennt oder gemeinsam, in unterschiedlichen Mahlaggregaten oder mit ganz neuen Ansätzen gefertigt. Darüber hinaus gewinnt auch der Sektor des Baustoffrecyclings, mit allen damit verbundenen Herausforderungen, immer mehr an Bedeutung. Bei der Fragestellung, wie der Mahlprozess einerseits leistungsfähige Produkte erzeugen kann und andererseits die zunehmenden Anforderungen an Nachhaltigkeit erfüllt, steht das Mahlaggregat im Mittelpunkt der Betrachtungen. Dementsprechend gliedert sich, neben einer eingehenden Literaturrecherche zum Wissensstand, die vorliegende Arbeit in zwei übergeordnete Teile:
Im ersten Teil werden Untersuchungen an konventionellen Mahlaggregaten mit in der Zementindustrie verwendeten Kernprodukten wie Portlandzementklinker, Kalkstein, Flugasche und Hüttensand angestellt. Um eine möglichst effektive Mahlung von Zement und Kompositmaterialien zu gewährleisten, ist es wichtig, die Auswirkung von Mühlenparametern zu kennen. Hierfür wurde eine umfangreiche Versuchsmatrix aufgestellt und
abgearbeitet. Das Spektrum der Analysemethoden war ebenfalls umfangreich und wurde sowohl auf die gemahlenen Materialien als auch auf die daraus hergestellten Zemente und Betone angewendet. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass vor allem die Unterscheidung zwischen Mahlkörpermühlen und mahlkörperlosen Mühlen entscheidenden Einfluss auf die Granulometrie und somit auch auf die Zementperformance hat. Besonders stark wurden die Verarbeitungseigenschaften, insbesondere der Wasseranspruch und damit auch das Porengefüge und schließlich Druckfestigkeiten sowie Dauerhaftigkeitseigenschaften der aus diesen Zementen hergestellten Betone, beeinflusst. Bei Untersuchungen zur gemeinsamen Mahlung von Kalkstein und Klinker führten ungünstige Anreicherungseffekte des gut mahlbaren Kalksteins sowie tonigen Nebenbestandteilen zu einer schlechteren Performance in allen Zementprüfungen.
Der zweite Teil widmet sich der Hochenergiemahlung. Die dahinterstehende Technik wird seit Jahrzehnten in anderen Wirtschaftsbranchen, wie der Pharmazie, Biologie oder auch Lebensmittelindustrie angewendet und ist seit einiger Zeit auch in der Zementforschung anzutreffen. Beispielhaft seien hier die Planeten- und Rührwerkskugelmühle als Vertreter genannt. Neben grundlegenden Untersuchungen an Zementklinker
und konventionellen Kompositmaterialien wie Hüttensand und Kalkstein wurde auch die Haupt-Zementklinkerphase Alit untersucht. Die Hochenergiemahlung von konventionellen Kompositmaterialien generierte zusätzliche Reaktivität bei gleicher Granulometrie gegenüber der herkömmlichen Mahlung. Dies wurde vor allem bei per se reaktivem Zementklinker als auch bei latent-hydraulischem Hüttensand beobachtet. Gemahlene Flugaschen konnten nur im geringen Maße weiter aktiviert werden. Der generelle Einfluss von Oberflächenvergrößerung, Strukturdefekten und Relaxationseffekten eines Mahlproduktes wurden eingehend untersucht und gewichtet. Die Ergebnisse bei der Hochenergiemahlung von Alit zeigten, dass die durch Mahlung eingebrachten Strukturdefekte eine Erhöhung der Reaktivität zur Folge haben. Hierbei konnte festgestellt werden, das maßgeblich Oberflächendefekte, strukturelle (Volumen-)defekte und als Konterpart Selbstheilungseffekte die reaktivitätsbestimmenden Faktoren sind. Weiterhin wurden Versuche zur Mahlung von Altbetonbrechsand durchgeführt. Im Speziellen wurde untersucht, inwieweit eine Rückführung von Altbetonbrechsand, als unverwertbarer Teil des Betonbruchs, in Form eines Zement-Kompositmaterials in den Baustoffkreislauf möglich ist. Die hierfür verwendete Mahltechnik umfasst sowohl konventionelle Mühlen als auch Hochenergiemühlen. Es wurden Kompositzemente mit variiertem Recyclingmaterialanteil hergestellt und auf grundlegende Eigenschaften untersucht. Zur Bewertung der Produktqualität wurde der sogenannte „Aktivierungskoeffizient“ eingeführt. Es stellte sich heraus, dass die Rückführung von Altbetonbrechsand als potentielles Kompositmaterial wesentlich vom Anteil des Zementsteins abhängt. So konnte beispielsweise reiner Zementstein als aufgemahlenes Kompositmaterial eine bessere Performance gegenüber dem mit Gesteinskörnung beaufschlagtem Altbetonbrechsand ausweisen. Bezogen auf die gemessenen Hydratationswärmen und Druckfestigkeiten nahm der Aktivierungskoeffzient mit fallendem Abstraktionsgrad ab. Ebenfalls sank der Aktivierungskoeffizient mit steigendem Substitutionsgrad. Als Vergleich wurden dieselben Materialien in konventionellen Mühlen aufbereitet. Die hier erzielten Ergebnisse können teilweise der Hochenergiemahlung als gleichwertig beurteilt werden. Folglich ist bei der Aktivierung von Recyclingmaterialien weniger die Mahltechnik als der Anteil an aktivierbarem Zementstein ausschlaggebend.