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This article covers the design of highly integrated gate drivers and level shifters for high-speed, high power efficiency and dv/dt robustness with focus on automotive applications. With the introduction of the 48 V board net in addition to the conventional 12 V battery, there is an increasing need for fast switching integrated gate drivers in the voltage range of 50 V and above. State-of-the-art drivers are able to switch 50 V in less than 5 ns. The high-voltage electrical drive train demands for galvanic isolated and highly integrated gate drivers. A gate driver with bidirectional signal transmission with a 1 MBit/s amplitude modulation, 10/20 MHz frequency modulation and power transfer over one single transformer will be discussed. The concept of high-voltage charge storing enables an area-efficient fully integrated bootstrapping supply with 70 % less area consumption. EMC is a major concern in automotive. Gate drivers with slope control optimize EMC while maintaining good switching efficiency. A current mode gate driver, which can change its drive current within 10 ns, results in 20 dBuV lower emissions between 7 and 60 MHz and 52 % lower switching loss compared to a conventional constant current gate driver.
Trotz der oft schwierigen Rahmenbedingungen auf den Märkten Subsahara Afrikas ist es möglich, ein erfolgreiches Geschäft aufzubauen, sofern man die adäquate Markteintrittsform wählt und darüber hinaus bereit ist, das eigene Geschäftsmodell an die lokalen Gegebenheiten anzupassen. Eine Herausforderung ist die politische, wirtschaftliche und kulturelle Heterogenität in Subsahara Afrika, die es unmöglich macht, den Kontinent als einen Markt zu bearbeiten. Allerdings gibt es seit Jahrzehnten regionale Integrationsabkommen, die jedoch erst in den letzten Jahren wiederbelebt und vorangetrieben wurden, wie z. B. die ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States), die EAC (East African Community) und die SADC (South African Development Corporation). Inzwischen funktionieren diese Initiativen soweit, dass einige ausländische Unternehmen beginnen, Teile des Geschäftes regional und nicht mehr national zu organisieren, also die Länder als gemeinsamen Markt zu bearbeiten. In der Regel sind die kulturellen Unterschiede in Nachbarländern nicht so groß. Aus diesen Gründen besteht Wachstumspotential für geschäftlich interessante Märkte in Subsahara Afrika.
Afrika ist aufgrund überdurchschnittlicher Wirtschaftswachstumsraten und als die weltweit letzten unbearbeiteten Märkte seit einigen Jahren ein populäres Thema der Wirtschaft. Deutsche Unternehmen sind allerdings mit ihrem Engagement auf den afrikanischen Märkten sehr zurückhaltend. So schwankt der Anteil der deutschen Exporte nach Afrika an den deutschen Gesamtexporten seit zehn Jahren um die zwei Prozent; betrachtet man nur Subsahara‐Afrika, so waren es sogar nur 0,5 % in 2014 (Allafi und Koch 2015, S. 3). Bezüglich der Direktinvestitionen (nur Beteiligungskapital, ohne Direktinvestitionskredite) spielt Afrika eine noch geringere Rolle mit nur 1,5 % aller deutschen Investitionen in 2014, wobei hiervon so gut wie alle nach Nordafrika und Südafrika geflossen sind (Deutsche Bundesbank 2015, S. 12 f.). Neben den Standardgründen wie beispielsweise politischen Risiken, schlechter Infrastruktur, schwacher institutioneller Rahmenbedingungen und Governance‐Problemen (vgl. zum Beispiel World Bank 2016a), ist ein gängiges Markteintrittsproblem die fehlende Verfügbarkeit von lokalen Partnern in den Bereichen Vertrieb, Logistik und teilweise auch Produktion (vgl. zum Beispiel Carlowitz und Röndigs 2016). Aktuell ist ein Markteintritt in Afrika ohne lokalen Partner aufgrund der völlig anderen und schwierigen Rahmenbedingungen fast unmöglich.
Die Internationalität muss das Markenzeichen und ein wesentlicher Bestandteil des Leitbildes einer Hochschule sein. Für die Strategieentwicklung und -umsetzung bedarf es der notwendigen Strukturen an einer Hochschule sowie der Vernetzung mit weiteren nationalen und internationalen Partnern. Keine Hochschulleitung würde dieses Erfordernis in Zweifel ziehen. Und doch unterschätzen noch immer Rektorate und Präsidien diesen "Dauer-Marathon". Eine Internationalisierungsstrategie wird vielfach und damit gleichzeitig unkorrekt mit einem Perpetuum mobile
verglichen. Einmal verabschiedet, geht es weiter - es gibt keinen Stillstand. Aber das passendere Bild - auch für die Hochschule Reutlingen - ist die Strategie, die einem "kontinuierlichen Verbesserungsprozess" gleicht.
The purpose of this paper is to identify the potential of a fashion fTRACE (ffTRACE) application that gives transparent insight on the supply chain of a fashion item. The research methodology applied to this purpose is a literature review examining academic references. The key findings of this paper are that information plays a major role in the consumer decision process and is therefore beneficial to the demand for sustainable products. Given the right information content in a transparent, credible and understandable way is important. It is found that the functions of such an application would be able to satisfy this consumer demand and therefore has the potential to raise the sales of a sustainable company as well as increase the brand’s awareness and improve its image. While mainly indicating the potentials of the ffTRACE application, their relevance is not examined in this paper.
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the use of sustainable closed-loop supply chain of the fashion brand Filippa K. Information on green fashion has been gathered and a case study approach on the fashion retailer
Filippa K conducted. Results show a switch in knowledge content between a fast fashion supply chain and a sustainable supply chain. Also there is an evolution in sustainability as companies, retailers, and manufactures suffer under pressure from the customers, governments, and the media. Sustainable fashion brands like Filippa K are interested in sharing precise knowledge on variety of aspects linked to the sustainable closed-loop supply chain. This research paper has been limited by less information and unexplored topics in the theme green fashion. This led to the personal critical disputation with the brand Filippa K.
The purpose of this paper is to investigate how the practice of closed-loop production systems (CLPS) is implemented in the fashion industry. This paper offers a critical literature review to present a thorough understanding of the actual status of literature. Subsequently, the paper reveals that CLPS are of great importance. Generally, such systems include different activities that have to be integrated. Critical points are the product acquisition, the recovering process itself and the remarketing to the customer. A lack of reliable data concerning CLPS in the specific case of fashion industry can be identified. Important research fields could be marketing strategies, controlling the acquisition process, evolvement of return technologies and strategies, adaption of recovered products to the mass market, and the development of new technologies concerning recovering processes.
The purpose of this paper is to explain the key aspects and growing relevance of sustainability in fashion retail and to evaluate the possibilities of fashion retailers to act sustainable in supply chain management as well as carving out the challenges they have to deal with. The research methodology applied for this purpose is a critical literature review examining books and articles. The findings demonstrate the rising importance of sustainability in fashion retail. In this regard, fashion retailers play a key role and responsibility for sustainability in the fashion supply chain, from the beginning up to the end. This paper mainly analyzes sustainability in the fashion supply chain. It does not analyze topics like second-hand shopping or social media sustainability.
Since there is no denying that transparency is increasingly central to corporate sustainability, the purpose of this paper is a case study on a company’s attempt to be fully transparent, hence, picking up the existent scholarly conversation about uncompromising supply chain transparency. Literature so far was found to be fairly limited, but, following a trend, has been rising in numbers over recent years. Addressing these shortcomings in the methodology, an in-depth literature review about the multiple dimensions of supply chain transparency has been performed and links within supply networks stressed. On this basis, a case study by exemplary illustrating the fashion label Honestby has been drafted and the effort to become the world’s first 100 % transparent company further examined. Findings are discussed whether more supply chain transparency is desirable in any case, obstacles listed and an outlook for this kind of business model has been drawn. The research is clearly limited by the amount of scholarly literature concerning Honestby in particular. Out of this reason, magazines and journal entries are used as reference as well. Only with the extension of the topic itself to supply chain transparency and the literature review beforehand, the paper gained its necessary academic standard. Concerning implications, it needs to be mentioned that even though Honest by demonstrates to be fully transparent, it was not possible to find any public information about the degree of supplier relationship. In particular, concerning the applied control mechanisms used to exert influence and to balance out the power gradient between company and suppliers.