Technik
Refine
Year of publication
- 2021 (37) (remove)
Document Type
- Journal article (16)
- Conference proceeding (16)
- Book (2)
- Book chapter (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Patent / Standard / Guidelines (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (37)
Institute
- Technik (37)
- Informatik (1)
Publisher
- VDE Verlag (7)
- IEEE (5)
- Elsevier (3)
- Springer (3)
- De Gruyter (2)
- Hochschule Nordhausen (2)
- Association for Computing Machinery (1)
- Cornell University (1)
- Dnipro University of Technology (1)
- EMW (1)
This paper presents a permanent magnet tubular linear generator system for powering passive sensors using vertical vibration harvesting energy. The system consists of a permanent magnet tubular linear vibration generator and electric circuits. By using the design of mechanical resonant movers, the generator is capable of converting low frequencies small amplitude vertical vibration energy into more regular sinusoidal electrical energy. The distribution of the magnetic field and electromotive force are calculated by Finite Element Analysis. The characteristics of the linear vibration generator system are observed. The experimental results show the generator can produce about 0.4W~1.6W electrical power when the vibration source's amplitude is fixed on 2mm and the frequencies are between 13Hz and 22Hz.
The incudo-malleal joint (IMJ) in the human middle ear is a true diarthrodial joint and it has been known that the flexibility of this joint does not contribute to better middle-ear sound transmission. Previous studies have proposed that a gliding motion between the malleus and the incus at this joint prevents the transmission of large displacements of the malleus to the incus and stapes and thus contributes to the protection of the inner ear as an immediate response against large static pressure changes. However, dynamic behavior of this joint under static pressure changes has not been fully revealed. In this study, effects of the flexibility of the IMJ on middle-ear sound transmission under static pressure difference between the middle-ear cavity and the environment were investigated. Experiments were performed in human cadaveric temporal bones with static pressures in the range of +/- 2 kPa being applied to the ear canal (relative to middle-ear cavity). Vibrational motions of the umbo and the stapes footplate center in response to acoustic stimulation (0.2-8 kHz) were measured using a 3D-Laser Doppler vibrometer for (1) the natural IMJ and (2) the IMJ with experimentally-reduced flexibility. With the natural condition of the IMJ, vibrations of the umbo and the stapes footplate center under static pressure loads were attenuated at low frequencies below the middle-ear resonance frequency as observed in previous studies. After the flexibility of the IMJ was reduced, additional attenuations of vibrational motion were observed for the umbo under positive static pressures in the ear canal (EC) and the stapes footplate center under both positive and negative static EC pressures. The additional attenuation of vibration reached 4~7 dB for the umbo under positive static EC pressures and the stapes footplate center under negative EC pressures, and 7~11 dB for the stapes footplate center under positive EC pressures. The results of this study indicate an adaptive mechanism of the flexible IMJ in the human middle ear to changes of static EC pressure by reducing the attenuation of the middle-ear sound transmission. Such results are expected to be used for diagnosis of the IMJ stiffening and to be applied to design of middle-ear prostheses.
This contribution presents a three-phase power stage for motor control with continuous output voltages using wide bandgap semiconductors and an asynchronous delta-sigma based switching signal generation. The focus of the paper is on an active damping approach for the LC output filter based on inductor current feedback.
This paper illustrates the implementation of series connected hardware modules as part of a scalable and modular power electronics device, which is ideally suited in the field of electric vehicles using wide bandgap semiconductor devices. The main benefit of the modular concept is that different current or voltage requirements can be satisfied based on the appropriate series or parallel connection of single modules. The particular design is based on the fact that the single modules generate a continuous and specified output voltage from a given dc voltage. The current work focuses on a brief classification of this work in different series connected concepts of power converters and in particular on an active damping approach for the series connected LC output filters based on inductor current feedback.
This paper presents a modular and scalable power electronics concept for motor control with continuous output voltage. In contrast to multilevel concepts, modules with continuous output voltage are connected in series. The continuous output voltage of each module is obtained by using gallium nitride (GaN) high electron motility transistor (HEMT)s as switches inside the modules with a switching frequency in the range between 500 kHz and 1 MHz. Due to this high switching frequency a LC filter is integrated into the module resulting in a continuous output voltage. A main topic of the paper is the active damping of this LC output filter for each module and the analysis of the series connection of the damping behaviour. The results are illustrated with simulations and measurements.
This paper presents a machine learning powered, procedural sizing methodology based on pre-computed look-up tables containing operating point characteristics of primitive devices. Several Neural Networks are trained for 90nm and 45nm technologies, mapping different electrical parameters to the corresponding dimensions of a primitive device. This transforms the geometric sizing problem into the domain of circuit design experts, where the desired electrical characteristics are now inputs to the model. Analog building blocks or entire circuits are expressed as a sequence of model evaluations, capturing the sizing strategy and intention of the designer in a procedure, which is reusable across different technology nodes. The methodology is employed for the sizing of two operational amplifiers, and evaluated for two technology nodes, showing the versatility and efficiency of this approach.
Public enterprises find themselves in increasingly competitive markets, a situation that makes having an entrepreneurial orientation (EO) an urgent need, given that EO is an indispensable driver of performance. Research describes politicians delaying the strategic change of public enterprises when serving as board members, but empirical evidence of the impact of board behavior on EO in public enterprises is lacking. We draw on stakeholder-agency theory (SAT) and resource dependence theory (RDT) and use structural equation modeling (SEM) to investigate survey data collected from 110 German energy suppliers that are majority government owned. Results indicate that board strategy control and board networking do not seem to predict EO on first sight. Closer analysis reveals a board networking–EO relationship depending on ownership structure. Remarkably, we find that it is not the usually suspected local municipal owner who hinders EO in our sample organizations but minority shareholders engaging in board networking activities. The results shed light on the intersection of governance and entrepreneurship with special reference to the fine-grained conceptualization of RDT.
Corporate entrepreneurship in the public sector: exploring the peculiarities of public enterprises
(2021)
Entrepreneurship is predominantly treated as a private-sector phenomenon and consequently its increasing importance in the public sector goes largely unremarked. That impedes the research field of entrepreneurship being capable of spanning multiple sectors. Accordingly, recent research calls for the study of corporate entrepreneurship (CE) as it manifests in the public sector where it can be labeled public entrepreneurship (PE). This dissertation considers government an essential entrepreneurial actor and is led by the central research question: What are the peculiarities of the public sector and how do they impact public enterprises’ entrepreneurial orientation (EO)?
Accordingly, this dissertation includes three studies focusing on public enterprises. Two of the studies set the scope of this thesis by investigating a specific type of organization in a specific context—German majority-government-owned energy suppliers. These enterprises operate in a liberalized market experiencing environmental uncertainties like competitiveness and business transformation.
The aims and results of the studies included in this dissertation can be summarized as follows: The systematic literature review illuminates the stimuli of and barriers to entrepreneurial activities in public enterprises and the potential outcomes of such activities discussed so far. The review reveals that research on EO has tended to focus on the private sector and consequently that barriers to and outcomes of entrepreneurial activities in the public sector remain under-researched. Building on these findings, the qualitative study focuses on the interrelated barriers affecting entrepreneurship in public enterprises and the outcomes of entrepreneurial activities being inhibited. The study adopts an explorative comparative causal mapping approach to address the above-mentioned research goal and the lack of clarity around how barriers identified in the public sphere are interrelated. Furthermore, the study bases its investigation on the different business segments of sales (competitive market) and the distribution grid (natural monopoly) to account for recent calls for fine-grained research on PE. Results were compared with prior findings in the public and private sector. That comparison indicates that the barriers revealed align with aspects discussed in prior research findings relating to both sectors. Examples include barriers associated with the external environment such as legal constraints and barriers originating from within the organization such as employee behavior linked to a value system that hampers entrepreneurial action. However, the most important finding is that a public enterprise’s supervisory board can hinder its progress, a finding running counter to those of previous private-sector research and one that underscores the widespread prejudice that the involvement of a public shareholder and its nominated board of directors has a negative effect on EO. The third study is quantitative (data collection via a questionnaire) and builds on both its predecessors to examine the little understood topic of board behavior and public enterprises’ social orientation as predictors of EO. The study’s results indicate that social orientation represses EO, whereas board strategy control (BSC) does not seem to predict EO. Regarding BSC, we find that the local government owners in our sample are less involved in BSC. The third study also examines board networking and finds its relationship with EO depends on the ownership structure of the public-sector organization. An important finding is that minority shareholders, such as majority privately-owned enterprises and hub firms, repress EO when engaging in board networking.
In summary, this doctoral thesis contributes to the under-researched topic of CE in the public sector. It investigates the peculiarities of this sector by focusing on the supervisory board and social oriented activities and their impact on the enterprise’s EO in the quantitative study. The thesis addresses institutional questions regarding ownership and the last study in particular contributes to expanding resource dependence theory, and invites a nuanced perspective: The original perspective suggests that interorganizational arrangements like interfirm network ties and equity holdings reduce external resource dependency and consequently improve firm performance. The findings within this thesis expose resource delivery to potential contrary effects to extend the understanding of interorganizational action with important implications for practice.
Für die erfolgreiche Umsetzung der Energiewende in Deutschland ist die Kraft-Wärme-Kopplung (KWK) aufgrund ihrer hohen Effizienz und Flexibilität nicht mehr wegzudenken. Um die verfügbare Flexibilität einer KWK-Anlage unter Gewährleistung ihrer hohen Effizienz optimal nutzen zu können, ist an der Hochschule Reutlingen in mehrjährigen Forschungsarbeit ein prognosebasierter Steuerungsalgorithmus für Blockheizkraftwerke (BHKW) in Verbindung mit Wärmespeichern entwickelt worden.
Flexible KWK – aber wie?
(2021)
Es ist mittlerweile unstrittig, dass Kraft-Wärme-Kopplungs-Anlagen (KWK-Anlagen) zunehmend flexible betrieben werden müssen. Nur so kann es gelingen, die Anlagen optimal in das elektrische Energiesystem einzubinden, beispielsweise zur Deckung der Residuallast oder zur Unterstützung der Verteilnetze, und damit zur Umsetzung der Energiewende beizutragen. Auch der Gesetzgeber fordert den flexiblen Betrieb durch die Absenkung der förderfähigen Betriebsstunden im KWK-Gesetz ein. Um vor diesem Hintergrund jedoch parallel die Deckung des erforderlichen Wärmebedarfs unter Gewährleistung der hohen Effizienz der KWK sicherzustellen, ist eine intelligente Steuerung der Geräte erforderlich. Zu diesem Zweck ist an der Hochschule Reutlingen ein vorausschauender Steuerungsalgorithmus zum „stromoptimierten“ und netzdienlichen“ Betrieb von KWK-Anlagen bei voller Nutzung der KWK-Wärme als Alternative zum standardmäßig anzutreffenden wärmegeführten Betrieb entwickelt worden.