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Dimensionen 1-2017 : Magazin der FH Aachen University of Applied Sciences - Struktur und Freiheit
(2017)
Inhalt Dimensionen 01-2017:
6 Struktur und Freiheit : Wie die Digitalisierung die Lehre beeinflusst
12 Wie wir in Zukunft konsumieren : Vom intelligenten Kühlschrank bis zur selbst gedruckten Brille
16 Baby unter Beobachtung : Forscher der FH decken massive Sicherheitsmängel bei Babymonitoringsystem auf
18 "In unserem Auge ist viel los" : Anissa Frank hat sich in ihrer Bachelorarbeit mit dem Phänomenen des kreisrunden Makulaloches beschäftigt
20 #totallove : Was kommt nach dem "Hotel Total"?
24 Das graue Wunder : Dirk Thal, Leon Bockstegers und Erick Regehr sind überzeugt: "Beton kann mehr"
26 Auftrieb : Zwei FH-Innovationen landen beim Luftfahrtkonzern Airbus
30 Ich möchte die Kunst demokratisieren : David Gerards bietet Künstlern mit dem "Poebel" eine Plattform
32 Zwischen Orient und Okzident : Unterwegs in Marokko
38 Einfach genau hinhören und horchen : Interview mit Prof. Dr. Hans-Joachim Blome zum Thema Gravitationswellen
42 Die Entdeckung eines Architekten : Auf den Spuren des Architekten Leonardo da Vinci
46 Über den Dächern von Chicago
48 Eine Prothese aus dem 3D-Drucker : Studierende engagieren sich für ein Projekt, das vielen Menschen in Krisenregionen helfen kann
50 Ist der Tod das Ende unserer Persönlichkeit? Prof. Dr. Walter van Laack ist Experte auf dem Gebiet Nahtoderfahrungen
52 Von Aachen in die ganze Welt : Die Summer Schools sind der Exportschlager der FH Aachen
59 Ein Stipendium zum Geburtstag
60 Keine Chance für Shimmy
58 Kopfnuss
61 Neues Buch über Prof. Rudold Schwarz
62 Silber beim PR-Bild-Award
63 Impressum
Einleitung vor § 1297
(2017)
Vorbemerkung vor § 1297
(2017)
Vorbemerkung vor § 1353
(2017)
Combined with the use of renewable energy sources for
its production, Hydrogen represents a possible alternative gas
turbine fuel for future low emission power generation. Due to
its different physical properties compared to other fuels such
as natural gas, well established gas turbine combustion
systems cannot be directly applied for Dry Low NOx (DLN)
Hydrogen combustion. This makes the development of new
combustion technologies an essential and challenging task
for the future of hydrogen fueled gas turbines.
The newly developed and successfully tested “DLN
Micromix” combustion technology offers a great potential to
burn hydrogen in gas turbines at very low NOx emissions.
Aiming to further develop an existing burner design in terms
of increased energy density, a redesign is required in order to
stabilise the flames at higher mass flows and to maintain low
emission levels.
For this purpose, a systematic design exploration has
been carried out with the support of CFD and optimisation
tools to identify the interactions of geometrical and design
parameters on the combustor performance. Aerodynamic
effects as well as flame and emission formation are observed
and understood time- and cost-efficiently. Correlations
between single geometric values, the pressure drop of the
burner and NOx production have been identified as a result.
This numeric methodology helps to reduce the effort of
manufacturing and testing to few designs for single
validation campaigns, in order to confirm the flame stability
and NOx emissions in a wider operating condition field.
Nowadays, the most employed devices for recoding videos or capturing images are undoubtedly the smartphones. Our work investigates the application of source camera identification on mobile phones. We present a dataset entirely collected by mobile phones. The dataset contains both still images and videos collected by 67 different smartphones. Part of the images consists in photos of uniform backgrounds, especially collected for the computation of the RSPN. Identifying the source camera given a video is particularly challenging due to the strong video compression. The experiments reported in this paper, show the large variation in performance when testing an highly accurate technique on still images and videos.
The gene encoding a putative (R,R)-butane-2,3-diol dehydrogenase (bdhA) from Bacillus clausii DSM 8716T was isolated, sequenced and expressed in Escherichia coli. The amino acid sequence of the encoded protein is only distantly related to previously studied enzymes (identity 33–43%) and exhibited some uncharted peculiarities. An N-terminally StrepII-tagged enzyme variant was purified and initially characterized. The isolated enzyme catalyzed the (R)-specific oxidation of (R,R)- and meso-butane-2,3-diol to (R)- and (S)-acetoin with specific activities of 12 U/mg and 23 U/mg, respectively. Likewise, racemic acetoin was reduced with a specific activity of up to 115 U/mg yielding a mixture of (R,R)- and meso-butane-2,3-diol, while the enzyme reduced butane-2,3-dione (Vmax 74 U/mg) solely to (R,R)-butane-2,3-diol via (R)-acetoin. For these reactions only activity with the co-substrates NADH/NAD+ was observed. The enzyme accepted a selection of vicinal diketones, α-hydroxy ketones and vicinal diols as alternative substrates. Although the physiological function of the enzyme in B. clausii remains elusive, the data presented herein clearly demonstrates that the encoded enzyme is a genuine (R,R)-butane-2,3-diol dehydrogenase with potential for applications in biocatalysis and sensor development.
The Dry-Low-NOx (DLN) Micromix combustion technology has been developed originally as a low emission alternative for industrial gas turbine combustors fueled with hydrogen. Currently the ongoing research process targets flexible fuel operation with hydrogen and syngas fuel.
The non-premixed combustion process features jet-in-crossflow-mixing of fuel and oxidizer and combustion through multiple miniaturized flames. The miniaturization of the flames leads to a significant reduction of NOx emissions due to the very short residence time of reactants in the flame.
The paper presents the results of a numerical and experimental combustor test campaign. It is conducted as part of an integration study for a dual-fuel (H2 and H2/CO 90/10 Vol.%) Micromix combustion chamber prototype for application under full scale, pressurized gas turbine conditions in the auxiliary power unit Honeywell Garrett GTCP 36-300.
In the presented experimental studies, the integration-optimized dual-fuel Micromix combustor geometry is tested at atmospheric pressure over a range of gas turbine operating conditions with hydrogen and syngas fuel. The experimental investigations are supported by numerical combustion and flow simulations. For validation, the results of experimental exhaust gas analyses are applied.
Despite the significantly differing fuel characteristics between pure hydrogen and hydrogen-rich syngas the evaluated dual-fuel Micromix prototype shows a significant low NOx performance and high combustion efficiency. The combustor features an increased energy density that benefits manufacturing complexity and costs.