Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (1343)
- Conference Proceeding (208)
- Book (43)
- Part of a Book (40)
- Doctoral Thesis (18)
- Other (5)
- Patent (4)
- Preprint (3)
- Lecture (2)
- Habilitation (1)
- Talk (1)
Language
- English (1668) (remove)
Keywords
- Biosensor (25)
- Finite-Elemente-Methode (12)
- Einspielen <Werkstoff> (10)
- CAD (8)
- civil engineering (8)
- Bauingenieurwesen (7)
- FEM (6)
- Limit analysis (6)
- Shakedown analysis (6)
- shakedown analysis (6)
- Clusterion (5)
- Air purification (4)
- Hämoglobin (4)
- LAPS (4)
- Lipopolysaccharide (4)
- Luftreiniger (4)
- Natural language processing (4)
- Plasmacluster ion technology (4)
- Raumluft (4)
- hydrogen peroxide (4)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (1668) (remove)
A procedure for the evaluation of the failure probability of elastic-plastic thin shell structures is presented. The procedure involves a deterministic limit and shakedown analysis for each probabilistic iteration which is based on the kinematical approach and the use the exact Ilyushin yield surface. Based on a direct definition of the limit state function, the non-linear problems may be efficiently solved by using the First and Second Order Reliabiblity Methods (Form/SORM). This direct approach reduces considerably the necessary knowledge of uncertain technological input data, computing costs and the numerical error. In: Computational plasticity / ed. by Eugenio Onate. Dordrecht: Springer 2007. VII, 265 S. (Computational Methods in Applied Sciences ; 7) (COMPLAS IX. Part 1 . International Center for Numerical Methods in Engineering (CIMNE)). ISBN 978-1-402-06576-7 S. 186-189
Detecting synchronization clusters in multivariate time series via coarse-graining of Markov chains
(2007)
In: Proc. of the 11th Intl. Conf. on Computing in Civil and Building Engineering (ICCCBE-XI) ed. Hugues Rivard, Montreal, Canada, Seite 1-12, ACSE (CD-ROM), 2006 Currently, the conceptual design phase is not adequately supported by any CAD tool. Neither the support while elaborating conceptual sketches, nor the automatic proof of correctness with respect to effective restrictions is currently provided by any commercial tool. To enable domain experts to store the common as well as their personal domain knowledge, we develop a visual language for knowledge formalization. In this paper, a major extension to the already existing concepts is introduced. The possibility to define rule dependencies extends the expressiveness of the knowledge definition language and contributes to the usability of our approach.