Conference Proceeding
Refine
Year of publication
- 2021 (52) (remove)
Institute
- Fachbereich Energietechnik (12)
- Fachbereich Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik (11)
- Fachbereich Luft- und Raumfahrttechnik (10)
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (7)
- ECSM European Center for Sustainable Mobility (6)
- Fachbereich Maschinenbau und Mechatronik (6)
- Solar-Institut Jülich (6)
- Fachbereich Bauingenieurwesen (5)
- MASKOR Institut für Mobile Autonome Systeme und Kognitive Robotik (5)
- IfB - Institut für Bioengineering (4)
Has Fulltext
- no (52)
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (52) (remove)
Keywords
- Hydrogen (2)
- NOx emissions (2)
- Out-of-plane load (2)
- PCM (2)
- autonomous driving (2)
- building information modelling (2)
- earthquakes (2)
- electro mobility (2)
- hydrogen (2)
- industrial facilities (2)
Infused Thermal Solutions (ITS) introduces a method for passive thermal control to stabilize structural components thermally without active heating and cooling systems, but with phase change material (PCM) for thermal energy storage (TES), in combination with lattice - both embedded in additive manufactured functional structures. In this ITS follow-on paper a thermal model approach and associated predictions are presented, related on the ITS functional breadboards developed at FH Aachen. Predictive TES by PCM is provided by a specially developed ITS PCM subroutine, which is applicable in ESATAN. The subroutine is based on the latent heat storage (LHS) method to numerically embed thermo-physical PCM behavior. Furthermore, a modeling approach is introduced to numerically consider the virtual PCM/lattice nodes within the macro-encapsulated PCM voids of the double wall ITS design. Related on these virtual nodes, in-plane and out-of-plane conductive links are defined. The recent additive manufactured ITS breadboard series are thermally cycled in the thermal vacuum chamber, both with and without embedded PCM. Related on breadboard hardware tests, measurement results are compared with predictions and are subsequently correlated. The results of specific simulations and measurements are presented. Recent predictive results of star tracker analyses are also presented in ICES-2021-106, based on this ITS PCM subroutine.
Reinforced concrete frames with masonry infill walls are popular form of construction all over the world as well in seismic regions. While severe earthquakes can cause high level of damage of both reinforced concrete and masonry infills, earthquakes of lower to medium intensity some-times can cause significant level of damage of masonry infill walls. Especially important is the level of damage of face loaded infill masonry walls (out-of-plane direction) as out-of-plane load cannot only bring high level of damage to the wall, it can also be life-threating for the people near the wall. The response in out-of-plane direction directly depends on the prior in-plane damage, as previous investigation shown that it decreases resistance capacity of the in-fills. Behaviour of infill masonry walls with and without prior in-plane load is investigated in the experimental campaign and the results are presented in this paper. These results are later compared with analytical approaches for the out-of-plane resistance from the literature. Conclusions based on the experimental campaign on the influence of prior in-plane damage on the out-of-plane response of infill walls are compared with the conclusions from other authors who investigated the same problematic.