Refine
Year of publication
- 2017 (262) (remove)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (67)
- Fachbereich Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik (37)
- IfB - Institut für Bioengineering (34)
- Fachbereich Luft- und Raumfahrttechnik (33)
- Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften (32)
- Fachbereich Energietechnik (27)
- INB - Institut für Nano- und Biotechnologien (27)
- Fachbereich Maschinenbau und Mechatronik (24)
- Fachbereich Bauingenieurwesen (14)
- Fachbereich Architektur (13)
Document Type
- Article (109)
- Conference Proceeding (87)
- Part of a Book (34)
- Book (14)
- Other (11)
- Part of a Periodical (2)
- Report (2)
- Contribution to a Periodical (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Patent (1)
Keywords
- Autonomous mobile robots (2)
- Gamification (2)
- Industry 4.0 (2)
- MASCOT (2)
- Multi-robot systems (2)
- Smart factory (2)
- 3D nonlinear finite element model (1)
- Acceptance tests (1)
- Ausfachungsmauerwerk (1)
- Automated Optimization (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (262)
Research collaborations provide opportunities for both practitioners and researchers: practitioners need solutions for difficult business challenges and researchers are looking for hard problems to solve and publish. Nevertheless, research collaborations carry the risk that practitioners focus on quick solutions too much and that researchers tackle theoretical problems, resulting in products which do not fulfill the project requirements.
In this paper we introduce an approach extending the ideas of agile and lean software development. It helps practitioners and researchers keep track of their common research collaboration goal: a scientifically enriched software product which fulfills the needs of the practitioner’s business model.
This approach gives first-class status to application-oriented metrics that measure progress and success of a research collaboration continuously. Those metrics are derived from the collaboration requirements and help to focus on a commonly defined goal.
An appropriate tool set evaluates and visualizes those metrics with minimal effort, and all participants will be pushed to focus on their tasks with appropriate effort. Thus project status, challenges and progress are transparent to all research collaboration members at any time.
The capacitive electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor (EIS) structure is a typical device based on a field-effect sensor platform. With a simple silicon-based structure, EIS have been useful for several sensing applications, especially with incorporation of nanostructured films to modulate the ionic transport and the flat-band potential. In this paper, we report on ion transport and changes in flat-band potential in EIS sensors made with layer-by-layer films containing poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimer and single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) adsorbed on p-Si/SiO 2 /Ta 2 O 5 chips with an Al ohmic contact. The impedance spectra were fitted using an equivalent circuit model, from which we could determine parameters such as the double-layer capacitance. This capacitance decreased with the number of bilayers owing to space charge accumulated at the electrolyte–insulator interface, up to three PAMAM/SWNTs bilayers, after which it stabilized. The charge-transfer resistance was also minimum for three bilayers, thus indicating that this is the ideal architecture for an optimized EIS performance. The understanding of the influence of nanostructures and the fine control of operation parameters pave the way for optimizing the design and performance of new EIS sensors.
Software Stories Guide
(2017)