Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (5586)
- Conference Proceeding (1620)
- Book (1078)
- Part of a Book (548)
- Bachelor Thesis (297)
- Patent (172)
- Report (100)
- Doctoral Thesis (78)
- Other (77)
- Administrative publication (76)
- Part of Periodical (63)
- Lecture (30)
- Master's Thesis (20)
- Contribution to a Periodical (19)
- Review (17)
- Diploma Thesis (15)
- Working Paper (13)
- Course Material (9)
- Talk (7)
- Study Thesis (5)
Language
- German (5012)
- English (4801)
- Russian (14)
- Portuguese (6)
- Multiple languages (5)
- Spanish (3)
- nld (2)
- Italien (1)
Keywords
- Amtliche Mitteilung (71)
- Bachelor (33)
- Aachen University of Applied Sciences (31)
- Master (31)
- Prüfungsordnung (31)
- Bauingenieurwesen (30)
- Lesbare Fassung (28)
- Biosensor (25)
- Fachhochschule Aachen (23)
- Illustration (21)
- Studien- und Prüfungsordnung (21)
- Aachen / Fachhochschule Aachen (20)
- Änderungsordnung (20)
- Blitzschutz (18)
- Corporate Design (17)
- Elektromobilität (17)
- CAD (16)
- Finite-Elemente-Methode (16)
- Fotografie (16)
- civil engineering (14)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (2052)
- Fachbereich Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik (1150)
- Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften (1138)
- Fachbereich Energietechnik (1104)
- Fachbereich Maschinenbau und Mechatronik (866)
- Fachbereich Chemie und Biotechnologie (847)
- Fachbereich Luft- und Raumfahrttechnik (776)
- Fachbereich Bauingenieurwesen (705)
- IfB - Institut für Bioengineering (686)
- INB - Institut für Nano- und Biotechnologien (613)
- Fachbereich Gestaltung (484)
- Solar-Institut Jülich (339)
- Fachbereich Architektur (174)
- FH Aachen (153)
- ECSM European Center for Sustainable Mobility (112)
- ZHQ - Bereich Hochschuldidaktik und Evaluation (74)
- MASKOR Institut für Mobile Autonome Systeme und Kognitive Robotik (71)
- Nowum-Energy (70)
- Institut fuer Angewandte Polymerchemie (32)
- Sonstiges (24)
Hydraulic modeling is the classical approach to investigate and describe complex fluid motion. Many empirical formulas in the literature used for the hydraulic design of river training measures and structures have been developed using experimental data from the laboratory. Although computer capacities have increased to a high level which allows to run complex numerical simulations on standard workstation nowadays, non-standard design of structures may still raise the need to perform physical model investigations. These investigations deliver insight into details of flow patterns and the effect of varying boundary conditions. Data from hydraulic model tests may be used for calibration of numerical models as well. As the field of hydraulic modeling is very complex, this chapter intends to give a short overview on capacities and limits of hydraulic modeling in regard to river flows and hydraulic structures only. The reader shall get a first idea of modeling principles and basic considerations. More detailed information can be found in the references.
Block ramps are ecologically oriented drop structures with adequate energy dissipation and partially moderate flow velocities. A special case is given with crossbar block ramps, where the upstream and downstream level difference is reduced by a series of basins. To prevent the total structure from failing, the stability of single boulders within the crossbars and the bed material in between must be guaranteed. The present paper addresses the stability of bed material and scour development for various flow regimes. Any bed material erosion may affect the stability of the crossbar boulders, which in turn can result in major damages of the ramp. Therefore new design approaches are developed to choose an appropriate bed material size and to avoid failures of crossbar block ramp structures.
Verbrennungsmotoren
(2013)
Verbrennungsmotoren
(2015)
System mit Hülle - Die innovativen Bauten der Steiff-Spielwarenfabrik in Giengen an der Brenz
(2015)
Lately there has been an increasing concern about uranium toxicity in some districts of Punjab State located in the North Western part of India after the publication of a report (Blaurock-Busch et al. 2010) which showed that the concentration of uranium in hair and urine of children suffering from physical deformities, neurological and mental disorder from Malwa region (Fig. 1) of Punjab State was manifold higher than the reference ranges. A train which connects the affected region with the nearby city of Bikaner which has a Cancer Hospital has been nicknamed as Cancer Express due to the frenzy generated on account of uranium related toxicity.
When exploring glacier ice it is often necessary to take samples or implement sensors at a certain depth underneath the glacier surface. One way of doing this is by using heated melting probes. In their common form these devices experience a straight one-dimensional downwards motion and can be modeled by standard close-contact melting theory. A recently developed melting probe however, the IceMole, achieves maneuverability by simultaneously applying a surface temperature gradient to induce a change in melting direction and controlling the effective contact-force by means of an ice screw to stabilize its change in attitude. A modeling framework for forced curvilinear melting does not exist so far and will be the content of this paper. At first, we will extend the existing theory for quasi-stationary close-contact melting to curved trajectories. We do this by introducing a rotational mode. This additional unknown in the system implies yet the need for another model closure. Within this new framework we will focus on the effect of a variable contact-force as well as different surface temperature profiles. In order to solve for melting velocity and curvature of the melting path we present both an inverse solution strategy for the analytical model, and a more general finite element framework implemented into the open source software package ELMER. Model results are discussed and compared to experimental data conducted in laboratory tests.