scholarly journals Concrete Silos: Failures, Design Issues and Repair/Strengthening Methods

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 5675
Author(s):  
Phung Tu ◽  
Vanissorn Vimonsatit

Current silo analysis and design methods developed from Janssen’s theory focus mainly on the flow of the granules inside the silo by assuming that the overall silo structure is infinitely rigid. A silo structure during discharge is technically a time varying mass dynamic problem, where the properties of the overall silo structure and the discharge rate and material properties also contribute to the development of the load. The physics of a silo system requires equilibrium between the granules inside the silo, the silo structure as a whole and the surrounding air. The established scientific principles and experimental data require fulfilling such equilibrium to accurately predict the dynamic loads during discharge. This correspondence explains how the equilibrium between the granules inside the silo, the silo structure as a whole and the surrounding air can be achieved to better predict and control the dynamic loads generated by the silo discharge process.

1988 ◽  
Vol 110 (4) ◽  
pp. 374-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asok Ray ◽  
Yoram Halevi

Asynchronous time-division multiplexed networks, used in Integrated Communication and Control Systems (ICCS), introduce time-varying and possibly stochastic delays in the feedback control loops. The objective of this on-going research is to develop a comprehensive methodology for the analysis and design of the above class of delayed control systems. In the first part [1] of this two-part paper, we developed a discrete-time, finite-dimensional, time-varying model of the delayed control system; necessary and sufficient conditions for system stability have been established for periodically varying delays. This second part elucidates the significance of the above model relative to the system dynamic performance as well as addresses major criteria for and outlines alternative analytical approaches to ICCS design. Pertinent concepts are illustrated by simulation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 42 (9) ◽  
pp. 1667-1674 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhan Li ◽  
Deqing Huang

Robot manipulators play important roles in helping people do repetitive dull jobs marvelously, with taking advantage of redundancy and flexibility. Two-link manipulators are one kind of basic manipulators and are applied in industrial and medical fields. In many application scenarios, external disturbances and time-varying mass loads may appear to have negative vibration effects on motion control for manipulators, and control algorithms that can eliminate such effects are urgently required. This paper proposes a novel control approach for accurate control of two-link manipulator with disturbance joint torques and time-variant mass loads. The proposed control algorithm can make the joint angle error to sustain in a limited bound under disturbances. Meanwhile, the proposed control method is able to make the two joints of the manipulator globally converge to zero if disturbances disappear. Simulation results show the efficiency of the proposed control approach for control of the two-link manipulator with disturbance torques and time-varying mass loads, and performance comparisons with other conventional control methods demonstrate its superiority.


2012 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-213
Author(s):  
K. Dems ◽  
Z. Mróz

Abstract. An elastic structure subjected to thermal and mechanical loading with prescribed external boundary and varying internal interface is considered. The different thermal and mechanical nature of this interface is discussed, since the interface form and its properties affect strongly the structural response. The first-order sensitivities of an arbitrary thermal and mechanical behavioral functional with respect to shape and material properties of the interface are derived using the direct or adjoint approaches. Next the relevant optimality conditions are formulated. Some examples illustrate the applicability of proposed approach to control the structural response due to applied thermal and mechanical loads.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing Cheng ◽  
Zeyi Liu ◽  
Guangquan Cheng ◽  
Jincai Huang

AbstractBeginning on December 31, 2019, the large-scale novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) emerged in China. Tracking and analysing the heterogeneity and effectiveness of cities’ prevention and control of the COVID-19 epidemic is essential to design and adjust epidemic prevention and control measures. The number of newly confirmed cases in 25 of China’s most-affected cities for the COVID-19 epidemic from January 11 to February 10 was collected. The heterogeneity and effectiveness of these 25 cities’ prevention and control measures for COVID-19 were analysed by using an estimated time-varying reproduction number method and a serial correlation method. The results showed that the effective reproduction number (R) in 25 cities showed a downward trend overall, but there was a significant difference in the R change trends among cities, indicating that there was heterogeneity in the spread and control of COVID-19 in cities. Moreover, the COVID-19 control in 21 of 25 cities was effective, and the risk of infection decreased because their R had dropped below 1 by February 10, 2020. In contrast, the cities of Wuhan, Tianmen, Ezhou and Enshi still had difficulty effectively controlling the COVID-19 epidemic in a short period of time because their R was greater than 1.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lior Rennert ◽  
Moonseong Heo ◽  
Alain H. Litwin ◽  
Victor De Gruttola

Abstract Background Beginning in 2019, stepped-wedge designs (SWDs) were being used in the investigation of interventions to reduce opioid-related deaths in communities across the United States. However, these interventions are competing with external factors such as newly initiated public policies limiting opioid prescriptions, media awareness campaigns, and the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, control communities may prematurely adopt components of the intervention as they become available. The presence of time-varying external factors that impact study outcomes is a well-known limitation of SWDs; common approaches to adjusting for them make use of a mixed effects modeling framework. However, these models have several shortcomings when external factors differentially impact intervention and control clusters. Methods We discuss limitations of commonly used mixed effects models in the context of proposed SWDs to investigate interventions intended to reduce opioid-related mortality, and propose extensions of these models to address these limitations. We conduct an extensive simulation study of anticipated data from SWD trials targeting the current opioid epidemic in order to examine the performance of these models in the presence of external factors. We consider confounding by time, premature adoption of intervention components, and time-varying effect modification— in which external factors differentially impact intervention and control clusters. Results In the presence of confounding by time, commonly used mixed effects models yield unbiased intervention effect estimates, but can have inflated Type 1 error and result in under coverage of confidence intervals. These models yield biased intervention effect estimates when premature intervention adoption or effect modification are present. In such scenarios, models incorporating fixed intervention-by-time interactions with an unstructured covariance for intervention-by-cluster-by-time random effects result in unbiased intervention effect estimates, reach nominal confidence interval coverage, and preserve Type 1 error. Conclusions Mixed effects models can adjust for different combinations of external factors through correct specification of fixed and random time effects. Since model choice has considerable impact on validity of results and study power, careful consideration must be given to how these external factors impact study endpoints and what estimands are most appropriate in the presence of such factors.


2016 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 2062-2068 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiwang Dong ◽  
Liang Han ◽  
Qingdong Li ◽  
Jian Chen ◽  
Zhang Ren

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