• Title/Summary/Keyword: Resonance structures

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Battery-free slotted patch antenna sensor for wireless strain and crack monitoring

  • Yi, Xiaohua;Cho, Chunhee;Wang, Yang;Tentzeris, Manos M.
    • Smart Structures and Systems
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    • v.18 no.6
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    • pp.1217-1231
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    • 2016
  • In this research, a slotted patch antenna sensor is designed for wireless strain and crack sensing. An off-the-shelf RFID (radiofrequency identification) chip is adopted in the antenna sensor design for signal modulation. The operation power of the RFID chip is captured from wireless reader interrogation signal, so the sensor operation is completely battery-free (passive) and wireless. For strain and crack sensing of a structure, the antenna sensor is bonded on the structure surface like a regular strain gage. Since the antenna resonance frequency is directly related with antenna dimension, which deforms when strain occurs on the structural surface, the deformation/strain can be correlated with antenna resonance frequency shift measured by an RFID reader. The slotted patch antenna sensor performance is first evaluated through mechanics-electromagnetics coupled simulation. Extensive experiments are then conducted to validate the antenna sensor performance, including tensile and compressive strain sensing, wireless interrogation range, and fatigue crack sensing.

Growth and Electrical Characteristics of Ultrathin $SiO_2$ Film Formed in an Electron Cyclotron Resonance Oxygen Plasma (ECR 산소 플라즈마에 의한 $SiO_2$ 박막의 성장 거동 및 전기적 특성)

  • 안성덕;이원종
    • Journal of the Korean Ceramic Society
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    • v.32 no.3
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    • pp.371-377
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    • 1995
  • Silicon oxide films were grown on single-crystal silicon substrates at low temperatures (25~205$^{\circ}C$) in a low pressure electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) oxygen plasma. The growth rate of the silicon oxide film increased as the temperature increased or the pressure decreased. Also, the thickness of the silicon oxide film increased at negative bias voltage, but not changed at positive bias voltage. The growth law of the silicon oxide film was approximated to the parabolic form. Capacitance-voltage (C-V) and current density-electric field (J-E) characteristics were studied using Al/SiO2/p-Si MOS structures. For a 10.2 nm thick silicon oxide film, the leakage current density at the electric field of 1 MVcm-1 was less than 1.0$\times$10-8Acm-2 and the breakdown field was higher than 10 MVcm-1. The flat band voltage of Al/SiO2/p-Si MOS capacitor was varied in the range of -2~-3 V and the effective dielectric constant was 3.85. These results indicate that high quality oxide films with properties that are similar to those of thermal oxide film can be fastly grown at low temperature using the ECR oxygen plasma.

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NMR Structural Studies on Novel Disintegrin, Saxatilin from Gloydius saxatilis Venom

  • Shin, Joon;Lee, Dong-Hee;Hong, Sung-Yu;Chung, Kwang-Hoe;Kim, Doo-Sik;Lee, Weon-Tae
    • Journal of the Korean Magnetic Resonance Society
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.10-23
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    • 2007
  • A new disintegrin protein named saxatilin was purified from Korean snake venom (Gloydius saxatilis). Saxatilin is a 73 residue small ploypeptide, which has a primary recognition motif in extracellular matrix, Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequence. Data from inhibition activity assay for the ${\alpha}_v{\beta}_3$ integrin showed that saxatilin showed about 5000-fold higher activity than those of RGD peptides, suggesting that RGD sequence may not be sufficient to induce full cellular function of this site. The solution structures calculated from NMR data were well converged for backbone atoms except RGD loop. The structure revealed that most of tight turns are stabilized by medium range NOE contacts and the RGD motif is located far from the rigid core of the C-terminal domain. The three-dimensional fold and biological function of saxatilin are discussed with those of salmosin, which is a disintegrin protein derived from Agkistrodon halys brevicaudus.

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MR Imaging Findings of Recurred Dermatofibrosarcoma Protuberans of the Scalp: A Case Report (두피에서 재발한 융기성 피부섬유육종의 MR영상: 증례 보고)

  • Cho, Joon;Roh, Hong-Gee;Kim, Mi-Young
    • Investigative Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.121-125
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    • 2006
  • A 48-year-old man presented with a dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (DFSP) of the scalp associated with local recurrence. Axial T1- and T2-weighted images demonstrated a well-circumscribed hypointense and intermediate hyperintense mass in the skin and subcutaneous layer of the scalp, respectively. Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted images showed the strongly enhanced mass invasion to the skin, subcutaneous layer and adjacent galeal layer. Scalp DFSP is very uncommon but is an aggressive tumor, so MR imaging diagnosis of the extent of the lesion to underlying structures, and initial wide local resection is important to prevent recurrence.

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Non-linear Vibration of Rectangular Plates (직사각형 평판의 비선형 진동)

  • Chang, Seo-Il;Lee, Jang-Moo
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Noise and Vibration Engineering Conference
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    • 1994.10a
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    • pp.35-39
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    • 1994
  • One of the important characteristics of the response of nonlinear systems is the existence of subharmonic resonances. When some conditions in parameter space are satisfied. It is possible even in the presence of damping for a periodically excited nonlinear system to possess a response which is the combination of a contribution at the excitation frequency and a component at the system natural frequency. The system natural frequency being a submultiple of the excitation frequency implies that the resulting response is a subharmonic oscillation. In general, there also co-exists, for the system, a response at the excitation frequency, and initial conditions determine which of the steady-state responses is achieved in an experiment or a numerical simulation. In single-degree-of-freedom systems with harmonic excitation, depending on the type of the nonlinearity, e.g., cubic or quadratic the frequency of subharmonic response is respectively, one-third or one-half of that of the excitation frequency. Although subharmonic resonance is one of the principal characteristics of a nonlinear system the subharmonic responses of structures in the presence of internal resonances have been studied very rarely. In this work, we consider subharmonic responses in the two-mode approximation of the plate equations. It is assumed that the two modes are in one-to-one internal resonance. Constant and periodic steady-state solutions of the averaged equations are studied. Finally, the results of direct time integration of the original equations of motion are presented and compared with those obtained from the averaged equations.

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Development of an Extraction Method of Cortical Surfaces from MR Images for Improvement in Efficiency and Accuracy (효율성과 정확도 향상을 위한 MR 영상에서의 뇌 외곽선 추출 기법 개발)

  • An, Kwang-Ok;Jung, Hyun-Kyo
    • Journal of Biomedical Engineering Research
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    • v.28 no.4
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    • pp.549-555
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    • 2007
  • In order to study cortical properties in human, it is necessary to obtain an accurate and explicit representation of the cortical surface in individual subjects. Among many approaches, surface-based method that reconstructs a 3-D model from contour lines on cross-section images is widely used. In general, however, medical brain imaging has some problems such as the complexity of the images, non-linear gain artifacts and so on. Due these limitations, therefore, extracting anatomical structures from imaging data is very a complicated and time-consuming task. In this paper, we present an improved method for extracting contour lines of cortical surface from magnetic resonance images that simplifies procedures of a conventional method. The conventional method obtains contour lines through thinning and chain code process. On the other hand, the proposed method can extract contour lines from comparison between boundary data and labeling image without supplementary processes. The usefulness of the proposed method has been verified using brain image.

Investigation of 3-D dynamic wind loads on lattice towers

  • Zou, Lianghao;Liang, Shuguo;Li, Q.S.;Zhao, Lin;Ge, Yaojun
    • Wind and Structures
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.323-340
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    • 2008
  • In this paper, the along-wind, across-wind as well as torsional dynamic wind loads on three kinds of lattice tower models are investigated using the base balance technique in a boundary layer wind tunnel. The models were specially designed, and their fundamental frequencies in the directions of the three principal axes are still in the frequency range of the spectra of wind loads on lattice towers. In order to clear contaminations to the spectra of wind loads induced by model resonance, the generalized force spectra of the first mode of the models in along-wind, across-wind and torsional directions were derived based on measured base moments of the models. The RMS generalized force coefficients are also obtained by removing the contributions of model resonance. Finally, the characteristics of the 3-D dynamic wind loads, especially those of the across-wind dynamic loads, on the three kinds of lattice towers are presented and discussed.

Effect of building volume and opening size on fluctuating internal pressures

  • Ginger, John D.;Holmes, John D.;Kopp, Gregory A.
    • Wind and Structures
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    • v.11 no.5
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    • pp.361-376
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    • 2008
  • This paper considers internal pressure fluctuations for a range of building volumes and dominant wall opening areas. The study recognizes that the air flow in and out of the dominant opening in the envelope generates Helmholtz resonance, which can amplify the internal pressure fluctuations compared to the external pressure, at the opening. Numerical methods were used to estimate fluctuating standard deviation and peak (i.e. design) internal pressures from full-scale measured external pressures. The ratios of standard deviation and peak internal pressures to the external pressures at a dominant windward wall opening of area, AW are presented in terms of the non-dimensional opening size to volume parameter, $S^*=(a_s/\bar{U}_h)^2(A_W^{3/2}/V_{Ie})$ where $a_s$ is the speed of sound, $\bar{U}_h$ is the mean wind speed at the top of the building and $V_{Ie}$ is the effective internal volume. The standard deviation of internal pressure exceeds the external pressures at the opening, for $S^*$ greater than about 0.75, showing increasing amplification with increasing $S^*$. The peak internal pressure can be expected to exceed the peak external pressure at the opening by 10% to 50%, for $S^*$ greater than about 5. A dominant leeward wall opening also produces similar fluctuating internal pressure characteristics.

Dynamic analysis of a transversely isotropic non-classical thin plate

  • Fadodun, Odunayo O.;Borokinni, Adebowale S.;Layeni, Olawanle P.;Akinola, Adegbola P.
    • Wind and Structures
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.25-38
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    • 2017
  • This study investigates the dynamic analysis of a transversely isotropic thin plate. The plate is made of hyperelastic John's material and its constitutive law is obtained by taken the Frechect derivative of the highlighted energy function with respect to the geometry of deformation. The three-dimensional equation governing the motion of the plate is expressed in terms of first Piola-Kirchhoff's stress tensor. In the reduction to an equivalent two-dimensional plate equation, the obtained model generalizes the classical plate equation of motion. It is obtained that the plate under consideration exhibits harmonic force within its planes whereas this force varnishes in the classical plate model. The presence of harmonic forces within the planes of the considered plate increases the natural and resonance frequencies of the plate in free and forced vibrations respectively. Further, the parameter characterizing the transversely isotropic structure of the plate is observed to increase the plate flexural rigidity which in turn increases both the natural and resonance frequencies. Finally, this study reinforces the view that non-classical models of problems in elasticity provide ample opportunity to reveal important phenomena which classical models often fail to apprehend.

Solution Structure of a Prion Protein: Implications for Infectivity

  • He Liu;Jones, Shauna-Farr;Nikolai Ulyanov;Manuel Llinas;Susan Marqusee;Fred E. Cohen;Stanley B. Prusiner;Thomas L. James
    • Journal of the Korean Magnetic Resonance Society
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.85-105
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    • 1998
  • Prions cause neurodegenerative diseases in animals and humans. The scrapie prion protein (PrPSc) is the major-possibly only-component of the infectious prion and is generated from the cellular isoform (PrPC) by a conformational change. Limited proteolysis of PrPSc produces an polypeptide comprised primarily of residues 90 to 231, which retains infectivity. The three-dimensional structure of rPrP(90-231), a recombinant protein resembling PrPC with the Syrian hamster (SHa) sequence, was solved using multidimensional NMR. Low-resolution structures of rPrP(90-231), synthetic peptides up to 56 residues, a longer (29-231, full-length) protein with SHa sequence, and a short here further structure refinement of rPrP(90-231) and dynamic features of the protein. Consideration of these features in the context of published data suggests regions of conformational heterogeneity, structural elements involved in the PrPC\longrightarrowPrPSc transformation, and possible structural features related to a species barrier to transmission of prion diseases.

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