Refine
H-BRS Bibliography
- yes (347) (remove)
Departments, institutes and facilities
- Institut für Technik, Ressourcenschonung und Energieeffizienz (TREE) (347) (remove)
Document Type
- Conference Object (194)
- Article (83)
- Part of a Book (25)
- Preprint (10)
- Report (9)
- Doctoral Thesis (8)
- Research Data (6)
- Contribution to a Periodical (5)
- Book (monograph, edited volume) (3)
- Lecture (2)
Year of publication
Has Fulltext
- no (347) (remove)
Keywords
The simulation of fluid flows is of importance to many fields of application, especially in industry and infrastructure. The modelling equations applied describe a coupled system of non-linear, hyperbolic partial differential equations given by one-dimensional shallow water equations that enable the consistent implementation of free surface flows in open channels as well as pressurised flows in closed pipes. The numerical realisation of these equations is complicated and challenging to date due to their characteristic properties that are able to cause discontinuous solutions.
Cost efficient energy monitoring in existing large buildings demands for autonomous indoor sensors with low power consumption, high performance in multipath fading channels and economic implementation. Good performance in multipath fading channels can be achieved with noncoherent chaotic modulation schemes such as chaos on-off keying (COOK) or differential chaos shift keying (DCSK). While COOK stands out in the area of power consumption, DCSK excels when it comes to its performance in noisy and multipath fading channels. This paper evaluates a combination of both schemes for autonomous indoor sensors. The simulation results show 50% less power consumption than DCSK and more than 3dB SNR gain in Rayleigh fading channels at BER=10-3 as compared to COOK, making it a promising candidate for low power transmission in autonomous wireless indoor sensors. We further present an enhanced version of this scheme showing another 1 dB SNR improvement, but at 25% less power consumption than DCSK.
Unternehmen agieren in einem dynamischen Umfeld mit hoher Komplexität und Unsicherheit. Um dabei langfristig wettbewerbsfähig zu bleiben, ist eine kontinuierliche Optimierung der Prozesse erforderlich. Eine konsequente Prozessorientierung wird daher seit langem angestrebt. Zur Ermittlung des aktuellen Standes der Prozessorganisation in deutschen Unternehmen hat die Gesellschaft für Organisation e. V. (gfo) eine Studie durchführen lassen, deren erste Ergebnisse hier vorgestellt werden.
Der Nutzen von Prozessmanagement für die Effizienz und Effektivität der Organisation von Unternehmen ist vielfach bestätigt. Eine Studie der gfo-Gesellschaft für Organisation stellt fest, dass der Umsetzungsgrad der Prozessorganisation in Unternehmen dennoch mangelhaft ist. Es fehlt die Unterstützung der Leitung, die selbst noch überwiegend funktional organisiert ist.