710 research outputs found

    Flash Flood Assessment for Wadi Mousa City-Jordan

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    This paper aims to assess risks due to potential Flash Floods hazards in Wadi Mousa and to determine the magnitude of flows for flash flood hazards and construct Floodplain Zone maps for the selected flood return periods of 25, 50, 75 and 100 years. Wadi Mousa is considered an ephemeral wadi with intermittent flash flood of flows that can exceed the 298 m3/s threshold. Its floods, however, do not flow every year. Nevertheless, at certain years the extent of flood can be huge. The surface drainage may be broadly divided into sub-catchments according to drainage namely; Wadi Als-Sader, Wadi Jelwakh with Wadi Khaleel, Wadi Al-Maghir. Wadi Zarraba is the confluence of the three sub- catchments. The study covers an area of 53.3 km2 and comprises a high semi -arid infrequent flash floods generated by heavy rainstorm over the catchment and flows to Wadi Araba. Average annual rainfall of Wadi Mousa was calculated of 178 mm, and average annual evapotranspiration is 1300 mm per year. The runoff analysis indicates that only rainfall events exceeding 22 mm within the 24 hour period would generate runoff

    sj-docx-1-trr-10.1177_03611981221075627 – Supplemental material for Prediction of Shear Wave Velocity in Fine-grained Soils From Cone Penetration Test Data: Toward a Global Approach

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-trr-10.1177_03611981221075627 for Prediction of Shear Wave Velocity in Fine-grained Soils From Cone Penetration Test Data: Toward a Global Approach by Ahmad Mousa and Mohab Hussein in Transportation Research Record</p

    sj-docx-1-trr-10.1177_03611981211062154 – Supplemental material for Value-Engineering Methodology for the Selection of an Optimal Bridge System

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-trr-10.1177_03611981211062154 for Value-Engineering Methodology for the Selection of an Optimal Bridge System by Ahmad A. Mousa, Mohab Hussein and Ahmed Farouk Kineber in Transportation Research Record</p

    Sir Herbert Samuel's second visit to Transjordan, etc. H.M. King Hussein and Musa Kazim Pasha [i.e., Musa Qassem al-Husseini], Amman.

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    Title from: Catalogue of photographs & lantern slides ... [1936?].Caption on negative: H.M. King Hussein and Musa Kazim Pasha, Amman.Date based on caption for similar image in LOT 13827, p. 80, no. 241 (http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.13290): King Hussein allowing his hand to be kissed by tribal sheiks etc. Mousa Kassim Pasha on his right. 1923 [1924?].Gift; Episcopal Home; 1978

    An Investigation of Aural Space inside Mousa Broch by Observation and Analysis of Sound and Light

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    This project emphasises the unique character and construction of Mousa broch, questions the model of Mousa broch as a roofed home (an interpretation adopted by Historic Scotland in 2002) and considers the way in which sound and light informs our understanding of the spaces contained within its structure. Underpinning the approach to data collection was the architectural concept of aural space. The author attempts to convey an impression of aural space inside Mousa broch by the creation of an audio-visual record supported by acoustic analysis, archaeological discussion, and an architectural breakdown of the spaces within the broch structure. Audio recordings, sound samples, photographs and movies were made on Mousa island and inside Mousa broch during the period of the Summer solstice of 2009

    Author Correction: the Influence of Nano Filter Elements on Pressure Drop and Pollutant Elimination Efficiency in Town Border Stations

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    The original version of this Article contained an error in the order of the author names, which was incorrectly given as Hamed Ebadiyan, Saeed Zeinali Heris, Seyed Borhan Mousavi, Shamin Hosseini Nami ; Mousa Mohammadpourfard. Consequently, in the Author Contributions section, “H.E. Investigation. S.Z.H. Supervision, Conceptualization, Methodology, Validation. S.B.M. Formal analysis, Writing original draft. S.H.N. Formal analysis, Writing original draft. M.M. Validation.” now reads: “S.Z.H. Supervision, Conceptualization, Methodology, Validation. H.E. Investigation. S.B.M. Formal analysis, Writing original draft. S.H.N. Formal analysis, Writing original draft. M.M. Validation.” The original Article has been corrected. © 2023, The Author(s)

    A Matter of Principle: King Hussein of the Hijaz and the Arabs of Palestine

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    On the whole, King Hussein of the Hijaz, sharif of Mecca, has fared badly at the hands of British historians. To most of them he was an obstinate old man, so overambitious for himself, and so overconfident about his following in the Arab world, that he was a poor judge of his powers and unrealistic to a great extent. Examination of the papers in the British Public Record Office, in conjunction with his own letters and other sources, offers another image. It shows quite a different man – consistent in his beliefs and policy, stubborn about questions of principle, and wholly set on pursuing with dignity the rights that he reckoned the British to have promised to all Arabs ‘liberated’ from the yoke of the Turks.</jats:p

    SYNTHESIS OF C-GLYCOSYL AMINO ACIDS AS STABLE BUILDING BLOCKS FOR MODIFIED GLYCOPEPTIDE SYNTHESIS

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    In this thesis, we have studied and synthesized new class of C-glycosly amino acids whose structure features a hetrocycle ring holding the carbohydrate and the amino acid fragments. Pyridine and tetrazole rings were used as hetrocycle linkers in this project. This class of C-glycosyl amino acids is of interest as new chealtors and as building building blocks for cotranslational glycopeptides synthesis. In the first part, C-Glycosylmethyl pyridylalanines were synthesized via thermally induced Hantzsch-type cyclocondensation using an aldehyde-ketoester-enamino ester system. To one of these reagents was attached a C-glycosyl residue, while to another was bound an amino acid fragment. In a one-pot optimized methodology, the dihydropyridine was not isolated while its purification was carried out by removal of unreacted material and side products using polymer-supported scavengers. Then the dihydropyridine (mixture of diastereoisomers) was oxidized by a polymer-bound oxidant to give the target pyridine bearing the two bioactive residues. In this way, a range of eight compounds (58-68% yield) was prepared in which the elements of diversity were (i) the gluco and galacto configurations of the pyranose ring, (ii) the α- and β-configurations at the anomeric center, and (iii) the positions of the carbohydrate and amino acid sectors in the pyridine ring. The orthogonal functional group protection in these amino acids allowed their easy incorporation into oligopeptides via sequential amino and carboxylic group coupling. In the second part, tetrazole moiety was constructed via Huisgen 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition between nitriles and organic azides. Two sets of compounds have been prepared, one being constituted of C-galactosyl and C-ribosyl O-tetrazolyl serines, while the other contains S-tetrazolyl cysteine derivatives. In both cases, the synthetic scheme involved a twostep route: the first one being the thermal cycloaddition of a sugar azide with p-toluensulfonyl cyanide (TsCN) to give a 1-substituted 5-sulfonyl tetrazole and the second the replacement of the tosyl group with a serine or cysteine residue. For the high efficiency and operational simplicity, the azide-TsCN cycloaddition appears to be a true click process. Finally, one of the amino acids prepared was incorporated into a tripeptid

    Lyapunov-Based Model Predictive Control for Stable Operation of a 9-Level Crossover Switches Cell Inverter in Grid Connection Mode

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    This study proposes the application of a Lyapunov-based Model Predictive Control (L-MPC) approach to a 9-level Crossover Switches Cell (CSC9) converter operating in grid connection mode. The proposed method utilizes the structure of the classical finite-control-set MPC (FCS-MPC) technique while integrating a cost function that requires no tuning. By deriving the cost function based on Lyapunov theory, the system stability is ensured. Notably, the suggested approach offers several advantages over traditional MPC controllers. Firstly, it eliminates the need for gain tuning, thereby simplifying the implementation process. Secondly, the proposed controller prioritizes stability as a key design aspect. The presented simulation results prove that the proposed controller effectively regulates the voltage of the DC capacitor around its desired value and feed a smooth sinusoidal current to the grid with low total harmonic distortion (THD) while operating at a unity power factor.Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.DC systems, Energy conversion & Storag

    A benchmark study of the multiscale and homogenization methods for fully implicit multiphase flow simulations

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    Accurate simulation of multiphase flow in subsurface formations is challenging, as the formations span large length scales (km) with high-resolution heterogeneous properties. To deal with this challenge, different multiscale methods have been developed. Such methods construct coarse-scale systems, based on a given high-resolution fine-scale system. Furthermore, they are amenable to parallel computing and allow for a-posteriori error control. The multiscale methods differ from each other in the way the transition between the different scales is made. Multiscale (finite element and finite volume) methods compute local basis functions to map the solutions (e.g. pressure) between coarse and fine scales. Instead, homogenization methods solve local periodic problems to determine effective models and parameters (e.g. permeability) at a coarser scale. It is yet unknown how these two methods compare with each other, especially when applied to complex geological formations, with no clear scale separation in the property fields. This paper develops the first comparison benchmark study of these two methods and extends their applicability to fully implicit simulations using the algebraic dynamic multilevel (ADM) method. At each time step, on the given fine-scale mesh and based on an error analysis, the fully implicit system is solved on a dynamic multilevel grid. The entries of this system are obtained by using multiscale local basis functions (ADM-MS), and, respectively, by homogenization over local domains (ADM-HO). Both sets of local basis functions (ADM-MS) and local effective parameters (ADM-HO) are computed at the beginning of the simulation, with no further updates during the multiphase flow simulation. The two methods are extended and implemented in the same open-source DARSim2 simulator (https://gitlab.com/darsim2simulator), to provide fair quality comparisons. The results reveal insightful understanding of the two approaches, and qualitatively benchmark their performance. It is re-emphasized that the test cases considered here include permeability fields with no clear scale separation. The development of this paper sheds new lights on advanced multiscale methods for simulation of coupled processes in porous media.Reservoir EngineeringNumerical Analysi
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