Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2017 (124)
- 2018 (84)
- 2022 (78)
- 2016 (70)
- 2021 (67)
- 2020 (60)
- 2015 (59)
- 2019 (55)
- 2023 (49)
- 2013 (45)
- 2006 (39)
- 2014 (35)
- 2007 (33)
- 2010 (32)
- 2008 (31)
- 2012 (31)
- 2005 (28)
- 2011 (27)
- 2003 (23)
- 2002 (20)
- 2001 (19)
- 2004 (19)
- 2009 (18)
- 2000 (16)
- 1996 (9)
- 1999 (9)
- 2024 (9)
- 1998 (7)
- 1995 (6)
- 1997 (4)
- 1994 (2)
- 1983 (1)
- 1987 (1)
- 1988 (1)
- 1992 (1)
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (1112) (entfernen)
Sprache
- Deutsch (872)
- Englisch (237)
- Französisch (2)
- Spanisch (1)
Schlagworte
- Geldpolitik (6)
- Arbeitsrecht (4)
- Building Information Modeling (4)
- Deutschland (4)
- Energiepolitik (4)
- Kühllastberechnung (4)
- E-Learning (3)
- Europäische Union (3)
- Europäische Zentralbank (3)
- GmbH (3)
Institut
- Wirtschaftsrecht (448)
- Institut für Internetsicherheit (160)
- Wirtschaft und Informationstechnik Bocholt (68)
- Institut für Innovationsforschung und -management (55)
- Westfälisches Energieinstitut (55)
- Westfälisches Institut für Gesundheit (47)
- Wirtschaft Gelsenkirchen (36)
- Elektrotechnik und angewandte Naturwissenschaften (33)
- Informatik und Kommunikation (32)
- Wirtschaftsingenieurwesen (25)
In this work, a novel polymer electrolyte membrane water electrolyzer (PEMWE) test cell based on hydraulic single-cell compression is described. In this test cell, the current density distribution is almost homogeneous over the active cell area due to hydraulic cell clamping. As the hydraulic medium entirely surrounds the active cell components, it is also used to control cell temperature resulting in even temperature distribution. The PEMWE single-cell test system based on hydraulic compression offers a 25 cm2 active surface area (5.0 × 5.0 cm) and can be operated up to 80°C and 6.0 A/cm2. Construction details and material selection for the designed test cell are given in this document. Furthermore, findings related to pressure distribution analyzed by utilizing a pressure-sensitive foil, the cell performance indicated by polarization curves, and the reproducibility of results are described. Experimental data indicate the applicability of the presented testing device for relevant PEMWE component testing and material analysis.
Robot arms are one of many assistive technologies used by people with motor impairments. Assistive robot arms can allow people to perform activities of daily living (ADL) involving grasping and manipulating objects in their environment without the assistance of caregivers. Suitable input devices (e.g., joysticks) mostly have two Degrees of Freedom (DoF), while most assistive robot arms have six or more. This results in time-consuming and cognitively demanding mode switches to change the mapping of DoFs to control the robot. One option to decrease the difficulty of controlling a high-DoF assistive robot arm using a low-DoF input device is to assign different combinations of movement-DoFs to the device’s input DoFs depending on the current situation (adaptive control). To explore this method of control, we designed two adaptive control methods for a realistic virtual 3D environment. We evaluated our methods against a commonly used non-adaptive control method that requires the user to switch controls manually. This was conducted in a simulated remote study that used Virtual Reality and involved 39 non-disabled participants. Our results show that the number of mode switches necessary to complete a simple pick-and-place task decreases significantl when using an adaptive control type. In contrast, the task completion time and workload stay the same. A thematic analysis of qualitative feedback of our participants suggests that a longer period of training could further improve the performance of adaptive control methods.