ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
- Arizona State University
- Huang, Huei-Ping
- 26 Herrmann, Marcus
- 13 Chen, Kangping
- 12 Calhoun, Ronald
- 9 Lee, Taewoo
- 8 Peet, Yulia
- more
- 8 Phelan, Patrick
- 5 Wang, Zhihua
- 4 Adrian, Ronald
- 4 Forzani, Erica
- 4 Lopez, Juan
- 3 Anderson, James
- 3 Clarke, Amanda
- 3 Kostelich, Eric
- 3 Mahalov, Alex
- 3 Rajagopalan, Jagannathan
- 3 Trimble, Steven
- 3 Vivoni, Enrique
- 2 Adrian, Ronald J
- 2 Adrian, Ronald J.
- 2 Ding, Liuyang
- 2 Kaloush, Kamil
- 2 Krishnamurthy, Raghavendra
- 2 Mascaro, Giuseppe
- 2 Moustaoui, Mohamed
- 2 Myint, Soe
- 2 Squires, Kyle
- 2 Tang, Wenbo
- 2 Wang, Liping
- 2 Wells, Valana
- 2 Yang, Jiachuan
- 1 Ahlf, Rick
- 1 Alajmi, Turki
- 1 Ansari, Adil
- 1 Artemiadis, Panagiotis K.
- 1 Bae, Kang-Sik
- 1 Baker, Noel Catherine
- 1 Ballesteros, Carlos Alberto
- 1 Booth, Stephanie
- 1 Bouey, Michael James
- 1 Calhoun, Ronald J
- 1 Calhoun, Ronald J.
- 1 Chandrashekar, Sriram
- 1 Chatterjee, Tanmoy
- 1 Chen, Kaangping
- 1 Chen, Kang P
- 1 Chen, Kang Ping
- 1 Chen, Kang-Ping
- 1 Choukulkar, Aditya
- 1 Dahm, Werner
- 1 Dahm, Werner J.A.
- 1 Fernando, Harindra J.S.
- 1 Frakes, David
- 1 Fraser, Matthew
- 1 Gandhi, Anurag
- 1 George, Sushant
- 1 Ghods, Sina
- 1 Gochis, David J
- 1 Gochis, David J.
- 1 Gupta, Sandeep
- 1 Hajiah, Ali
- 1 Hargrave, Kevin
- 1 Hermann, Marcus
- 1 Hu, Jueming
- 1 Jain, Gaurav
- 1 Jiao, Yang
- 1 Jindrich, Devin L.
- 1 Kadiyala, Yogesh Rao
- 1 Kailkhura, Gargi
- 1 Kamal, Samy M.
- 1 Kanjiyani, Shezan
- 1 Kannan, Arunachala
- 1 Kannan, Arunachala Mada
- 1 Kedelty, Dominic Sebastian
- 1 Kher, Aditya Deepak
- 1 Knutson, Brent
- 1 Kulkarni, Sujay
- 1 Lee, Jong Hwa
- 1 Lee, Joon Young
- 1 Lee, Tae-Woo
- 1 Li, Guoyi
- 1 Magerman, Beth
- 1 Mahon, Kelly Susan
- 1 Mangavelli, Sai Chaitanya
- 1 Mays, Larry
- 1 Mays, Larry W
- 1 Mays, Larry W.
- 1 Merrill, Brandon Earl
- 1 Middleton, James
- 1 Mirzamoghadam, Alexander
- 1 Mittelmann, Hans
- 1 Mode, Jeffrey Michael
- 1 Moradi, Ali
- 1 Moreno, Hernan A.
- 1 Mudunur, Santosh shekar
- 1 Nagarajan, Venkatraman
- 1 Oliden, Daniel Oscar
- 1 Oswald, Jay
- 1 Ou, Che Wei
- 64 English
- 39 Masters Thesis
- 25 Doctoral Dissertation
- 2 Moving Image
- 1 Image
- 64 Public
- 31 Mechanical engineering
- 14 Aerospace engineering
- 10 Atmospheric sciences
- 6 Engineering
- 5 Fluid mechanics
- 5 Mechanical Engineering
- 5 Physics
- more
- 4 Climate change
- 4 Energy
- 4 Hydrologic sciences
- 4 Meteorology
- 3 Aerospace Engineering
- 3 Computational Fluid Dynamics
- 3 Computational physics
- 3 Environmental science
- 3 Turbulence
- 2 Acoustics
- 2 Atomization
- 2 Computer science
- 2 Environmental engineering
- 2 Lidar
- 2 Spectral Element Method
- 2 Sustainability
- 2 Water resources management
- 2 cfd
- 2 climate change
- 2 computational
- 2 computational fluid dynamics
- 1 ANSYS fluent
- 1 Aerospike
- 1 Ansys
- 1 Antenna Pointing Mechanism
- 1 Applied Mathematics
- 1 Applied mathematics
- 1 Aral Sea
- 1 Astronomy
- 1 Atmosphere
- 1 Atmospheric Angular Momentum
- 1 Atmospheric modelling
- 1 Autonomic Closure
- 1 Base Bleed
- 1 Biomechanics
- 1 Biomedical engineering
- 1 Boundary Layer Studies
- 1 Building Energy
- 1 CFD
- 1 CMIP
- 1 CMIP5
- 1 COAMPS
- 1 Channel flow
- 1 Civil engineering
- 1 Climate downscaling
- 1 Climate modeling
- 1 Closure Stress
- 1 Compaction
- 1 Compressed Sensing
- 1 Compressible
- 1 Computational fluid dynamics
- 1 Cooling Delay
- 1 Correlation
- 1 Data Assimilation
- 1 Decadal variability
- 1 Deflagration
- 1 Desert Cities
- 1 Detonation
- 1 Direct Numerical Simulations
- 1 Doppler Lidar
- 1 Downscaling
- 1 Dust Generation
- 1 Dynamic Stall
- 1 Dynamic mesh
- 1 Elliptic Fracture
- 1 Energy conservation measures
- 1 Energy outlook
- 1 Energy policy
- 1 Energy scenarios
- 1 Environmental Engineering
- 1 Environmental Flow
- 1 Environmental studies
- 1 Evaporation
- 1 FLUENT
- 1 Field Experiments
- 1 Floating objects
- 1 Flood forecasting
- 1 Flow Transition
- 1 Fluid Acceleration Measurement
- 1 Fluid Mechanics
- 1 Fluid process
- 1 Fracking
- 1 Freeway Noise
- 1 Friction Velocity
- 1 Geometric Transport
- 1 Geophysical engineering
- 1 Granular
- 1 Groundwater Estimation
- 1 HMX
- 1 Hairpin vortices
- 1 High Density Ratio
- 1 Hydraulic Resistance
- 1 Hydrocode
- Dwarf Galaxies as Laboratories of Protogalaxy Physics: Canonical Star Formation Laws at Low Metallicity
- Evolutionary Genetics of CORL Proteins
- Social Skills and Executive Functioning in Children with PCDH-19
- Deep Domain Fusion for Adaptive Image Classification
- Software Defined Pulse-Doppler Radar for Over-The-Air Applications: The Joint Radar-Communications Experiment
The goal of this paper was to do an analysis of two-dimensional unsplit mass and momentum conserving Finite Volume Methods for Advection for Volume of Fluid Fields with interfaces and validating their rates of convergence. Specifically three unsplit transport methods and one split transport method were amalgamated individually with four Piece-wise Linear Reconstruction Schemes (PLIC) i.e. Unsplit Eulerian Advection (UEA) by Owkes and Desjardins (2014), Unsplit Lagrangian Advection (ULA) by Yang et al. (2010), Split Lagrangian Advection (SLA) by Scardovelli and Zaleski (2003) and Unsplit Averaged Eulerian-Lagrangian Advection (UAELA) with two Finite Difference Methods by Parker and Youngs (1992) and …
- Contributors
- Ansari, Adil, Herrmann, Marcus, Peet, Yulia, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
The Volume-of-Fluid method is a popular method for interface tracking in Multiphase applications within Computational Fluid Dynamics. To date there exists several algorithms for reconstruction of a geometric interface surface. Of these are the Finite Difference algorithm, Least Squares Volume-of-Fluid Interface Reconstruction Algorithm, LVIRA, and the Efficient Least Squares Volume-of-Fluid Interface Reconstruction Algorithm, ELVIRA. Along with these geometric interface reconstruction algorithms, there exist several volume-of-fluid transportation algorithms. This paper will discuss two operator-splitting advection algorithms and an unsplit advection algorithm. Using these three interface reconstruction algorithms, and three advection algorithms, a comparison will be drawn to see how different combinations …
- Contributors
- Kedelty, Dominic Sebastian, Herrmann, Marcus, Huang, Huei-Ping, et al.
- Created Date
- 2015
Multi-touch tablets and smart phones are now widely used in both workplace and consumer settings. Interacting with these devices requires hand and arm movements that are potentially complex and poorly understood. Experimental studies have revealed differences in performance that could potentially be associated with injury risk. However, underlying causes for performance differences are often difficult to identify. For example, many patterns of muscle activity can potentially result in similar behavioral output. Muscle activity is one factor contributing to forces in tissues that could contribute to injury. However, experimental measurements of muscle activity and force for humans are extremely challenging. Models …
- Contributors
- Lee, Jong Hwa, Jindrich, Devin L., Artemiadis, Panagiotis K., et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
This dissertation introduces FARCOM (Fortran Adaptive Refiner for Cartesian Orthogonal Meshes), a new general library for adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) based on an unstructured hexahedral mesh framework. As a result of the underlying unstructured formulation, the refinement and coarsening operators of the library operate on a single-cell basis and perform in-situ replacement of old mesh elements. This approach allows for h-refinement without the memory and computational expense of calculating masked coarse grid cells, as is done in traditional patch-based AMR approaches, and enables unstructured flow solvers to have access to the automated domain generation capabilities usually only found in tree …
- Contributors
- Ballesteros, Carlos Alberto, Herrmann, Marcus, Adrian, Ronald, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
A new method of adaptive mesh generation for the computation of fluid flows is investigated. The method utilizes gradients of the flow solution to adapt the size and stretching of elements or volumes in the computational mesh as is commonly done in the conventional Hessian approach. However, in the new method, higher-order gradients are used in place of the Hessian. The method is applied to the finite element solution of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations on model problems. Results indicate that a significant efficiency benefit is realized. Dissertation/Thesis
- Contributors
- Shortridge, Randall Raymond, Chen, Kang Ping, Herrmann, Marcus, et al.
- Created Date
- 2011
The flow of liquid PDMS (10:1 v/v base to cross-linker ratio) in open, rectangular silicon micro channels, with and without a hexa-methyl-di-silazane (HMDS) or poly-tetra-fluoro-ethylene (PTFE) (120 nm) coat, was studied. Photolithographic patterning and etching of silicon wafers was used to create micro channels with a range of widths (5-50 μm) and depths (5-20 μm). The experimental PDMS flow rates were compared to an analytical model based on the work of Lucas and Washburn. The experimental flow rates closely matched the predicted flow rates for channels with an aspect ratio (width to depth), p, between one and two. Flow rates …
- Contributors
- Sowers, Timothy Wayne, Rajagopalan, Jagannathan, Herrmann, Marcus, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
Climate change has been one of the major issues of global economic and social concerns in the past decade. To quantitatively predict global climate change, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) of the United Nations have organized a multi-national effort to use global atmosphere-ocean models to project anthropogenically induced climate changes in the 21st century. The computer simulations performed with those models and archived by the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project - Phase 5 (CMIP5) form the most comprehensive quantitative basis for the prediction of global environmental changes on decadal-to-centennial time scales. While the CMIP5 archives have been widely used …
- Contributors
- Kulkarni, Sujay, Huang, Huei-Ping, Calhoun, Ronald, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
ABSTRACT A large fraction of the total energy consumption in the world comes from heating and cooling of buildings. Improving the energy efficiency of buildings to reduce the needs of seasonal heating and cooling is one of the major challenges in sustainable development. In general, the energy efficiency depends on the geometry and material of the buildings. To explore a framework for accurately assessing this dependence, detailed 3-D thermofluid simulations are performed by systematically sweeping the parameter space spanned by four parameters: the size of building, thickness and material of wall, and fractional size of window. The simulations incorporate realistic …
- Contributors
- Jain, Gaurav, Huang, Huei-Ping, Ren, Yi, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) simulation is the industry standard for computing practical turbulent flows -- since large eddy simulation (LES) and direct numerical simulation (DNS) require comparatively massive computational power to simulate even relatively simple flows. RANS, like LES, requires that a user specify a “closure model” for the underlying turbulence physics. However, despite more than 60 years of research into turbulence modeling, current models remain largely unable to accurately predict key aspects of the complex turbulent flows frequently encountered in practical engineering applications. Recently a new approach, termed “autonomic closure”, has been developed for LES that avoids the need to …
- Contributors
- Ahlf, Rick, Dahm, Werner J.A., Wells, Valana, et al.
- Created Date
- 2017
This study uses Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) modeling to analyze the dependence of wind power potential and turbulence intensity on aerodynamic design of a special type of building with a nuzzle-like gap at its rooftop. Numerical simulations using ANSYS Fluent are carried out to quantify the above-mentioned dependency due to three major geometric parameters of the building: (i) the height of the building, (ii) the depth of the roof-top gap, and (iii) the width of the roof-top gap. The height of the building is varied from 8 m to 24 m. Likewise, the gap depth is varied from 3 m …
- Contributors
- Kailkhura, Gargi, Huang, Huei-Ping, Rajagopalan, Jagannathan, et al.
- Created Date
- 2017