Dias, Ricardo, João Louren{\c c}o, and Gon{\c c}alo Cunha. "
Developing libraries using software transactional memory."
Comput. Sci. Inf. Syst.. 5 (2008): 103-117.
AbstractSoftware transactional memory is a promising programming model that adapts many concepts borrowed from the databases world to control concurrent accesses to main memory (RAM). This paper discusses how to support revertible operations, such as memory allocation and release, within software libraries that will be used in software memory transactional contexts. The proposal is based in the extension of the transaction life cycle state diagram with new states associated to the execution of user-defined handlers. The proposed approach is evaluated in terms of functionality and performance by way of a use case study and performance tests. Results demonstrate that the proposal and its current implementation are flexible, generic and efficient
Dias, Ricardo, João Louren{\c c}o, and Gon{\c c}alo Cunha. "
Developing Libraries Using Software Transactional Memory."
CoRTA 2008: Proceedings of the Conference on Compilers, Related Technologies and Applications. Instituto Politécnico de Bragan{\c c}a - ESTG, 2008.
AbstractSoftware transactional memory (STM) is a promising programming model that adapts many concepts borrowed from the databases world to control concurrent accesses to main memory (RAM) locations. This paper aims at discussing how to support apparently irreversible operations within a memory transaction.
Monteiro, R. C. C., M. M. R. A. Lima, and C. S. Clemente. "
Development of structural ceramics from fly ash and shale."
Materials Science Forum. 587-588 (2008): 787-791.
AbstractThe possibility of using fly ash and shale as alternative raw materials for the production of structural ceramics was investigated. Fly ash is a by-product from coal-burning power plants, and shale is a sedimentary rock that if ground finely enough can exhibit a clay-like plasticity. Ceramic samples containing 10-50 wt% fly ash were formed from mechanical mixing of both kinds of powders that were packed and sintered in the temperature range 950-1200°C It was verified that powders with larger fly ash content exhibited lower packing density resulting in compacts with a lower sintered density. Although an increase in fly ash content was associated to a larger presence of porosity in the sintered samples, as confirmed by microstructural analysis, all studied compositions when sintered at the highest temperatures exhibited satisfactory values for water absorption (< 10%), for flexural strength (20-64 MPa) and for hardness (20-30 GPa) indicating that they have potential to be applied in the production of structural ceramics.
Lanca, M. C., S. Peuckert, E. R. Neagu, L. Gil, P. C. Silva, and J. Marat-Mendes. "
Electrical Properties Studies of a Cork/TetraPak (R)/Paraffin Wax Composite."
Advanced Materials Forum Iv. Eds. AT Marques, AF Silva, APM Baptista, C. Sa, FJLA Alves, LF Malheiros, and M. Vieira. Vol. 587-588. Materials Science Forum, 587-588. 2008. 613-617.
AbstractLately the electrical and dielectric properties of cork and some cork-based materials (commercial and non-commercial) have been studied in order to understand their ability to store electrical charge. The main problem found so far is related to the water content in cork, only of a few % weight. but large enough to influence greatly the conductivity of cork and, consequently, the charge storage capability. To overcome this problem cork has been combined with hydrophobic materials. In this work a commercial wax (paraffin wax) was used to produce a cork/paraffin composite by hot pressing. After milled and mixed natural cork. TetraPak (R) containers waste and paraffin were pressed to make plaques of a new composite. Different concentrations of cork. TetraPak (R) and paraffin, different granules sire, different temperature and pressure were used to produce the samples. The electrical properties of the new composite were measured by the isothermal charging and discharging current method and the results compared to previously ones obtained for natural cork and other derivative products. The new composite has shown to have lower conductivity than the commercial agglomerate. which makes it a better material for charge storage.
Lanca, M. C., S. Peuckert, E. R. Neagu, L. Gil, P. C. Silva, and J. Marat-Mendes. "
Electrical Properties Studies of a Cork/TetraPak (R)/Paraffin Wax Composite."
Advanced Materials Forum Iv. 587-588 (2008): 613-617.
AbstractLately the electrical and dielectric properties of cork and some cork-based materials (commercial and non-commercial) have been studied in order to understand their ability to store electrical charge. The main problem found so far is related to the water content in cork, only of a few % weight. but large enough to influence greatly the conductivity of cork and, consequently, the charge storage capability. To overcome this problem cork has been combined with hydrophobic materials. In this work a commercial wax (paraffin wax) was used to produce a cork/paraffin composite by hot pressing. After milled and mixed natural cork. TetraPak (R) containers waste and paraffin were pressed to make plaques of a new composite. Different concentrations of cork. TetraPak (R) and paraffin, different granules sire, different temperature and pressure were used to produce the samples. The electrical properties of the new composite were measured by the isothermal charging and discharging current method and the results compared to previously ones obtained for natural cork and other derivative products. The new composite has shown to have lower conductivity than the commercial agglomerate. which makes it a better material for charge storage.
Lanca, Carmo M., Stefan Peuckert, Eugen R. Neagu, Luis Gil, Paulo C. Silva, and Jose Marat-Mendes. "
Electrical Properties Studies of a Cork/TetraPak (R)/Paraffin Wax Composite."
Advanced Materials Forum Iv. Eds. AT Marques, AF Silva, APM Baptista, C. Sa, FJLA Alves, LF Malheiros, and M. Vieira. Vol. 587-588. Materials Science Forum, 587-588. 2008. 613-617.
AbstractLately the electrical and dielectric properties of cork and some cork-based materials (commercial and non-commercial) have been studied in order to understand their ability to store electrical charge. The main problem found so far is related to the water content in cork, only of a few % weight. but large enough to influence greatly the conductivity of cork and, consequently, the charge storage capability. To overcome this problem cork has been combined with hydrophobic materials. In this work a commercial wax (paraffin wax) was used to produce a cork/paraffin composite by hot pressing. After milled and mixed natural cork. TetraPak (R) containers waste and paraffin were pressed to make plaques of a new composite. Different concentrations of cork. TetraPak (R) and paraffin, different granules sire, different temperature and pressure were used to produce the samples. The electrical properties of the new composite were measured by the isothermal charging and discharging current method and the results compared to previously ones obtained for natural cork and other derivative products. The new composite has shown to have lower conductivity than the commercial agglomerate. which makes it a better material for charge storage.
Lanca, Carmo M., Stefan Peuckert, Eugen R. Neagu, Luis Gil, Paulo C. Silva, Jose Marat-Mendes, AT Marques, AF Silva, APM Baptista, C. Sa, FJLA Alves, LF Malheiros, and M. Vieira. "
Electrical Properties Studies of a Cork/TetraPak (R)/Paraffin Wax Composite."
Advanced Materials Forum Iv. Vol. 587-588. 2008. 613-617.
Abstractn/a
Neagu, R. M., E. R. Neagu, M. C. Lanca, and J. N. Marat-Mendes. "
New Experimental Facts Concerning the Thermally Stimulated Discharge Current in Dielectric Materials."
Advanced Materials Forum Iv. Eds. AT Marques, AF Silva, APM Baptista, C. Sa, FJLA Alves, LF Malheiros, and M. Vieira. Vol. 587-588. Materials Science Forum, 587-588. 2008. 328-332.
AbstractThe thermally stimulated discharge current (TSDC.) method is a very sensitive and a very selective technique to analyze dipole disorientation and the movement of de-trapped space charge (SC). We have proposed a variant of the TSDC method, namely the final thermally stimulated discharge current (FTSDC) technique. flee experimental conditions can be selected so that the FTSDC is mainly determined by the SC de-trapping. The temperatures of the maximum intensity of the fractional polarization peaks obtained at low temperature, in the range of the local (secondary) relaxation, are in general about 10 to 20 K above the poling temperature. Measurements of the FTSDC in a wide temperature range demonstrate the existence of an apparent peak at a temperature T-ma shifted with about 10 to 30 K above the charging temperature T-c. The shift of T-ma with respect to T-c depends on the experimental conditions. The peak width at the half maximum intensity decreases as T-c increases and the thermal apparent activation energy increases. The variations are not monotonous revealing the temperature range where the molecular motion is stronger and consequently the charge trapping and de-trapping processes are affected. Our results demonstrate that there is a strong similarity between the elementary peaks obtained by the two methods, and the current is mainly determined by SC de-trapping. Even the best elementary peaks are not fitted very well by the analytical equation, indicating that the hypothesis behind this equation have to be reconsidered.
Neagu, R. M., E. R. Neagu, Carmo M. Lanca, and J. N. Marat-Mendes. "
New Experimental Facts Concerning the Thermally Stimulated Discharge Current in Dielectric Materials."
Advanced Materials Forum Iv. Eds. AT Marques, AF Silva, APM Baptista, C. Sa, FJLA Alves, LF Malheiros, and M. Vieira. Vol. 587-588. Materials Science Forum, 587-588. 2008. 328-332.
AbstractThe thermally stimulated discharge current (TSDC.) method is a very sensitive and a very selective technique to analyze dipole disorientation and the movement of de-trapped space charge (SC). We have proposed a variant of the TSDC method, namely the final thermally stimulated discharge current (FTSDC) technique. flee experimental conditions can be selected so that the FTSDC is mainly determined by the SC de-trapping. The temperatures of the maximum intensity of the fractional polarization peaks obtained at low temperature, in the range of the local (secondary) relaxation, are in general about 10 to 20 K above the poling temperature. Measurements of the FTSDC in a wide temperature range demonstrate the existence of an apparent peak at a temperature T-ma shifted with about 10 to 30 K above the charging temperature T-c. The shift of T-ma with respect to T-c depends on the experimental conditions. The peak width at the half maximum intensity decreases as T-c increases and the thermal apparent activation energy increases. The variations are not monotonous revealing the temperature range where the molecular motion is stronger and consequently the charge trapping and de-trapping processes are affected. Our results demonstrate that there is a strong similarity between the elementary peaks obtained by the two methods, and the current is mainly determined by SC de-trapping. Even the best elementary peaks are not fitted very well by the analytical equation, indicating that the hypothesis behind this equation have to be reconsidered.
Neagu, R. M., E. R. Neagu, Carmo M. Lanca, J. N. Marat-Mendes, AT Marques, AF Silva, APM Baptista, C. Sa, FJLA Alves, LF Malheiros, and M. Vieira. "
New Experimental Facts Concerning the Thermally Stimulated Discharge Current in Dielectric Materials."
Advanced Materials Forum Iv. Vol. 587-588. 2008. 328-332.
Abstractn/a
Dikaiakos, Marios, Omer Rana, Shmuel Ur, and João Louren{\c c}o. "
Topic 1: Support Tools and Environments."
Euro-Par 2008 Parallel Processing. Vol. 5168. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 5168. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, 2008. 1-2.
AbstractThe spread of systems that provide parallelism either ‘‘in-the-large’’ (grid infrastructures, clusters) or ‘‘in-the-small’’ (multi-core chips), creates new opportunities for exploiting parallelism in a wider spectrum of application domains. However, the increasing complexity of parallel and distributed platforms renders the programming, the use, and the management of these systems a costly endeavor that requires advanced expertise and skills. Therefore, there is an increasing need for powerful support tools and environments that will help end-users, application programmers, software engineers and system administrators to manage the increasing complexity of parallel and distributed platforms.
Dikaiakos, Marios, Omer Rana, Shmuel Ur, and João M. Lourenço. "
Topic 1: Support Tools and Environments."
Euro-Par 2008 Parallel Processing. Vol. 5168. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 5168. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, 2008. 1-2.
AbstractThe spread of systems that provide parallelism either «in-the-large» (grid infrastructures, clusters) or «in-the-small» (multi-core chips), creates new opportunities for exploiting parallelism in a wider spectrum of application domains. However, the increasing complexity of parallel and distributed platforms renders the programming, the use, and the management of these systems a costly endeavor that requires advanced expertise and skills. Therefore, there is an increasing need for powerful support tools and environments that will help end-users, application programmers, software engineers and system administrators to manage the increasing complexity of parallel and distributed platforms.
Lima, M. M. R. A., and R. C. C. Monteiro. "
Viscous sintering in a glass-alumina system."
Materials Science Forum. 587-588 (2008): 143-147.
AbstractThe densification during sintering of borosilicate glass matrix composites with 25 vol. % alumina (Al2O3) particles was investigated. The powder compacts, isostatically pressed at 200 MPa, were sintered at a temperature within the range 800-1000° C and maintained at this temperature during various times. The sintering behaviour of the composites was investigated by density measurement and by axial and radial shrinkage measurements. The crystalline phases present in the sintered composites were identified by XRD and the microstructure was analyzed by SEM. For temperatures up to 900°C, the relative density of the composites increased continuously with sintering temperature and sintering time, while for higher temperatures, the density increased rapidly and then slowed down to achieve a nearly constant value after sintering the composites for 30 minutes. The composites exhibited isotropic shrinkage behaviour when sintered at 800°C and 850°C, but at higher temperatures slightly higher axial shrinkage than radial shrinkage was observed. The shrinkage behaviour and microstructural characteristics of the composites indicate that densification during sintering can be attributed to the viscous flow of the borosilicate glass.