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.

Displaying 1 - 10 of 72
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Description
Admittance control with fixed damping has been a successful control strategy in previous human-robotic interaction research. This research implements a variable damping admittance controller in a 7-DOF robotic arm coupled with a human subject’s arm at the end effector to study the trade-off of agility and stability and

Admittance control with fixed damping has been a successful control strategy in previous human-robotic interaction research. This research implements a variable damping admittance controller in a 7-DOF robotic arm coupled with a human subject’s arm at the end effector to study the trade-off of agility and stability and aims to produce a control scheme which displays both fast rise time and stability. The variable damping controller uses a measure of intent of movement to vary damping to aid the user’s movement to a target. The range of damping values is bounded by incorporating knowledge of a human arm to ensure the stability of the coupled human-robot system. Human subjects completed experiments with fixed positive, fixed negative, and variable damping controllers to evaluate the variable damping controller’s ability to increase agility and stability. Comparisons of the two fixed damping controllers showed as fixed damping increased, the coupled human-robot system reacted with less overshoot at the expense of rise time, which is used as a measure of agility. The inverse was also true; as damping became increasingly negative, the overshoot and stability of the system was compromised, while the rise time became faster. Analysis of the variable damping controller demonstrated humans could extract the benefits of the variable damping controller in its ability to increase agility in comparison to a positive damping controller and increase stability in comparison to a negative damping controller.
ContributorsBitz, Tanner Jacob (Author) / Lee, Hyunglae (Thesis advisor) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Committee member) / Yong, Sze Zheng (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Polylactic Acid (PLA), a thermoplastic polymer is well-known for its biocompatibility, making it ideal for the manufacturing of biomedical devices. However, the current applications of PLA are commonly limited by its intrinsic polymer characteristics, such as low modulus, mechanical strength, and thermal conductivity. To enhance these physical properties, a biocompatible

Polylactic Acid (PLA), a thermoplastic polymer is well-known for its biocompatibility, making it ideal for the manufacturing of biomedical devices. However, the current applications of PLA are commonly limited by its intrinsic polymer characteristics, such as low modulus, mechanical strength, and thermal conductivity. To enhance these physical properties, a biocompatible nanodiamond enhanced PLA filament has been studied. Thermogravimetric analysis was performed to unveil the composition of nanodiamond in the composite. Four printing parameters: nozzle temperature, layer height, infill pattern and printing speed were considered and the Taguchi L9 orthogonal array was implemented for the design of experiments. Fused deposition modeling (FDM) technique was utilized to 3D print the PLA/Nanodiamond samples by altering the four printing parameters considered and were tested according to the standards for tensile strength, flexural strength, and thermal conductivity. Using the Taguchi optimization approach and analysis of variance (ANOVA), the generated experimental data was used to find the optimum set of printing parameters. Finally, cell studies were performed to demonstrate the biocompatibility of PLA/Nanodiamond. All these results could aid in determining the working ranges for FDM fabrication of PLA/Nanodiamond for biomedical applications.
ContributorsPoornabodha, Nikhitha (Author) / Nian, Qiong (Thesis advisor) / Kang, Wonmo (Committee member) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) additive manufacturing (AM) has received widespread attention due to its ability to produce parts with complicated design and better surface finish compared to other additive techniques. LPBF uses a laser heat source to melt layers of powder particles and manufactures a part based on the

Laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) additive manufacturing (AM) has received widespread attention due to its ability to produce parts with complicated design and better surface finish compared to other additive techniques. LPBF uses a laser heat source to melt layers of powder particles and manufactures a part based on the CAD design. This process can benefit significantly through computational modeling. The objective of this thesis was to understand the thermal transport, and fluid flow phenomena of the process, and to optimize the main process parameters such as laser power and scan speed through a combination of computational, experimental, and statistical analysis. A multi-physics model was built using to model temperature profile, bead geometry and elemental evaporation in powder bed process using a non-gaussian interaction between laser heat source and metallic powder. Owing to the scarcity of thermo-physical properties of metallic powders in literature, thermal conductivity, diffusivity, and heat capacity was experimentally tested up to a temperature of 1400 degrees C. The values were used in the computational model, which improved the results significantly. The computational work was also used to assess the impact of fluid flow around melt pool. Dimensional analysis was conducted to determine heat transport mode at various laser power/scan speed combinations. Convective heat flow proved to be the dominant form of heat transfer at higher energy input due to violent flow of the fluid around the molten region, which can also create keyhole effect. The last part of the thesis focused on gaining useful information about several features of the bead area such as contact angle, porosity, voids and melt pool that were obtained using several combinations of laser power and scan speed. These features were quantified using process learning, which was then used to conduct a full factorial design that allows to estimate the effect of the process parameters on the output features. Both single and multi-response analysis are applied to analyze the output response. It was observed that laser power has more influential effect on all the features. Multi response analysis showed 150 W laser power and 200 mm/s produced bead with best possible features.
ContributorsAhsan, Faiyaz (Author) / Ladani, Leila (Thesis advisor) / Razmi, Jafar (Committee member) / Kwon, Beomjin (Committee member) / Nian, Qiong (Committee member) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
The ability for aerial manipulators to stay aloft while interacting with dynamic environments is critical for successfully in situ data acquisition methods in arboreal environments. One widely used platform utilizes a six degree of freedom manipulator attached to quadcoper or octocopter, to sample a tree leaf by maintaining the system

The ability for aerial manipulators to stay aloft while interacting with dynamic environments is critical for successfully in situ data acquisition methods in arboreal environments. One widely used platform utilizes a six degree of freedom manipulator attached to quadcoper or octocopter, to sample a tree leaf by maintaining the system in a hover while the arm pulls the leaf for a sample. Other system are comprised of simpler quadcopter with a fixed mechanical device to physically cut the leaf while the system is manually piloted. Neither of these common methods account or compensate for the variation of inherent dynamics occurring in the arboreal-aerial manipulator interaction effects. This research proposes force and velocity feedback methods to control an aerial manipulation platform while allowing waypoint navigation within the work space to take place. Using these methods requires minimal knowledge of the system and the dynamic parameters. This thesis outlines the Robot Operating System (ROS) based Open Autonomous Air Vehicle (OpenUAV) simulations performed on the purposed three degree of freedom redundant aerial manipulation platform.
ContributorsCohen, Daniel (Author) / Das, Jnaneshwar (Thesis advisor) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Committee member) / Saldaña, David (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Disordered many-body systems are ubiquitous in condensed matter physics, materials science and biological systems. Examples include amorphous and glassy states of matter, granular materials, and tissues composed of packings of cells in the extra-cellular matrix (ECM). Understanding the collective emergent properties in these systems is crucial to improving the capability

Disordered many-body systems are ubiquitous in condensed matter physics, materials science and biological systems. Examples include amorphous and glassy states of matter, granular materials, and tissues composed of packings of cells in the extra-cellular matrix (ECM). Understanding the collective emergent properties in these systems is crucial to improving the capability for controlling, engineering and optimizing their behaviors, yet it is extremely challenging due to their complexity and disordered nature. The main theme of the thesis is to address this challenge by characterizing and understanding a variety of disordered many-body systems via unique statistical geometrical and topological tools and the state-of-the-art simulation methods. Two major topics of the thesis are modeling ECM-mediated multicellular dynamics and understanding hyperuniformity in 2D material systems. Collective migration is an important mode of cell movement for several biological processes, and it has been the focus of a large number of studies over the past decades. Hyperuniform (HU) state is a critical state in a many-particle system, an exotic property of condensed matter discovered recently. The main focus of this thesis is to study the mechanisms underlying collective cell migration behaviors by developing theoretical/phenomenological models that capture the features of ECM-mediated mechanical communications in vitro and investigate general conditions that can be imposed on hyperuniformity-preserving and hyperuniformity-generating operations, as well as to understand how various novel transport physical properties arise from the unique hyperuniform long-range correlations.
ContributorsZheng, Yu (Author) / Jiao, Yang (Thesis advisor) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Beckstein, Oliver (Committee member) / Ros, Robert (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Autonomous systems inevitably must interact with other surrounding systems; thus, algorithms for intention/behavior estimation are of great interest. This thesis dissertation focuses on developing passive and active model discrimination algorithms (PMD and AMD) with applications to set-valued intention identification and fault detection for uncertain/bounded-error dynamical systems. PMD uses the obtained

Autonomous systems inevitably must interact with other surrounding systems; thus, algorithms for intention/behavior estimation are of great interest. This thesis dissertation focuses on developing passive and active model discrimination algorithms (PMD and AMD) with applications to set-valued intention identification and fault detection for uncertain/bounded-error dynamical systems. PMD uses the obtained input-output data to invalidate the models, while AMD designs an auxiliary input to assist the discrimination process. First, PMD algorithms are proposed for noisy switched nonlinear systems constrained by metric/signal temporal logic specifications, including systems with lossy data modeled by (m,k)-firm constraints. Specifically, optimization-based algorithms are introduced for analyzing the detectability/distinguishability of models and for ruling out models that are inconsistent with observations at run time. On the other hand, two AMD approaches are designed for noisy switched nonlinear models and piecewise affine inclusion models, which involve bilevel optimization with integer variables/constraints in the inner/lower level. The first approach solves the inner problem using mixed-integer parametric optimization, whose solution is included when solving the outer problem/higher level, while the second approach moves the integer variables/constraints to the outer problem in a manner that retains feasibility and recasts the problem as a tractable mixed-integer linear programming (MILP). Furthermore, AMD algorithms are proposed for noisy discrete-time affine time-invariant systems constrained by disjunctive and coupled safety constraints. To overcome the issues associated with generalized semi-infinite constraints due to state-dependent input constraints and disjunctive safety constraints, several constraint reformulations are proposed to recast the AMD problems as tractable MILPs. Finally, partition-based AMD approaches are proposed for noisy discrete-time affine time-invariant models with model-independent parameters and output measurement that are revealed at run time. Specifically, algorithms with fixed and adaptive partitions are proposed, where the latter improves on the performance of the former by allowing the partitions to be optimized. By partitioning the operation region, the problem is solved offline, and partition trees are constructed which can be used as a `look-up table' to determine the optimal input depending on revealed information at run time.
ContributorsNiu, Ruochen (Author) / Yong, Sze Zheng S.Z. (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Zhang, Wenlong (Committee member) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Tire blowout often occurs during driving, which can suddenly disturb vehicle motions and seriously threaten road safety. Currently, there is still a lack of effective methods to mitigate tire blowout risks in everyday traffic, even for automated vehicles. To fundamentally study and systematically resolve the tire blowout issue for automated

Tire blowout often occurs during driving, which can suddenly disturb vehicle motions and seriously threaten road safety. Currently, there is still a lack of effective methods to mitigate tire blowout risks in everyday traffic, even for automated vehicles. To fundamentally study and systematically resolve the tire blowout issue for automated vehicles, a collaborative project between General Motors (GM) and Arizona State University (ASU) has been conducted since 2018. In this dissertation, three main contributions of this project will be presented. First, to explore vehicle dynamics with tire blowout impacts and establish an effective simulation platform for close-loop control performance evaluation, high-fidelity tire blowout models are thoroughly developed by explicitly considering important vehicle parameters and variables. Second, since human cooperation is required to control Level 2/3 partially automated vehicles (PAVs), novel shared steering control schemes are specifically proposed for tire blowout to ensure safe vehicle stabilization via cooperative driving. Third, for Level 4/5 highly automated vehicles (HAVs) without human control, the development of control-oriented vehicle models, controllability study, and automatic control designs are performed based on impulsive differential systems (IDS) theories. Co-simulations Matlab/Simulink® and CarSim® are conducted to validate performances of all models and control designs proposed in this dissertation. Moreover, a scaled test vehicle at ASU and a full-size test vehicle at GM are well instrumented for data collection and control implementation. Various tire blowout experiments for different scenarios are conducted for more rigorous validations. Consequently, the proposed high-fidelity tire blowout models can correctly and more accurately describe vehicle motions upon tire blowout. The developed shared steering control schemes for PAVs and automatic control designs for HAVs can effectively stabilize a vehicle to maintain path following performance in the driving lane after tire blowout. In addition to new research findings and developments in this dissertation, a pending patent for tire blowout detection is also generated in the tire blowout project. The obtained research results have attracted interest from automotive manufacturers and could have a significant impact on driving safety enhancement for automated vehicles upon tire blowout.
ContributorsLi, Ao (Author) / Chen, Yan (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Kannan, Arunachala Mada (Committee member) / Liu, Yongming (Committee member) / Lin, Wen-Chiao (Committee member) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
For the past two centuries, coal has played a vital role as the primary carbon source, fueling industries and enabling the production of essential carbon-rich materials, including carbon nanotubes, graphite, and diamond. However, the global transition towards sustainable energy production has resulted in a decline in coal usage for energy

For the past two centuries, coal has played a vital role as the primary carbon source, fueling industries and enabling the production of essential carbon-rich materials, including carbon nanotubes, graphite, and diamond. However, the global transition towards sustainable energy production has resulted in a decline in coal usage for energy purposes, with the United States alone witnessing a substantial 50% reduction over the past decade. This shift aligns with the UN’s 2030 sustainability goals, which emphasize the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and the promotion of cleaner energy sources. Despite the decreased use in energy production, the abundance of coal has sparked interest in exploring its potential for other sustainable and valuable applications.In this context, Direct Ink Writing (DIW) has emerged as a promising additive manufacturing technique that employs liquid or gel-like resins to construct three-dimensional structures. DIW offers a unique advantage by allowing the incorporation of particulate reinforcements, which enhance the properties and functionalities of the materials. This study focuses on evaluating the viability of coal as a sustainable and cost-effective substitute for other carbon-based reinforcements, such as graphite or carbon nanotubes. The research utilizes a thermosetting resin based on phenol-formaldehyde (commercially known as Bakelite) as the matrix, while pulverized coal (250 µm) and carbon black (CB) function as the reinforcements. The DIW ink is meticulously formulated to exhibit shear-thinning behavior, facilitating uniform and continuous printing of structures. Mechanical property testing of the printed structures was conducted following ASTM standards. Interestingly, the study reveals that incorporating a 2 wt% concentration of coal in the resin yields the most significant improvements in tensile modulus and flexural strength, with enhancements of 35% and 12.5% respectively. These findings underscore the promising potential of coal as a sustainable and environmentally friendly reinforcement material in additive manufacturing applications. By harnessing the unique properties of coal, this research opens new avenues for its utilization in the pursuit of greener and more efficient manufacturing processes.
ContributorsSundaravadivelan, Barath (Author) / Song, Kenan (Thesis advisor) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Committee member) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Soft robotics has garnered attention for its substantial prospective in various domains, such as manipulation and interactions with humans, by offering competitive advantages against rigid robotic systems, including inherent compliance and variable stiffness. Despite these benefits, their theoretically infinite degrees of freedom and prominent nonlinearities pose significant challenges in developing

Soft robotics has garnered attention for its substantial prospective in various domains, such as manipulation and interactions with humans, by offering competitive advantages against rigid robotic systems, including inherent compliance and variable stiffness. Despite these benefits, their theoretically infinite degrees of freedom and prominent nonlinearities pose significant challenges in developing dynamic models and guiding the robots along desired paths. Additionally, soft robots may exhibit rigid behaviors and potentially collide with their surroundings during path tracking tasks, particularly when possible contact points are unknown. In this dissertation, reduced-order models are used to describe the behaviors of three different soft robot designs, including both linear parameter varying (LPV) and augmented rigid robot (ARR) models. While the reduced-order model captures the majority of the soft robot's dynamics, modeling uncertainties notably remain. Non-repeated modeling uncertainties are addressed by categorizing them as a lumped disturbance, employing two methodologies, $H_\infty$ method and nonlinear disturbance observer (NDOB) based sliding mode control, for its rejection. For repeated disturbances, an iterative learning control (ILC) with a P-type learning function is implemented to enhance trajectory tracking efficacy. Furthermore,for non-repeated disturbances, the NDOB facilitates the contact estimation, and its results are jointly used with a switching algorithm to modify the robot trajectories. The stability proof of all controllers and corresponding simulation and experimental results are provided. For a path tracking task of a soft robot with multi-segments, a robust control strategy that combines a LPV model with an innovative improved nonlinear disturbance observer-based adaptive sliding mode control (INASMC). The control framework employs a first-order LPV model for dynamic representation, leverages an improved disturbance observer for accurate disturbance forecasting, and utilizes adaptive sliding mode control to effectively counteract uncertainties. The tracking error under the proposed controller is proven to be asymptotically stable, and the controller's effectiveness is is validated with simulation and experimental results. Ultimately, this research mitigates the inherent uncertainty in soft robot modeling, thereby enhancing their functionality in contact-intensive tasks.
ContributorsQIAO, ZHI (Author) / Zhang, Wenlong (Thesis advisor) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Committee member) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Sugar, Thomas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Computing the fluid phase interfaces in multiphase flow is a challenging area of research in fluids. The Volume of Fluid andLevel Set methods are a few algorithms that have been developed for reconstructing the multiphase fluid flow interfaces. The thesis work focuses on exploring the ability of neural networks to reconstruct

Computing the fluid phase interfaces in multiphase flow is a challenging area of research in fluids. The Volume of Fluid andLevel Set methods are a few algorithms that have been developed for reconstructing the multiphase fluid flow interfaces. The thesis work focuses on exploring the ability of neural networks to reconstruct the multiphase fluid flow interfaces using a data-driven approach. The neural network model has liquid volume fraction stencils as an input, and it predicts the radius of the circle as an output of the network which represents a phase interface separating two immiscible fluids inside a fluid domain. The liquid volume fraction stencils are generated for randomly varying circle radii within a 1x1 domain using an open-source VOFI library. These datasets are used to train the neural network. Once the model is trained, the predicted circular phase interface from the neural network output is used to generate back the predicted liquid volume fraction stencils. Error norms values are calculated to assess the error in the neural network model’s predicted liquid volume fraction stencils with the actual liquid volume fraction stencils from the VOFI library. The neural network parameters are optimized by testing them for different hyper-parameters to reduce the error norms. So as to minimize the difference between the predicted and the actual liquid volume fraction stencils and errors in reconstructing the fluid phase interface geometry.
ContributorsPawar, Pranav Rajesh (Author) / Herrmann, Marcus (Thesis advisor) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Huang, Huei-Ping (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023