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.
Filtering by
- Creators: Jiao, Yang
- Creators: Shen, Wei
- Creators: Wang, Robert
In order to enhance the attenuation contrast observed in multi-phase material systems, a modeling approach has been developed to predict settings for the controllable imaging parameters which yield relatively high detection rates over the range of x-ray energies for which maximum attenuation contrast is expected in the polychromatic x-ray imaging system. In order to develop this predictive tool, a model has been constructed for the Bremsstrahlung spectrum of an x-ray tube, and calculations for the detector's efficiency over the relevant range of x-ray energies have been made, and the product of emitted and detected spectra has been used to calculate the effective x-ray imaging spectrum. An approach has also been established for filtering `zinger' noise in x-ray radiographs, which has proven problematic at high x-ray energies used for solder imaging. The performance of this filter has been compared with a known existing method and the results indicate a significant increase in the accuracy of zinger filtered radiographs.
The obtained results indicate the conception of a powerful means for the study of failure causing processes in solder systems used as interconnects in microelectronic packaging devices. These results include the volumetric quantification of parameters which are indicative of both electromigration tolerance of solders and the dominant mechanisms for atomic migration in response to current stressing. This work is aimed to further the community's understanding of failure-causing electromigration processes in industrially relevant material systems for microelectronic interconnect applications and to advance the capability of available characterization techniques for their interrogation.
ure of merit (zT) due to quantum connement eects. Improving the eciency of
thermoelectric devices allows for the development of better, more economical waste
heat recovery systems. Such systems may be used as bottoming or co-generation
cycles in conjunction with conventional power cycles to recover some of the wasted
heat. Thermal conductivity measurement systems are an important part of the char-
acterization processes of thermoelectric materials. These systems must possess the
capability of accurately measuring the thermal conductivity of both bulk and thin-lm
samples at dierent ambient temperatures.
This paper discusses the construction, validation, and improvement of a thermal
conductivity measurement platform based on the 3-Omega technique. Room temperature
measurements of thermal conductivity done on control samples with known properties
such as undoped bulk silicon (Si), bulk gallium arsenide (GaAs), and silicon dioxide
(SiO2) thin lms yielded 150 W=m􀀀K, 50 W=m􀀀K, and 1:46 W=m􀀀K respectively.
These quantities were all within 8% of literature values. In addition, the thermal
conductivity of bulk SiO2 was measured as a function of temperature in a Helium-
4 cryostat from 75K to 250K. The results showed good agreement with literature
values that all fell within the error range of each measurement. The uncertainty in
the measurements ranged from 19% at 75K to 30% at 250K. Finally, the system
was used to measure the room temperature thermal conductivity of a nanocomposite
composed of cadmium selenide, CdSe, nanocrystals in an indium selenide, In2Se3,
matrix as a function of the concentration of In2Se3. The observed trend was in
qualitative agreement with the expected behavior.
i
Here, this research extends that exploratory work in an effort to determine if hfg of aqueous nanofluids can be manipulated, i.e., increased or decreased, by the addition of graphite or silver nanoparticles. Our results to date indicate that hfg can be substantially impacted, by up to ± 30% depending on the type of nanoparticle. Moreover, this dissertation reports further experiments with changing surface area based on volume fraction (0.005% to 2%) and various nanoparticle sizes to investigate the mechanisms for hfg modification in aqueous graphite and silver nanofluids. This research also investigates thermophysical properties, i.e., density and surface tension in aqueous nanofluids to support the experimental results of hfg based on the Clausius - Clapeyron equation. This theoretical investigation agrees well with the experimental results. Furthermore, this research investigates the hfg change of aqueous nanofluids with nanoscale studies in terms of melting of silver nanoparticles and hydrophobic interactions of graphite nanofluid. As a result, the entropy change due to those mechanisms could be a main cause of the changes of hfg in silver and graphite nanofluids.
Finally, applying the latent heat results of graphite and silver nanofluids to an actual solar thermal system to identify enhanced performance with a Rankine cycle is suggested to show that the tunable latent heat of vaporization in nanofluilds could be beneficial for real-world solar thermal applications with improved efficiency.