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The following report followed three separate construction crews at a construction site at ASU and performed labor productivity analysis to quantitatively measure the efficiency of the workers performing specific tasks. These crews were tasked with electrical wiring, concrete pouring, and drywall sanding. Crew balance measured the down time of individual

The following report followed three separate construction crews at a construction site at ASU and performed labor productivity analysis to quantitatively measure the efficiency of the workers performing specific tasks. These crews were tasked with electrical wiring, concrete pouring, and drywall sanding. Crew balance measured the down time of individual crew members compared to the overall time spent on a task, and the results of these observations were calculated, and suggested improvements given.
ContributorsScollick, Evelyn (Author) / Grau, David (Thesis director) / Lamanna, Anthony (Committee member) / School of Film, Dance and Theatre (Contributor) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2020-05
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Description
It is common to use crumb rubber as modifier in bitumen. Good performance of crumb rubber in bitumen has been reported in terms of improving characteristics like higher skid resistance, reducing noise, higher rutting resistance and longevity. However, due to the vulcanization, the polymeric crosslinked structure of crumb rubber suffers

It is common to use crumb rubber as modifier in bitumen. Good performance of crumb rubber in bitumen has been reported in terms of improving characteristics like higher skid resistance, reducing noise, higher rutting resistance and longevity. However, due to the vulcanization, the polymeric crosslinked structure of crumb rubber suffers from inadequate dispersion and incompatibility in bitumen where storage stability becomes an issue. To solve this problem, partial surface devulcanization of the rubber via chemical and microbial surface activation was examined in this study showing both method can be effective to enhance rubber-bitumen interactions and subsequently storage stability of the rubberized bitumen. To ensure proper surface activation, it is important to thoroughly understand chemo-mechanics of bitumen containing rubber particles as well as underlying interaction mechanism at the molecular level. Therefore, this study integrates a multi-scale approach using density functional theory based computational modeling and laboratory experiments to provide an in-depth understanding of the mechanisms of interaction between surface activated rubber and bitumen. To do so, efficacy of various bio-modifiers was examined and compared it terms of both surface activation capability and durability of resulting rubberized bitumen. It was found that biomodifiers with various compositions can have either synergistic or antagonistic effect onchemo-mechanics of rubberized bitumen. The study was further extended to study the interplay of Polyphosphoric Acid (PPA) and these biomodified rubberized bitumens showing not all modifiers have high synergy with PPA in bitumens. Finally, durability of rubberized bitumen was studied in terms of its resistance to Ultraviolet (UV) aging. It was shown that there is a strong relation between composition of biomodified rubberized bitumen and its resistance to UV-aging.
ContributorsKabir, Sk Faisal (Author) / Fini, Elham (Thesis advisor) / Kaloush, Kamil (Committee member) / Lamanna, Anthony (Committee member) / Delgado, Anca (Committee member) / Poulikakos, Lily (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
The International Energy Agency (IEA) anticipates the global energy demand to grow by more than 25% by 2040, requiring more than $2 trillion a year of investment in new energy supply (IEA, 2018). With power needs increasing as populations grow and climate extremes become more routine, power companies seek to

The International Energy Agency (IEA) anticipates the global energy demand to grow by more than 25% by 2040, requiring more than $2 trillion a year of investment in new energy supply (IEA, 2018). With power needs increasing as populations grow and climate extremes become more routine, power companies seek to continually increase capacity, improve efficiency, and provide resilience to the power grid, such that they can meet the energy needs of the societies they serve, often while trying to minimize their carbon emissions. Despite significant research dedicated to planning for industrial projects, including power generation projects as well as the pipeline projects that enable power generation and distribute power, there are still endemic cost overruns and schedule delays in large scale power generation projects. This research explores root causes of these seemingly systemic project performance issues that plague power generation projects. Specifically, this work analyzes approximately 770 power and pipeline projects and identifies how project performance indicators (i.e., cost and schedule performance) as well as planning indicators, compare in two regulatory environments, namely nonregulated and regulated markets. This contributes explicit understanding of the relationship between project performance and regulatory environment, both quantitatively and qualitatively, to the pipeline and power project planning and construction bodies of knowledge. Following an understanding of nonregulated versus regulated markets, this research takes a deeper dive into one highly-regulated power sector, the nuclear power sector, and explores root causes for cost overruns and schedule delays. This work leverages gray literature (i.e., newspaper articles) as sources, in order to analyze projects individually (most academic literature presents data about an aggregated set of projects) and understand the public perception of risks associated with such projects. This work contributes an understanding of the risks associated with nuclear power plant construction to the nuclear power plant construction body of knowledge. Ultimately, the findings from this research support improved planning for power and pipeline projects, in turn leading to more predictable projects, in terms of cost and schedule performance, regardless of regulatory environment. This enables power providers to meet the capacity demands of a growing population within budget and schedule.
ContributorsSherman, Rachael Paige (Author) / Parrish, Kristen (Thesis advisor) / Gibson Jr., G. Edward (Committee member) / Lamanna, Anthony (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Virtual Reality (VR) has been used in the sphere of training and education in the construction field. Research has investigated the different applications of VR in construction-focused simulations to report its benefits and drawbacks in training and education. Although this is significant, they were not albeit explicitly studied through the

Virtual Reality (VR) has been used in the sphere of training and education in the construction field. Research has investigated the different applications of VR in construction-focused simulations to report its benefits and drawbacks in training and education. Although this is significant, they were not albeit explicitly studied through the lens of accreditation at undergraduate educational levels. The American Council for Construction Education (ACCE) established twenty Students Learning Outcomes (SLOs) that equip students with essential knowledge and industry-oriented technical and managerial skills that maintain quality education in undergraduate construction programs. This paper analyzes the trends in VR literature through reported benefits and unexplored learning outcomes of VR in construction training and education and investigates the ways by which these trends do or do not contribute to the learning experience by targeting the content areas associated with the ACCE’s SLOs. To accomplish this, the author reviewed 59 articles from 2014 to 2023 found through a keyword search for “Virtual” AND “Reality” AND “Construction” AND (“Training” OR “Simulation” OR “Education”) AND “Students”. The learning outcomes of the VR training reported in the 59 articles were mapped to their corresponding content areas from ACCE’s SLO(s). The results demonstrate the content areas of SLOs that were addressed in literature (1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16, 18, 19, and 20) and the SLOs that were not explored (4, 12, 14, and 17) due to lack of studies in some contexts. This study reveals trends and patterns of VR training, some of which exemplify benefits of addressing content areas of SLOs through virtual on-site immersion, manipulation of time, cost efficiency, and ethical measures, while others indicate unexplored learning outcomes of VR training in targeting content areas of SLOs that involve human interaction, complex quantitative calculations or require construction management tools, delivery method and stakeholders’ management, and risk management. While this research does not seek replacement of traditional trainings, it encourages consideration of VR training under the lens of ACCE’s accreditation. This research’s findings propose guidance to educational researchers on how VR training could address content areas from ACCE’s SLOs.
ContributorsElgamal, Sara (Author) / Ayer, Steven (Thesis advisor, Committee member) / Parrish, Kristen (Thesis advisor, Committee member) / Lamanna, Anthony (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023