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Publicações

Publicações por CRIIS

2013

Power management architecture for smart hip prostheses comprising multiple energy harvesting systems

Autores
Silva, NM; Santos, PM; Ferreira, JAF; Soares dos Santos, MPS; Ramos, A; Simoes, JAO; Reis, MJCS; Morais, R;

Publicação
SENSORS AND ACTUATORS A-PHYSICAL

Abstract
Energy harvesting solutions such as instrumented orthopaedic implants are under development to power a wide variety of electronic systems including biomedical implants. Three micro-power generators have already been developed as part of a smart hip prosthesis structure. This paper outlines a power management architecture for efficient harvesting of energy to supply power to modules other than those powered by current instrumented implants. Considering that it is impossible to predict the amount of energy harvested by each particular person, the proposed system also comprises an activation circuit and its ultracapacitor energy reservoir as a fourth type of energy to be used when a continuous energy source is needed. The hip prosthesis prototype has now the capability to energize more power demanding loads, intermittently or continuously, such as radio-frequency modules. The proposed architecture enables operation of a Bluetooth low energy (V4.0) embedded device (BLE112 from Bluegiga), part of a wireless body sensor network, up to 50 s, and a MSP430/eZ430-RF2500 (Texas Instruments), which uses the SimpliciTl communication protocol, up to 110 s, solely using the energy produced by one of the generators.

2013

The viStaMPS tool for visualization and manipulation of time series interferometric results

Autores
Sousa, JJ; Magalhaes, LG; Ruiz, AM; Sousa, AMR; Cardoso, G;

Publicação
COMPUTERS & GEOSCIENCES

Abstract
In the last decade, Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry (InSAR) has become operational as a technique that allows remote detection of deformation at the Earth's surface. Analysis of time series of SAR images extends the area where InSAR can be successfully applied and also permits detection of smaller displacements through the reduction of error sources. Stanford Method for Persistent Scatterers (StaMPS) InSAR implementation, which is based on the processing of multi-temporal SAR data, is widely used for ground deformation monitoring. This is due mainly to its proven reliability and freeware distribution among the scientific community. However, some issues can make the interpretation of the results a difficult task: StaMPS supports data processing based on command prompt, which increases the difficulty of usage by users not familiar with the specific programming language that supports StaMPS. Moreover, several visualization tasks are not implemented in the standard approach requiring that each user develop its own code for visualization and interpretation purposes. In this paper, we present viStaMPS, a new visual application developed to enhance the visualization, manipulation and exportation of StaMPS results. The programmed application is developed in Matlab through the Graphical User Interface (GUI) and no coding is required for running it, which avoids any programming language knowledge for standard uses. The included graphical interface is very versatile allowing the user to choose among several features: visualization, manipulation and exportation of data which are not available in the original StaMPS.

2013

The viStaMPS tool for visualization and manipulation of time series interferometric results

Autores
Sousa, JJ; Magalhães, LG; Ruiz, AM; Sousa, AMR; Cardoso, G;

Publicação
Comput. Geosci.

Abstract

2013

On analyzing the semantics of IEC61131 -3 ST and IL applications

Autores
de Sousa, M;

Publicação
Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering

Abstract
The IEC 61508 standard recognizes the programming languages defined in IEC 61131-3 as being appropriate for safety-related applications, and suggests the use of static analysis techniques to find errors in the source code. In this context, we have added a semantic verification stage to the MatIEC compiler—an open source ST, IL, and SFC code translator to ANSI C. In so doing, we have identified several issues related to the definition of the semantics of the IL and ST programming languages, as well as with the data type model defined in IEC 61131-3. Most of the issues are related to undefined semantics, which may result in applications generating distinct results, depending on the platform on which they are executed. In this paper we describe some of the issues we uncovered, explain the options we took, and suggest how the IEC 61131-3 standard could be made more explicit. © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2013.

2013

Protective Activity of Hydroxytyrosol Metabolites on Erythrocyte Oxidative-Induced Hemolysis

Autores
Paiva Martins, F; Silva, A; Almeida, V; Carvalheira, M; Serra, C; Rodrigues Borges, JE; Fernandes, J; Belo, L; Santos Silva, A;

Publicação
JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY

Abstract
The capacity of important hydroxytyrosol metabolites (homovanillyl alcohol, hydroxytyrosol acetate, homovanillyl alcohol acetate, hydroxytyrosol 3' and 4'-O-glucuronides, and homovanillyl alcohol 4'-O-glucuronide) to protect red blood cells (RBCs) from oxidative injury induced by the radical initiator 2,2'-azo-bis(2-amidinopropane) dihydrochloride (AAPH) or by the natural radical initiator H2O2 was evaluated. In the presence of AAPH, all compounds showed to protect RBCs from hemolysis in a dose-dependent manner, exccept for the homovanillyl alcohol glucuronide, with the order of activity being at 20 mu M hydroxytyrosol > hydroxytyrosol glucuronides = hydroxytyrosol acetate = homovanillyl alcohol = homovanillyl acetate > homovanillyl alcohol glucuronide. At 10 mu M, hydroxytyrosol, hydroxytyrosol acetate, and hydroxytyrosol glucuronides still protected hemoglobine from oxidation and from morphological RBC changes. In the presence of H2O2, hydroxytyrosol showed to significantly protect RBCs from oxidative hemolysis in a dose-dependent manner, but the hydroxytyrosol glucuronides showed only a limited protection that was independent of the concentration used.

2013

Project Management Success I-C-E Model – A Work in Progress

Autores
Marques, A; Varajão, J; Sousa, J; Peres, E;

Publicação
Procedia Technology

Abstract

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