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EIoT (Hardcover)
Amro M. Farid, Steffi O. Muhanji, Alison E. Flint
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R1,351
Discovery Miles 13 510
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book provides a synthesis of recent developments in Axiomatic
Design theory and its application in large complex systems.
Introductory chapters provide concise tutorial materials for
graduate students and new practitioners, presenting the
fundamentals of Axiomatic Design and relating its key concepts to
those of model-based systems engineering. A mathematical exposition
of design axioms is also provided. The main body of the book, which
represents a concentrated treatment of several applications, is
divided into three parts covering work on: complex products;
buildings; and manufacturing systems. The book shows how design
work in these areas can benefit from the scientific and systematic
underpinning provided by Axiomatic Design, and in so doing
effectively combines the state of the art in design research with
practice. All contributions were written by an international group
of leading proponents of Axiomatic Design. The book concludes with
a call to action motivating further research into the engineering
design of large complex systems.
Cities have always played a prominent role in the prosperity of
civilization. Indeed, every great civilization we can think of is
associated with the prominence of one or more thriving cities. And
so understanding cities -- their inhabitants, their institutions,
their infrastructure -- what they are and how they work
independently and together -- is of fundamental importance to our
collective growth as a human civilization. Furthermore, the 21st
century "smart" city, as a result global climate change and
large-scale urbanization, will emerge as a societal grand
challenge. This book focuses on the role of interdependent
infrastructure systems in such smart cities especially as it
relates to timely and poignant questions about resilience and
sustainability. In particular, the goal of this book is to present,
in one volume, a consistent Hetero-Functional Graph Theoretic
(HFGT) treatment of interdependent smart city infrastructures as an
overarching application domain of engineering systems. This work
may be contrasted to the growing literature on multi-layer
networks, which despite significant theoretical advances in recent
years, has modeling limitations that prevent their real-world
application to interdependent smart city infrastructures of
arbitrary topology. In contrast, this book demonstrates that HFGT
can be applied extensibly to an arbitrary number of arbitrarily
connected topologies of interdependent smart city infrastructures.
It also integrates, for the first time, all six matrices of HFGT in
a single system adjacency matrix. The book makes every effort to be
accessible to a broad audience of infrastructure system
practitioners and researchers (e.g. electric power system planners,
transportation engineers, and hydrologists, etc.). Consequently,
the book has extensively visualized the graph theoretic concepts
for greater intuition and clarity. Nevertheless, the book does
require a common methodological base of its readers and directs
itself to the Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) community and
the Network Science Community (NSC). To the MBSE community, we hope
that HFGT will be accepted as a quantification of many of the
structural concepts found in model-based systems engineering
languages like SysML. To the NSC, we hope to present a new view as
how to construct graphs with fundamentally different meaning and
insight. Finally, it is our hope that HFGT serves to overcome many
of the theoretical and modeling limitations that have hindered our
ability to systematically understand the structure and function of
smart cities.
This open access book explores the collision between the
sustainable energy transition and the Internet of Things (IoT). In
that regard, this book's arrival is timely. Not only is the
Internet of Things for energy applications, herein called the
energy Internet of Things (eIoT), rapidly developing but also the
transition towards sustainable energy to abate global climate is
very much at the forefront of public discourse. It is within the
context of these two dynamic thrusts, digitization and global
climate change, that the energy industry sees itself undergoing
significant change in how it is operated and managed. This book
recognizes that they impose five fundamental energy management
change drivers: 1.) the growing demand for electricity, 2.) the
emergence of renewable energy resources, 3.) the emergence of
electrified transportation, 4.) the deregulation of electric power
markets, 5.) and innovations in smart grid technology. Together,
they challenge many of the assumptions upon which the electric grid
was first built. The goal of this book is to provide a single
integrated picture of how eIoT can come to transform our energy
infrastructure. This book links the energy management change
drivers mentioned above to the need for a technical energy
management solution. It, then, describes how eIoT meets many of the
criteria required for such a technical solution. In that regard,
the book stresses the ability of eIoT to add sensing,
decision-making, and actuation capabilities to millions or perhaps
even billions of interacting "smart" devices. With such a large
scale transformation composed of so many independent actions, the
book also organizes the discussion into a single multi-layer energy
management control loop structure. Consequently, much attention is
given to not just network-enabled physical devices but also
communication networks, distributed control & decision making,
and finally technical architectures and standards. Having gone into
the detail of these many simultaneously developing technologies,
the book returns to how these technologies when integrated form new
applications for transactive energy. In that regard, it highlights
several eIoT-enabled energy management use cases that fundamentally
change the relationship between end users, utilities, and grid
operators. Consequently, the book discusses some of the emerging
applications for utilities, industry, commerce, and residences. The
book concludes that these eIoT applications will transform today's
grid into one that is much more responsive, dynamic, adaptive and
flexible. It also concludes that this transformation will bring
about new challenges and opportunities for the
cyber-physical-economic performance of the grid and the business
models of its increasingly growing number of participants and
stakeholders.
This book provides a synthesis of recent developments in Axiomatic
Design theory and its application in large complex systems.
Introductory chapters provide concise tutorial materials for
graduate students and new practitioners, presenting the
fundamentals of Axiomatic Design and relating its key concepts to
those of model-based systems engineering. A mathematical exposition
of design axioms is also provided. The main body of the book, which
represents a concentrated treatment of several applications, is
divided into three parts covering work on: complex products;
buildings; and manufacturing systems. The book shows how design
work in these areas can benefit from the scientific and systematic
underpinning provided by Axiomatic Design, and in so doing
effectively combines the state of the art in design research with
practice. All contributions were written by an international group
of leading proponents of Axiomatic Design. The book concludes with
a call to action motivating further research into the engineering
design of large complex systems.
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EIoT (Paperback)
Amro M. Farid, Steffi O. Muhanji, Alison E. Flint
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R1,040
Discovery Miles 10 400
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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