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Most recently, the federal government in Germany published new climate goals in order reach climate neutrality by 2045. This paper demonstrates a path to a cost optimal energy supply system for the German power grid until the year 2050. With special regard to regionality, the system is based on yearly myopic optimization with the required energy system transformation measures and the associated system costs. The results point out, that energy storage systems (ESS) are fundamental for renewables integration in order to have a feasible energy transition. Moreover, the investment in storage technologies increased the usage of the solar and wind technologies. Solar energy investments were highly accompanied with the installation of short-term battery storage. Longer-term storage technologies, such as H2, were accompanied with high installations of wind technologies. The results pointed out that hydrogen investments are expected to overrule short-term batteries if their cost continues to decrease sharply. Moreover, with a strong presence of ESS in the energy system, biomass energy is expected to be completely ruled out from the energy mix. With the current emission reduction strategy and without a strong presence of large scale ESS into the system, it is unlikely that the Paris agreement 2° C target by 2050 will be achieved, let alone the 1.5° C.
An import ban of Russian energy sources to Germany is currently being increasingly discussed. We want to support the discussion by showing a way how the electricity system in Germany can manage low energy imports in the short term and which measures are necessary to still meet the climate protection targets. In this paper, we examine the impact of a complete stop of Russian fossil fuel imports on the electricity sector in Germany, and how this will affect the climate coals of an earlier coal phase-out and climate neutrality by 2045.
Following a scenario-based analysis, the results gave a point of view on how much would be needed to completely rely on the scarce non-renewable energy resources in Germany. Huge amounts of investments would be needed in order to ensure a secure supply of electricity, in both generation energy sources (RES) and energy storage systems (ESS). The key findings are that a rapid expansion of renewables and storage technologies will significantly reduce the dependence of the German electricity system on energy imports. The huge integration of renewable energy does not entail any significant imports of the energy sources natural gas, hard coal, and mineral oil, even in the long term. The results showed that a ban on fossil fuel imports from Russia outlines huge opportunities to go beyond the German government's climate targets, where the 1.5-degree-target is achieved in the electricity system.
Elektronische Türschilder zur Darstellung von Informationen sind insbesondere in öffentlichen Gebäuden zwischenzeitlich weit verbreitet. Die Varianz dieser elektronischen Türschilder reicht vom Tablet-basierten Türschild bis hin zum PC-basierten Türschild mit externem Bildschirm. Zumeist werden die Systeme mit 230 V betrieben. Bei einer großen Summe von Türschildern in öffentlichen Gebäuden kann dies zu einem signifikanten Umsatz an Energie führen. Im Rahmen dieses Papers wird die Entwicklung eines energieautarken arbeiten Türschildes vorgestellt, bei dem ein E-Paper-Display zum Einsatz kommt. Das Türschild lässt sich per Smartphone-App und NFC-Schnittstelle konfigurieren. Es wird insbesondere auf das Low-Power-Hardware-Design der Elektronik und energetische Aspekte eingegangen.
Im Rahmen einer Master Thesis wurde ausgehend von einem vorhandenen System On Chip Design, welches eingehende EKG-Datensignale verarbeitet, das bestehende System so erweitert dass es komplett über den standardisierten SPI-Bus steuerbar und auslesbar ist.
Im ASIC Design Center der Hochschule Offenburg wird ein Design Kit für die UMC 0.18μm Faraday Technologie aufbereitet. Dabei werden alle benötigten Dateien, welche für einen zunächst rein digitalen Chipentwurf unter Verwendung der Synopsys, Cadence und Mentor Tools benötigt werden, für den UMC 0.18μm Prozess zusammengestellt.
An der FH Offenburg arbeiten seit Ende 1989 in einem Team die Professoren Dr. Jansen, Dr. Schüssele, die wissenschaftlichen Mitarbeiter Bernd Reinke, Martin Jörger und die Diplomanden Hans Fiesel, Otmar Feißt an dem Entwurf eines Nachrichtenempfängers. Im Rahmen dieses Projekts, genannt GPS-Projekt (GPS = Global Positioning System), wurde im Herbst 1990 ein experimenteller Empfänger in Betrieb genommen. Nachdem die Testergebnisse gezeigt hatten,daß das Konzept der Anlage stimmte, ging es nun um die Miniaturisieriung, Integration und Optimierung der Schaltung. Außerdem sollte der bisher verwendete PC durch einen auf der Platine befindlichen Mikroprozessor ersetzt werden. Im Zusammenhang mit dem GPS-Projekt wurden bisher im Offenburger ASIC-Labor eine Analogschaltung auf einem B500, drei LCA Designs und diverse GAL's entwickelt.
Zur Zeit arbeiten mehrere Diplomanden an der zweiten Generation des Empfängers. Meine Aufgabe besteht darin, die dort noch in drei LCA's untergebrachte digitale Logik sowie einen Teil des bisherigen PC-Interface in einem IMS Gate Forrest zu integrieren. Außerdem muß die Logik von 8 Bit auf einen 16 Bit breiten Datenbus umgestellt und an die neue Peripherie des Mikroprozessors angepasst werden. Damit soll die jetzige Digital-Platine noch weiter verkleinert werden. Wesentlich ist dabei die Umsetzung der zahlreichen Zähler- und Registerstrukturen in einem Gate Forrest. Als Arbeitsmittel stehen Apollo Workstations mit Mentor Software zur Verfügung.
In this paper an RFID/NFC (ISO 15693 standard) based inductively powered passive SoC (system on chip) for biomedical applications is presented. A brief overview of the system design, layout techniques and verification method is dis-cussed here. The SoC includes an integrated 32 bit microcontroller, sensor interface circuit, analog to digital converter, integrated RAM, ROM and some other peripherals required for the complete passive operation. The entire chip is realized in CMOS 0.18 μm technology with a chip area of 1.52mm x 3.24 mm.
In 2015, Google engineer Alexander Mordvintsev presented DeepDream as technique to visualise the feature analysis capabilities of deep neural networks that have been trained on image classification tasks. For a brief moment, this technique enjoyed some popularity among scientists, artists, and the general public because of its capability to create seemingly hallucinatory synthetic images. But soon after, research moved on to generative models capable of producing more diverse and more realistic synthetic images. At the same time, the means of interaction with these models have shifted away from a direct manipulation of algorithmic properties towards a predominance of high level controls that obscure the model's internal working. In this paper, we present research that returns to DeepDream to assess its suit-ability as method for sound synthesis. We consider this research to be necessary for two reasons: it tackles a perceived lack of research on musical applications of DeepDream, and it addresses DeepDream's potential to combine data driven and algorithmic approaches. Our research includes a study of how the model architecture, choice of audio data-sets, and method of audio processing influence the acoustic characteristics of the synthesised sounds. We also look into the potential application of DeepDream in a live-performance setting. For this reason, the study limits itself to models consisting of small neural networks that process time-domain representations of audio. These models are resource-friendly enough to operate in real time. We hope that the results obtained so far highlight the attractiveness of Deep-Dream for musical approaches that combine algorithmic investigation with curiosity driven and open ended exploration.