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Nicholas Kottenstette

Researcher at Vanderbilt University

Publications -  56
Citations -  1508

Nicholas Kottenstette is an academic researcher from Vanderbilt University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mass flow controller & Mass flow. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 56 publications receiving 1438 citations. Previous affiliations of Nicholas Kottenstette include University of Notre Dame.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Science of Cyber–Physical System Integration

TL;DR: A passivity-based design approach that decouples stability from timing uncertainties caused by networking and computation is presented, and cross-domain abstractions that provide effective solution for model-based fully automated software synthesis and high-fidelity performance analysis are described.
Patent

Mass flow ratio system and method

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a system for dividing a single mass flow, including an inlet adapted to receive the one mass flow and at least two flow lines connected to the inlet.
Journal ArticleDOI

On relationships among passivity, positive realness, and dissipativity in linear systems

TL;DR: This paper summarizes the connection between passivity and positive realness for continuous and discrete time LTI systems and provides results that clarify more subtle connections between these concepts.
Patent

Apparatus and method for pressure fluctuation insensitive mass flow control

TL;DR: A mass flow controller includes a thermal mass flow sensor in combination with a pressure sensor to provide a mass flow control valve that is relatively insensitive to fluctuations in input pressure as discussed by the authors, where the measured pressure is used to compensate the measured inlet flow rate and to produce a compensated measure of the outlet flow rate.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Feedback Thermal Control for Real-time Systems

TL;DR: R rigorously modeled and designed based on control theory, TCUB can maintain both desired processor temperature and CPU utilization, thereby avoiding processor overheating and maintaining desired soft real-time performance.