Institution
Mines ParisTech
Education•Paris, France•
About: Mines ParisTech is a education organization based out in Paris, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Finite element method & Microstructure. The organization has 6564 authors who have published 11676 publications receiving 359898 citations. The organization is also known as: École nationale supérieure des mines de Paris & École des mines de Paris.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: It is shown that a linear observer-based output feedback can globally regulate an equilibrium of strongly nonlinear systems, provided that a single high gain is appropriately tuned.
341 citations
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TL;DR: Emerging biological and chemical monitoring tools that may become part of a 'toolbox' of techniques for use by those in charge of assessing water quality are presented.
341 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a review of Ni-base superalloys in terms of fundamental deformation mechanisms, environmental effects, and interactions between environment and deformation mode is presented, where the basic principles that are developed are used to show how both intrinsic and extrinsic variables can be manipulated to control fatigue behaviour and as a guide for formulation of engineering life prediction models.
339 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the geographic distribution and global diffusion of inventions in thirteen climate-mitigation technologies since 1978 and found that until 1990 innovation was driven mostly by energy prices, and since then, environmental policies and, more recently, climate policies, have accelerated the pace of innovation.
Abstract: This article uses the European Patent Office Worldwide Patent Statistical Database to examine the geographic distribution and global diffusion of inventions in thirteen climate-mitigation technologies since 1978. The data suggest that until 1990 innovation was driven mostly by energy prices. Since then, environmental policies, and, more recently, climate policies, have accelerated the pace of innovation. The data also indicate that innovation is highly concentrated in three countries-Japan, Germany, and the United States-which together account for 60 percent of total inventions. Surprisingly, the contribution of emerging economies is far from negligible as China and Brazil together account for about 10 percent of total inventions. However, inventions from emerging economies are less likely to find markets beyond their borders, suggesting that inventions from emerging economies have less value. More generally, international transfers occur mostly between developed countries (73 percent of all exported inventions). Exports from developed countries to emerging economies are still limited (22 percent) but are growing rapidly, especially to China.
337 citations
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TL;DR: A state-of-the-art of a particular planning problem, the Single Item Lot Sizing Problem, is given for its uncapacitated and capacitated versions.
336 citations
Authors
Showing all 6591 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Francis Bach | 110 | 484 | 54944 |
Olivier Delattre | 103 | 490 | 39258 |
Richard M. Murray | 97 | 711 | 69016 |
Bruno Latour | 96 | 364 | 94864 |
George G. Malliaras | 94 | 382 | 28533 |
George S. Wilson | 88 | 716 | 33034 |
Zhong-Ping Jiang | 81 | 597 | 24279 |
F. Liu | 80 | 428 | 23869 |
Kazu Suenaga | 75 | 329 | 26287 |
Carlo Adamo | 75 | 444 | 36092 |
Edith Heard | 75 | 196 | 23899 |
Enrico Zio | 73 | 1127 | 23809 |
John J. Jonas | 70 | 379 | 21544 |
Bernard Asselain | 69 | 409 | 23648 |
Eric Guibal | 69 | 294 | 16397 |