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Institution

Queensland University of Technology

EducationBrisbane, Queensland, Australia
About: Queensland University of Technology is a education organization based out in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 14188 authors who have published 55022 publications receiving 1496237 citations. The organization is also known as: QUT.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The concept of a liquid metal enabled pump with no mechanical parts by simply incorporating droplets of Galinstan is demonstrated, which has the potential to fundamentally advance the field of microfluidics.
Abstract: Small-scale pumps will be the heartbeat of many future micro/nanoscale platforms. However, the integration of small-scale pumps is presently hampered by limited flow rate with respect to the input power, and their rather complicated fabrication processes. These issues arise as many conventional pumping effects require intricate moving elements. Here, we demonstrate a system that we call the liquid metal enabled pump, for driving a range of liquids without mechanical moving parts, upon the application of modest electric field. This pump incorporates a droplet of liquid metal, which induces liquid flow at high flow rates, yet with exceptionally low power consumption by electrowetting/deelectrowetting at the metal surface. We present theory explaining this pumping mechanism and show that the operation is fundamentally different from other existing pumps. The presented liquid metal enabled pump is both efficient and simple, and thus has the potential to fundamentally advance the field of microfluidics.

287 citations

Book ChapterDOI
24 Oct 2005
TL;DR: A series of workflow data patterns are described that aim to capture the various ways in which data is represented and utilised in workflows and are used as the basis for a detailed comparison of a number of commercially available workflow management systems, workflow standards and web-service composition languages.
Abstract: Workflow systems seek to provide an implementation vehicle for complex, recurring business processes. Notwithstanding this common objective, there are a variety of distinct features offered by commercial workflow management systems. These differences result in significant variations in the ability of distinct tools to represent and implement the plethora of requirements that may arise in contemporary business processes. Many of these requirements recur quite frequently during the requirements analysis activity for workflow systems and abstractions of these requirements serve as a useful means of identifying the key components of workflow languages. In this paper, we describe a series of workflow data patterns that aim to capture the various ways in which data is represented and utilised in workflows. By delineating these patterns in a form that is independent of specific workflow technologies and modelling languages, we are able to provide a comprehensive treatment of the workflow data perspective and we subsequently use these patterns as the basis for a detailed comparison of a number of commercially available workflow management systems, workflow standards and web-service composition languages.

287 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article proposes a translation technique that does not impose structural restrictions on the source BPMN model and emphasizes the generation of readable (block-structured) BPEL code.
Abstract: Several methods for enterprise systems analysis rely on flow-oriented representations of business operations, otherwise known as business process models. The Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN) is a standard for capturing such models. BPMN models facilitate communication between domain experts and analysts and provide input to software development projects. Meanwhile, there is an emergence of methods for enterprise software development that rely on detailed process definitions that are executed by process engines. These process definitions refine their counterpart BPMN models by introducing data manipulation, application binding, and other implementation details. The de facto standard for defining executable processes is the Business Process Execution Language (BPEL). Accordingly, a standards-based method for developing process-oriented systems is to start with BPMN models and to translate these models into BPEL definitions for subsequent refinement. However, instrumenting this method is challenging because BPMN models and BPEL definitions are structurally very different. Existing techniques for translating BPMN to BPEL only work for limited classes of BPMN models. This article proposes a translation technique that does not impose structural restrictions on the source BPMN model. At the same time, the technique emphasizes the generation of readable (block-structured) BPEL code. An empirical evaluation conducted over a large collection of process models shows that the resulting BPEL definitions are largely block-structured. Beyond its direct relevance in the context of BPMN and BPEL, the technique presented in this article addresses issues that arise when translating from graph-oriented to block-structure flow definition languages.

287 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) effect and interband transition of silver nanoparticles can activate organic molecules for oxidation under ultraviolet and visible light irradiation.

287 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The intervention focuses on encouraging supportive sun protective attitudes and beliefs, fostering perceptions of normative support for sun protection behaviour, and increasing perceptions of control/self-efficacy over using sun protection.
Abstract: Background Most skin cancers are preventable by encouraging consistent use of sun protective behaviour. In Australia, adolescents have high levels of knowledge and awareness of the risks of skin cancer but exhibit significantly lower sun protection behaviours than adults. There is limited research aimed at understanding why people do or do not engage in sun protective behaviour, and an associated absence of theory-based interventions to improve sun safe behaviour. This paper presents the study protocol for a school-based intervention which aims to improve the sun safe behaviour of adolescents.

287 citations


Authors

Showing all 14597 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Nicholas G. Martin1921770161952
Paul M. Thompson1832271146736
Christopher J. O'Donnell159869126278
Robert G. Parton13645959737
Tim J Cole13682792998
Daniel I. Chasman13448472180
David Smith1292184100917
Dmitri Golberg129102461788
Chao Zhang127311984711
Shi Xue Dou122202874031
Thomas H. Marwick121106358763
Peter J. Anderson12096663635
Bruno S. Frey11990065368
David M. Evans11663274420
Michael Pollak11466357793
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023205
2022641
20214,219
20204,026
20193,623
20183,374