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Institution

University of Wollongong

EducationWollongong, New South Wales, Australia
About: University of Wollongong is a education organization based out in Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 15674 authors who have published 46658 publications receiving 1197471 citations. The organization is also known as: UOW & Wollongong University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An integrative research model is developed by extending extant Technology Acceptance Model through the incorporation of a set of social, political, and cultural constructs: trust, perceived public value, and national culture that finds strong evidence that citizen attitude toward using e-government services is the most significant determinant of citizen intention to adopt and use e- government services.

261 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted a study of the relationship between culture and the adoption of IT in two different developing regions: West Africa and the Middle East, and compared the results along eight cultural dimensions and are contrasted with a third developed region, Australia, the country of residence of the researchers.
Abstract: Of all the factors that must be considered in the adoption of information technology, culture is probably the most difficult to isolate, define and measure. Consequently, the influence of local culture on the adoption of computer-based information systems in organisations has not featured prominently in the research literature. As cultural factors may be important to the success of IT projects, we have conducted a study of the relationship between culture and the adoption of IT in two different developing regions: West Africa and the Middle East. The results are compared along eight cultural dimensions and are contrasted with a third developed region, Australia, the country of residence of the researchers. In this paper, we use the results of the study to identify three issues of concern to the relationship of culture and IT, and discuss their implications for the IT industry

261 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the use of carbon nanotubes as reinforcing fibers in a polyaniline (PAni) matrix to improve the mechanical performance of actuators.
Abstract: Actuating materials capable of producing useful movement and forces are recognized as the “missing link” in the development of a wide range of frontier technologies including haptic devices, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), and even molecular machines. Immediate uses for these materials include an electronic Braille screen, a rehabilitation glove, tremor suppression, and a variable-camber propeller. Most of these applications could be realized with actuators that have equivalent performance to natural skeletal muscle. Although many actuator materials are available, none have the same mix of speed, movement, and force as skeletal muscle. Indeed, the actuator community was challenged to produce a material capable of beating a human in an arm wrestling match. This challenge remains to be met. One class of materials that has received considerable attention as actuators is low-voltage electrochemical systems utilizing conducting polymers and carbon nanotubes. Low-voltage sources are convenient and safe, and power inputs are potentially low. One deficiency of conducting polymers and nanotubes compared with skeletal muscle is their low actuation strains: less than 15 % for conducting polymers and less than 1 % for nanotubes. It has been argued that the low strains can be mechanically amplified (levers, bellows, hinges, etc.) to produce useful movements, but higher forces are needed to operate these amplifiers. In recent studies of the forces and displacements generated from conducting-polymer actuators, it has become obvious that force generation is limited by the breaking strength of the actuator material. Baughman has predicted that the maximum stress generated by an actuator can be estimated as 50 % of the breaking stress, so that for highly drawn polyaniline (PAni) fibers, stresses on the order of 190 MPa should be achievable. However, in practice the breaking stresses of conducting-polymer fibers when immersed in electrolyte and operated electromechanically are significantly lower than their dry-state strengths. The reasons for the loss of strength are not well known, but the limitations on actuator performance are severe. The highest reported stress that can be sustained by conducting polymers during actuator work cycles is in the range 20–34 MPa for polypyrrole (PPy) films. However, the maximum stress that can be sustained by PPy during actuation appears to be very sensitive to the dopant ion and polymerization conditions used, with many studies showing maximum stress values of less than 10 MPa. The low stress generation from conducting polymers, limited by the low breaking strengths, mean that the application of mechanical amplifiers is also very limited. To improve the mechanical performance, we have investigated the use of carbon nanotubes as reinforcing fibers in a polyaniline (PAni) matrix. Previous work has shown that the addition of singlewalled nanotubes (SWNTs) and multi-walled nanotubes (MWNTs) to various polymer matrices have produced significant improvements in strength and stiffness. It has been shown that the modulus of PAni can be increased by up to four times with the addition of small (< 2 %) amounts of nanotubes. Similar improvements in the modulus of actuating polymers may lead to significant increases in the stress generated and work per cycle. Other previous studies have shown that PAni can be wet-spun into continuous fibers and that these may be used as actuators. Isotonic strains of 0.3 % and isometric stresses of 2 MPa were obtained from these fibers when operated in ionic-liquid electrolytes. The aim of the present study was to develop methods for incorporating carbon nanotubes into PAni fibers and to determine the effects on actuator performance at different isotonic loads. A wet-spinning technique was used to prepare the composite fibers. First, the nanotubes (NTs, HiPCO SWNTs from Carbon Nanotechnology, Inc.) were dispersed by sonication for 30 min in a mixture of 2-acrylamido-2-methyl-1-propanesulfonic acid (AMPSA, Aldrich, 99 %) and dichloroacetic acid (DCAA, Merck, 98 %). PAni (Santa Fe Science and Technology, Inc.) and additional AMPSA were then dissolved in the dispersion by high-speed mixing. After degassing, the spinning solution was injected through a narrow outlet using N2 pressure into an acetone coagulation bath. The spun fibers were hand-drawn to approximately five times their original length across a soldering iron wrapped in Teflon tape heated to 100 °C. C O M M U N IC A IO N S

260 citations

Book
18 Apr 2022
TL;DR: Goodbred et al. as discussed by the authors studied the Ganges-brahmaputra river sediment in the Indian Ocean and found evidence for highstand dispersal to flod-plain, shelf and deepsea depocenters.
Abstract: . Gilbert, G.K. (1885) The topographic features of lake shores. US Geol. Surv., 5th Ann. Rept, 69–123. Gilbert, G.K. (1890) Lake Bonneville. US Geol. Surv. Monogr. 1. Goodbred, S.L., Jr and Kuehl, S.A. (1998) Floodplain processes in the Bengal Basin and the storage of Ganges-Brahmaputra river sediment: an accretion study using Cs and Pb geochronology. Sediment. Geol., 121, 239–258. Goodbred, S.L., Jr and Kuehl, S.A. (1999) Holocene and modern sediment budgets for the Ganges-Brahmaputra River system: evidence for highstand dispersal to fl ood-plain, shelf, and deepsea depocenters. Geology, 27, 559–562. Goodbred, S.L., Jr and Kuehl, S.A. (2000a) The signifi cance of large sediment supply, active tectonism, and eustasy on margin sequence development: Late Quaternary stratigraphy and evolution of the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta. Sediment. Geol., 133, 227–248. Goodbred, S.L., Jr and Kuehl, S.A. (2000b) Enormous GangesBrahmaputra sediment discharge during the strengthened early Holocene monsoon. Geology, 28, 1083–1086. Gould, H.R. (1970) The Mississippi delta complex. In: Deltaic Sedimentation: Modern and Ancient (J.P. Morgan, Ed.). SEPM Spec. Publ. no. 15, pp. 3–30. Harris, P.T., Baker, E.K., Cole, A.R. and Short, S.A. (1993) A preliminary study of sedimentation in the tidally dominated Fly River Delta, Gulf of Papua. Cont. Shelf Res., 13, 441– 472. Harris, P.T., Pattiaratchi, C.B., Keene, J.B., Dalrymple, R.W., Gardner, J.V., Baker, E.K., Cole, A.R., Mitchell, D., Gibbs, P. and Schroeder, W.W. (1996) Late Quaternary deltaic and carbonate sedimentation in the Gulf of Papua foreland basin: response to sea-level change. J. Sediment. Res., 66, 801–819. Harris, P.T., Heap, A.D., Bryce, S.M., Porter-Smith, R., Ryan, D.A. and Heggie, D.T. (2003) Classifi cation of Australian clastic coastal depositional environments based upon a quantitative analysis of wave, tidal, and river power. J. Sediment. Res., 72, 858–870. Haruyama, S. and Phai, V.V. (2002) Coastal change in the Southern Song Hong Delta. J. Geogr., 111, 124–132 (in Japanese with English abstract). Hayes, M.O. (1979) Barrier island morphology as a function of tidal and wave regime. In: Barrier Islands from the Gulf of St Lawrence to the Gulf of Mexico (S.P. Leatherman, Ed.). Academic Press, New York, pp. 1–27. Hori, K. and Saito, Y. (2003) Morphology and sediments of large river deltas, J. Geogr., 112, 337–359 (in Japanese with English abstract). Hori, K., Saito, Y., Zhao, Q., Cheng, C., Wang, P., Sato, Y. and Li, C. (2001a) Sedimentary facies and Holocene progradation rates of the Changjiang (Yangtze) delta, China. Geomorphology, 41, 233–248. Hori, K., Saito, Y., Zhao, Q., Cheng, C., Wang, P., Sato, Y. and Li, C. (2001b) Sedimentary facies of the tide-dominated paleoChangjiang (Yangtze) estuary during the last transgression. Mar. Geol., 177, 331–351. Hori, K., Saito, Y., Zhao, Q. and Wang, P. (2002) Architecture and evolution of the tide-dominated Changjiang (Yangtze) River delta, China. Sediment. Geol., 146, 249–264. Hori, K., Tanabe, S., Saito, Y., Haruyama, S., Nguyen, V. and Kitamura, A. (2004) Delta initiation and Holocene sea-level change: example from the Song Hong (Red River) delta, Vietnam. Sediment. Geol., 164, 237–249. Hovius, N. (1998) Controls on sediment supply by large rivers. In: Relative Role of Eustasy, Climate, and Tectonism in Continental Rocks (K.W. Shanley and P.J. McCabe, Eds.). SEPM Spec. Publ. no. 59, pp. 3–16.

260 citations


Authors

Showing all 15918 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Lei Jiang1702244135205
Menachem Elimelech15754795285
Yoshio Bando147123480883
Paul Mitchell146137895659
Jun Chen136185677368
Zhen Li127171271351
Neville Owen12770074166
Chao Zhang127311984711
Jay Belsky12444155582
Shi Xue Dou122202874031
Keith A. Johnson12079851034
William R. Forman12080053717
Yang Li117131963111
Yusuke Yamauchi117100051685
Guoxiu Wang11765446145
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
202388
2022483
20212,897
20203,018
20192,784