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Wilton Agila, Gomer Rubio, Francisco Vidal, & B. Lima. (2019). Real time Qualitative Model for estimate Water content in PEM Fuel Cell. In 8th International Conference on Renewable Energy Research and Applications (ICRERA 2019); Brasov, Rumania (pp. 455–459).
Abstract: To maintain optimum performance of the electrical
response of a fuel cell, a real time identification of the
malfunction situations is required. Critical fuel cell states depend,
among others, on the variable demand of electric load and are
directly related to the membrane hydration level. The real time
perception of relevant states in the PEM fuel cell states space, is
still a challenge for the PEM fuel cell control systems. Current
work presents the design and implementation of a methodology
based upon fuzzy decision techniques that allows real time
characterization of the dehydration and flooding states of a PEM
fuel cell. Real time state estimation is accomplished through a
perturbation-perception process on the PEM fuel cell and further
on voltage oscillation analysis. The real time implementation of
the perturbation-perception algorithm to detect PEM fuel cell
critical states is a novelty and a step forwards the control of the
PEM fuel cell to reach and maintain optimal performance.
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G.A. Rubio, & Wilton Agila. (2019). Sustainable Energy: A Strategic View of Fuel Cells. In 8th International Conference on Renewable Energy Research and Applications (ICRERA 2019); Brasov, Rumania (pp. 239–243).
Abstract: Based on the model of the proton exchange fuel cell in a strategic context,
this document develops the issue of energy as one of the pillars to achieve the
sustainability of our planet, considering the future scenarios up to the year 2060 of the
situation energy, hydrogen as a strategic vector and the contribution of the fuel cell in
solving the serious problems of environmental pollution and economic inequity that
humanity faces; for its application in the energy generation, telecommunications and
vehicle manufacturing industries.
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G.A. Rubio, & Wilton Agila. (2019). Transients analysis in Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells: A critical review. In 8th International Conference on Renewable Energy Research and Applications (ICRERA 2019); Brasov, Rumania (pp. 249–252).
Abstract: When a proton exchange fuel cell operates it produces in addition to electrical
energy, heat and water as sub products, which impact on the performance of the cell. This
paper analyzes the issue of transients and proposes a model that describes the dynamic
operation of the fuel cell. The model considers the transients produced by electrochemical
reactions, by flow water and by heat transfer. Two-phase flow transients result in
increased the parasitic power losses and thermal transients may result in flooding or dryout of the GDL and membrane, understanding transient behavior is critical for reliable
and predictable performance from the cell.
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Viñán-Ludeña, M. S., Roberto Jacome Galarza, Montoya, L.R., Leon, A.V., & Ramírez, C.C. (2020). Smart university: an architecture proposal for information management using open data for research projects. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, 1137 AISC, 2020, 172–178.
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Juca Aulestia M., L. J. M., Guaman Quinche J., Coronel Romero E., Chamba Eras L., & Roberto Jacome Galarza. (2020). Open innovation at university: a systematic literature review. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, 1159 AISC, 2020, 3–14.
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Alex Ferrin, Julio Larrea, Miguel Realpe, & Daniel Ochoa. (2018). Detection of utility poles from noisy Point Cloud Data in Urban environments. In Artificial Intelligence and Cloud Computing Conference (AICCC 2018) (pp. 53–57).
Abstract: In recent years 3D urban maps have become more common, thus providing complex point clouds that include diverse urban furniture such as pole-like objects. Utility poles detection in urban environment is of particular interest for electric utility companies in order to maintain an updated inventory for better planning and management. The present study develops an automatic method for the detection of utility poles from noisy point cloud data of Guayaquil – Ecuador, where many poles are located next to buildings, or houses are built until the border of the sidewalk getting very close to poles, which increases the difficulty of discriminating poles, walls, columns, fences and building corners.
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Rivadeneira, R. E., & Sappa, A. D. and V. B. X. (2022). Thermal Image Super-Resolution: A Novel Unsupervised Approach. In Communications in Computer and Information Science, 15th International Communications in Computer and Information Science Joint Conference on Computer Vision, Imaging and Computer Graphics Theory and Applications (Vol. 1474, pp. 495–506).
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Velez R., P. A., Silva S., Paillacho D., and Paillacho J. (2022). Implementation of a UVC lights disinfection system for a diferential robot applying security methods in indoor. In Communications in Computer and Information Science, International Conference on Applied Technologies (ICAT 2021), octubre 27-29 (Vol. 1535, pp. 319–331).
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Dennys Paillacho, N. S., Michael Arce, María Plues & Edwin Eras. (2023). Advanced metrics to evaluate autistic children's attention and emotions from facial characteristics using a human robot-game interface. In Communications in Computer and Information Science. 11th Conferencia Ecuatoriana de Tecnologías de la Información y Comunicación TICEC 2023 (Vol. 1885 CCIS, pp. 234–247).
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Rafael E. Rivadeneira, A. D. S., Boris X. Vintimilla, Jin Kim, Dogun Kim et al. (2022). Thermal Image Super-Resolution Challenge Results- PBVS 2022. In Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops, (CVPRW 2022), junio 19-24. (Vol. 2022-June, pp. 349–357).
Abstract: This paper presents results from the third Thermal Image
Super-Resolution (TISR) challenge organized in the Perception Beyond the Visible Spectrum (PBVS) 2022 workshop.
The challenge uses the same thermal image dataset as the
first two challenges, with 951 training images and 50 validation images at each resolution. A set of 20 images was
kept aside for testing. The evaluation tasks were to measure
the PSNR and SSIM between the SR image and the ground
truth (HR thermal noisy image downsampled by four), and
also to measure the PSNR and SSIM between the SR image
and the semi-registered HR image (acquired with another
camera). The results outperformed those from last year’s
challenge, improving both evaluation metrics. This year,
almost 100 teams participants registered for the challenge,
showing the community’s interest in this hot topic.
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