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    1,3-bis(gamma-aminopropyl)tetramethyldisiloxane modified epoxy resins: curing and characterization
    (Elsevier, 1998) Department of Chemistry; Department of Chemistry; Yılgör, Emel; Yılgör, İskender; Researcher; Faculty Member; Department of Chemistry; College of Sciences; College of Sciences; 40527; 24181
    Incorporation of siloxane oligomers with reactive organofunctional terminal groups, such as amine, epoxy and carboxy, into the structure of epoxy networks, provides improvements in the fracture toughness, water absorption and surface properties of the resultant systems. 1,3-bis(gamma-aminopropyl) tetramethyldisiloxane (DSX) was used as a model curing agent and modifier in bis(4-aminocyclohexyl)methane (PACM-20) cured diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA) based epoxy resins. Curing reactions followed by differential scanning calorimetry indicated faster reaction rates between DSX and DGEBA as compared with PACM-20 and DGEBA. Mechanical characterization of the modified products showed improvements in tensile and impact strengths as expected. Glass transition temperatures of these materials showed a decrease with an increase in DSX content.
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    A bicriteria approach to the two-machine flow shop scheduling problem
    (Elsevier Science Bv, 1999) N/A; Department of Business Administration; Department of Business Administration; Sayın, Serpil; Karabatı, Selçuk; Faculty Member; Faculty Member; Department of Business Administration; College of Administrative Sciences and Economics; College of Administrative Sciences and Economics; 6755; 38819
    In this paper we address the problem of minimizing makespan and sum of completion times simultaneously in a two-machine flow shop environment. We formulate the problem as a bicriteria scheduling problem, and develop a branch-and-bound procedure that iteratively solves restricted single objective scheduling problems until the set of efficient solutions is completely enumerated. We report computational results, and explore certain properties of the set of efficient solutions. We then discuss their implications for the Decision Maker.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    A class of Banach algebras whose duals have the Schur property
    (TÜBİTAK, 1999) Mustafayev, H.; Department of Mathematics; Ülger, Ali; Faculty Member; Department of Mathematics; College of Sciences
    Call a commutative Banach algebra A a γ-algebra if it contains a bounded group Λ such that aco(Λ) contains a multiple of the unit ball of A. In this paper, first by exhibiting several concrete examples, we show that the class of γ-algebras is quite rich. Then, for a γ-algebra A, we prove that A* has the Schur property iff the Gelfand spectrum Σ of A is scattered iff A* = ap(A) iff A* = Span(Σ).
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    A class of banach algebras whose duals have the schur property
    (Scientific and Technical research Council of Turkey - TUBITAK/Türkiye Bilimsel ve Teknik Araştırma Kurumu, 1999) Mustafayev, Heybetkulu; Department of Mathematics; Ülger, Ali; Faculty Member; Department of Mathematics; College of Sciences; N/A
    Call a commutative Banach algebra A a γ-algebra if it contains a bounded group Λ such that aco(Λ) contains a multiple of the unit ball of A. In this paper, first by exhibiting several concrete examples, we show that the class of γ-algebras is quite rich. Then, for a γ-algebra A, we prove that A* has the Schur property iff the Gelfand spectrum Σ of A is scattered iff A* = ap(A) iff A* = Span(Σ).
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    A comparison of stochastic and interval finite elements applied to shear frames with uncertain stiffness properties
    (Elsevier, 1998) Elishakoff, I; Department of Mathematics; Köylüoğlu, Hasan Uğur; Teaching Faculty; Department of Mathematics; College of Sciences; N/A
    Structural uncertainties are modelled using stochastic and interval methods to quantify the uncertainties in the response quantities. Through a suitable discretization, stochastic and interval finite element methods are constructed. A comparison of these methods is illustrated using a shear frame with uncertain stiffness properties.
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    A computational study of the reactivity of diethenylnaphthalenes towards anionic polymerization
    (Royal Soc Chemistry, 1999) Akın, Fatma Ahu; Erdem, Safiye Sağ; Nugay, Turgut; Aviyente, Viktorya; Department of Physics; Reşat, Haluk; Faculty Member; Department of Physics; College of Sciences; N/A
    Diethenyl, di(1-methylethenyl), and di(1-phenylethenyl) naphthalenes are known to be difunctional initiators used in the synthesis of thermoplastic elastomers. Semiempirical (AM1, PM3) and ab initio calculations (HF/6-31G, HF/6-31G*) have been carried out to determine the reactivity of these compounds towards anionic polymerization. For this purpose, geometrical parameters, electrostatic potentials, and frontier orbitals have been analyzed. Reaction paths starting from the diethenylnaphthalenes and reaching the proposed products have been studied, and transition structures along the paths have been located. The minimum energy conformers were determined through a conformational search around single bonds for a series of diethenylnaphthalenes. We have attempted to predict how the location of the vinyl groups affects the reactivity of diethenylnaphthalenes. Our results have revealed that the most suitable difunctional initiators for anionic polymerization are the compounds where the substituents lie away from the naphthalene bridge. We have also found that in some cases the substituents are conjugated with each other and di(1-phenylethenyl)naphthalenes are more reactive th an diethenylnaphthalenes which in turn are more reactive than di(1-methylethenyl)naphthalenes towards anionic polymerization.
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    A cross-language evaluation of the Kintsch and Van Dijk model of text comprehension
    (Psychology Press, 1996) Department of Psychology; Gülgöz, Sami; Faculty Member; Department of Psychology; College of Social Sciences and Humanities; 49200
    N/A
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    A decomposition model for continuous materials flow production systems
    (Taylor & Francis, 1997) Yeralan, Sencer; Department of Business Administration; N/A; Tan, Barış; Faculty Member; N/A; Department of Business Administration; College of Administrative Sciences and Economics; N/A; 28600; N/A
    This study presents a general and flexible decomposition method for continuous materials flow production systems. The decomposition method uses the station model developed in the first part of this study (Yeralan and Tan 1997). The decomposition method is an iterative method. At each iteration the input and output processes of the station model are matched to the most recent solutions of the adjacent stations. The procedure terminates when the solutions converge and the conservation of materials flow is satisfied. The decomposition method does not alter the station parameters such as the breakdown, repair, and service rates. This method can be used to analyse a wide variety of production systems built from heterogeneous stations. The properties of the decomposition method are studied for the series arrangement of workstations. The convergence and uniqueness of the decomposition method are discussed. The method is compared to other approximation methods. The complexity of the decomposition method is empirically investigated and is shown to be in the order of N-2 where N is the number of stations in the line, irrespective of the buffer capacities.
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    A direct method for the inversion of physical systems
    (Institute of Physics (IOP) Publishing, 1994) Caudill, Lester F.; Rabitz, Herschel; Department of Mathematics; Aşkar, Attila; Faculty Member; Department of Mathematics; College of Sciences; 178822
    A general algorithm for the direct inversion of data to yield unknown functions entering physical systems is presented. of particular interest are linear and non-linear dynamical systems. The potential broad applicability of this method is examined in the context of a number of coefficient-recovery problems for partial differential equations. Stability issues are addressed and a stabilization approach, based on inverse asymptotic tracking, is proposed. Numerical examples for a simple illustration are presented, demonstrating the effectiveness of the algorithm.
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    A dynamic analysis of market entry rates in a global industry: a community ecology perspective
    (Emerald, 1999) Çavuşgil, S. Tamer; Department of Business Administration; Tunalı, Ayşegül Özsomer; Faculty Member; Department of Business Administration; College of Administrative Sciences and Economics; 108158
    States that it is critical that incumbent firms understand the processes that enhance or inhibit entry of new firms into their industry. A new entrant into an industry may create additional demand by legitimizing the technology/products, and/or may share the existing market by drawing buyers away from incumbents. An analysis of market entry rates is especially important in new, high technology industries where sub‐groups of firms pursue different technology and global market diversification strategies because such sub‐groups may have asymmetrical cross‐effects on entry rates of new firms. Suggests a community ecology approach to assessing the impact of industry density on new firm entry rates. The framework is demonstrated by applying it to the global personal computer industry during the period of 1977‐1992. Results suggest that density has a nonmonotonic positive effect, while the firm‐level variables of technological strategy and market expansion strategies have a monotonic positive effect on new firm entry rates.