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The Global COE is setting out a zero-emission technology roadmap and is promoting socioeconomic studies of energy, studies of new technologies for renewable energies, and research for advanced nuclear energy. It has also established the Global COE Unit for Energy Science Education to support young researchers as they apply their skills and knowledge and a broad international perspective to respond to issues of energy and the environment in our societies. This book follows on the earlier volumes Zero-Carbon Energy Kyoto 2009, 2010, and 2011.
Mechatronics is the synergistic combination of precision mechanical engineering, electronic control and systems thinking in the design of products and manufacturing processes. It relates to the design of systems, devices and products aimed at achieving an optimal balance between basic mechanical structure and its overall control. Volume is indexed by Thomson Reuters CPCI-S (WoS). The peer reviewed papers are grouped as follows: Chapter 1: Engineering Design of Machines and Equipment for Manufacturing; Chapter 2: Materials and Processing Technologies; Chapter 3: Robotics and its Motor System; Chapter 4: Sensors, Measurement, Monitoring and Detection; Chapter 5: Electronics and Microelectronics; Chapter 6: Data Acquisition and Data Processing, Computational Techniques; Chapter 7: Control and Automation, Theory and Applications; Chapter 8: Software, Communication and Computer Applications in Industry and Engineering; Chapter 9: Engineering Education, Engineering Management, Products Design and Manufacture Management; Chapter 10: Other Related Topics.
Since 2008, the Global Center of Excellence (COE) at Kyoto University, Japan, has been engaged in a program called “Energy Science in the Age of Global Warming—Toward a CO2 Zero-Emission Energy System.” Its aim is to establish an international education and research platform to foster educators, researchers, and policy makers who can develop technologies and propose policies for establishing a CO2 zero-emission society no longer dependent on fossil fuels. It is well known that the energy problem cannot simply be labeled a technological one, as it is also deeply involved with social and economic issues. The establishment of a “low-carbon energy science” as an interdisciplinary field...
This is the fourth in a series of seminars on current topics in heat transfer presented to develop cooperation between the United States and Japanese heat transfer communities.