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Search Results (158)

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Keywords = multi-strategy hybrid technology

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36 pages, 5053 KiB  
Systematic Review
Prescriptive Maintenance: A Systematic Literature Review and Exploratory Meta-Synthesis
by Marko Orošnjak, Felix Saretzky and Slawomir Kedziora
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8507; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158507 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Abstract
Prescriptive Maintenance (PsM) transforms industrial asset management by enabling autonomous decisions through simultaneous failure anticipation and optimal maintenance recommendations. Yet, despite increasing research interest, the conceptual clarity, technological maturity, and practical deployment of PsM remains fragmented. Here, we conduct a comprehensive and application-oriented [...] Read more.
Prescriptive Maintenance (PsM) transforms industrial asset management by enabling autonomous decisions through simultaneous failure anticipation and optimal maintenance recommendations. Yet, despite increasing research interest, the conceptual clarity, technological maturity, and practical deployment of PsM remains fragmented. Here, we conduct a comprehensive and application-oriented Systematic Literature Review of studies published between 2013–2024. We identify key enablers—artificial intelligence and machine learning, horizontal and vertical integration, and deep reinforcement learning—that map the functional space of PsM across industrial sectors. The results from our multivariate meta-synthesis uncover three main thematic research clusters, ranging from decision-automation of technical (multi)component-level systems to strategic and organisational-support strategies. Notably, while predictive models are widely adopted, the translation of these capabilities to PsM remains limited. Primary reasons include semantic interoperability, real-time optimisation, and deployment scalability. As a response, a structured research agenda is proposed to emphasise hybrid architectures, context-aware prescription mechanisms, and alignment with Industry 5.0 principles of human-centricity, resilience, and sustainability. The review establishes a critical foundation for future advances in intelligent, explainable, and action-oriented maintenance systems. Full article
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59 pages, 2417 KiB  
Review
A Critical Review on the Battery System Reliability of Drone Systems
by Tianren Zhao, Yanhui Zhang, Minghao Wang, Wei Feng, Shengxian Cao and Gong Wang
Drones 2025, 9(8), 539; https://doi.org/10.3390/drones9080539 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Abstract
The reliability of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) energy storage battery systems is critical for ensuring their safe operation and efficient mission execution, and has the potential to significantly advance applications in logistics, monitoring, and emergency response. This paper reviews theoretical and technical advancements [...] Read more.
The reliability of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) energy storage battery systems is critical for ensuring their safe operation and efficient mission execution, and has the potential to significantly advance applications in logistics, monitoring, and emergency response. This paper reviews theoretical and technical advancements in UAV battery reliability, covering definitions and metrics, modeling approaches, state estimation, fault diagnosis, and battery management system (BMS) technologies. Based on international standards, reliability encompasses performance stability, environmental adaptability, and safety redundancy, encompassing metrics such as the capacity retention rate, mean time between failures (MTBF), and thermal runaway warning time. Modeling methods for reliability include mathematical, data-driven, and hybrid models, which are evaluated for accuracy and efficiency under dynamic conditions. State estimation focuses on five key battery parameters and compares neural network, regression, and optimization algorithms in complex flight scenarios. Fault diagnosis involves feature extraction, time-series modeling, and probabilistic inference, with multimodal fusion strategies being proposed for faults like overcharge and thermal runaway. BMS technologies include state monitoring, protection, and optimization, and balancing strategies and the potential of intelligent algorithms are being explored. Challenges in this field include non-unified standards, limited model generalization, and complexity in diagnosing concurrent faults. Future research should prioritize multi-physics-coupled modeling, AI-driven predictive techniques, and cybersecurity to enhance the reliability and intelligence of battery systems in order to support the sustainable development of unmanned systems. Full article
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37 pages, 1099 KiB  
Review
Application Advances and Prospects of Ejector Technologies in the Field of Rail Transit Driven by Energy Conservation and Energy Transition
by Yiqiao Li, Hao Huang, Shengqiang Shen, Yali Guo, Yong Yang and Siyuan Liu
Energies 2025, 18(15), 3951; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18153951 - 24 Jul 2025
Viewed by 283
Abstract
Rail transit as a high-energy consumption field urgently requires the adoption of clean energy innovations to reduce energy consumption and accelerate the transition to new energy applications. As an energy-saving fluid machinery, the ejector exhibits significant application potential and academic value within this [...] Read more.
Rail transit as a high-energy consumption field urgently requires the adoption of clean energy innovations to reduce energy consumption and accelerate the transition to new energy applications. As an energy-saving fluid machinery, the ejector exhibits significant application potential and academic value within this field. This paper reviewed the recent advances, technical challenges, research hotspots, and future development directions of ejector applications in rail transit, aiming to address gaps in existing reviews. (1) In waste heat recovery, exhaust heat is utilized for propulsion in vehicle ejector refrigeration air conditioning systems, resulting in energy consumption being reduced by 12~17%. (2) In vehicle pneumatic pressure reduction systems, the throttle valve is replaced with an ejector, leading to an output power increase of more than 13% and providing support for zero-emission new energy vehicle applications. (3) In hydrogen supply systems, hydrogen recirculation efficiency exceeding 68.5% is achieved in fuel cells using multi-nozzle ejector technology. (4) Ejector-based active flow control enables precise ± 20 N dynamic pantograph lift adjustment at 300 km/h. However, current research still faces challenges including the tendency toward subcritical mode in fixed geometry ejectors under variable operating conditions, scarcity of application data for global warming potential refrigerants, insufficient stability of hydrogen recycling under wide power output ranges, and thermodynamic irreversibility causing turbulence loss. To address these issues, future efforts should focus on developing dynamic intelligent control technology based on machine learning, designing adjustable nozzles and other structural innovations, optimizing multi-system efficiency through hybrid architectures, and investigating global warming potential refrigerants. These strategies will facilitate the evolution of ejector technology toward greater intelligence and efficiency, thereby supporting the green transformation and energy conservation objectives of rail transit. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Research on Heat Exchangers Networks and Heat Recovery)
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22 pages, 4620 KiB  
Article
Spatial Strategies for the Renewable Energy Transition: Integrating Solar Photovoltaics into Barcelona’s Urban Morphology
by Maryam Roodneshin, Adrian Muros Alcojor and Torsten Masseck
Solar 2025, 5(3), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/solar5030034 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 357
Abstract
This study investigates strategies for urban-scale renewable energy integration through a photovoltaic-centric approach, with a case study of a district in Barcelona. The methodology integrates spatial and morphological data using a geographic information system (GIS)-based and clustering framework to address challenges of CO [...] Read more.
This study investigates strategies for urban-scale renewable energy integration through a photovoltaic-centric approach, with a case study of a district in Barcelona. The methodology integrates spatial and morphological data using a geographic information system (GIS)-based and clustering framework to address challenges of CO2 emissions, air pollution, and energy inefficiency. Rooftop availability and photovoltaic (PV) design constraints are analysed under current urban regulations. The spatial analysis incorporates building geometry and solar exposure, while an evolutionary optimisation algorithm in Grasshopper refines shading analysis, energy yield, and financial performance. Clustering methods (K-means and 3D proximity) group PV panels by solar irradiance uniformity and spatial coherence to enhance system efficiency. Eight PV deployment scenarios are evaluated, incorporating submodule integrated converter technology under a solar power purchase agreement model. Results show distinct trade-offs among PV scenarios. The standard fixed tilted (31.5° tilt, south-facing) scenario offers a top environmental and performance ratio (PR) = 66.81% but limited financial returns. In contrast, large- and huge-sized modules offer peak financial returns, aligning with private-sector priorities but with moderate energy efficiency. Medium- and large-size scenarios provide balanced outcomes, while a small module and its optimised rotated version scenarios maximise energy output yet suffer from high capital costs. A hybrid strategy combining standard fixed tilted with medium and large modules balances environmental and economic goals. The district’s morphology supports “solar neighbourhoods” and demonstrates how multi-scenario evaluation can guide resilient PV planning in Mediterranean cities. Full article
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28 pages, 5208 KiB  
Article
ORC System Temperature and Evaporation Pressure Control Based on DDPG-MGPC
by Jing Li, Zexu Gao, Xi Zhou and Junyuan Zhang
Processes 2025, 13(7), 2314; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13072314 - 21 Jul 2025
Viewed by 270
Abstract
The organic Rankine cycle (ORC) is a key technology for the recovery of low-grade waste heat, but its efficient and stable operation is challenged by complex kinetic coupling. This paper proposes a model partitioning strategy based on gap measurement to construct a high-fidelity [...] Read more.
The organic Rankine cycle (ORC) is a key technology for the recovery of low-grade waste heat, but its efficient and stable operation is challenged by complex kinetic coupling. This paper proposes a model partitioning strategy based on gap measurement to construct a high-fidelity ORC system model and combines the setting of observer decoupling and multi-model switching strategies to reduce the coupling impact and enhance adaptability. For control optimization, the reinforcement learning method of deep deterministic Policy Gradient (DDPG) is adopted to break through the limitations of the traditional discrete action space and achieve precise optimization in the continuous space. The proposed DDPG-MGPC (Hybrid Model Predictive Control) framework significantly enhances robustness and adaptability through the synergy of reinforcement learning and model prediction. Simulation shows that, compared with the existing hybrid reinforcement learning and MPC methods, DDPG-MGPC has better tracking performance and anti-interference ability under dynamic working conditions, providing a more efficient solution for the practical application of ORC. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy Systems)
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21 pages, 4944 KiB  
Article
Multi-Objective Optimization Methods for University Campus Planning and Design—A Case Study of Dalian University of Technology
by Lin Qi, Chaoran Chen and Jun Dong
Buildings 2025, 15(14), 2551; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15142551 - 19 Jul 2025
Viewed by 339
Abstract
This study focuses on the multi-objective coordination problem in university campus planning and design, proposing an optimized methodology integrating an improved multi-objective decision-making framework. A five-dimensional objective system—comprising energy efficiency, spatial quality, economic cost, ecological benefits, and cultural expression—was established, alongside the identification [...] Read more.
This study focuses on the multi-objective coordination problem in university campus planning and design, proposing an optimized methodology integrating an improved multi-objective decision-making framework. A five-dimensional objective system—comprising energy efficiency, spatial quality, economic cost, ecological benefits, and cultural expression—was established, alongside the identification and standardization of 29 key variables to construct mapping relationships among objective functions. On the algorithmic level, an adapted NSGA-III was implemented on the MATLAB platform (version R2022b), introducing a dynamic reference point mechanism and hybrid constraint-handling strategy to enhance convergence and solution diversity. Taking the northern residential area of the western campus of Dalian University of Technology as a case study, multiple Pareto-optimal solutions were generated. Five representative alternatives were selected and evaluated through the AHP–TOPSIS method to determine the optimal scheme. The results indicated significant improvements in energy, economic, spatial, and ecological dimensions, while also achieving quantifiable control over cultural expression. On this basis, an integrated optimization strategy targeting “form–function–environment–culture” was proposed, offering data-informed support and procedural reference for systematic campus planning. This study demonstrates the effectiveness, adaptability, and practical value of the proposed approach in addressing multi-objective conflicts in university planning. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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22 pages, 524 KiB  
Review
Strategic Decision-Making in SMEs: A Review of Heuristics and Machine Learning for Multi-Objective Optimization
by Gines Molina-Abril, Laura Calvet, Angel A. Juan and Daniel Riera
Computation 2025, 13(7), 173; https://doi.org/10.3390/computation13070173 - 18 Jul 2025
Viewed by 387
Abstract
Small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) face dynamic and competitive environments where resilience and data-driven decision-making are critical. Despite the potential benefits of artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and optimization techniques, SMEs often struggle to adopt these tools due to high costs, limited [...] Read more.
Small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) face dynamic and competitive environments where resilience and data-driven decision-making are critical. Despite the potential benefits of artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and optimization techniques, SMEs often struggle to adopt these tools due to high costs, limited training, and restricted hardware access. This study reviews how SMEs can employ heuristics, metaheuristics, ML, and hybrid approaches to support strategic decisions under uncertainty and resource constraints. Using bibliometric mapping with UMAP and BERTopic, 82 key works are identified and clustered into 11 thematic areas. From this, the study develops a practical framework for implementing and evaluating optimization strategies tailored to SMEs’ limitations. The results highlight critical application areas, adoption barriers, and success factors, showing that heuristics and hybrid methods are especially effective for multi-objective optimization with lower computational demands. The study also outlines research gaps and proposes future directions to foster digital transformation in SMEs. Unlike prior reviews focused on specific industries or methods, this work offers a cross-sectoral perspective, emphasizing how these technologies can strengthen SME resilience and strategic planning. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Computational Social Science)
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18 pages, 3899 KiB  
Article
Multi-Agent-Based Estimation and Control of Energy Consumption in Residential Buildings
by Otilia Elena Dragomir and Florin Dragomir
Processes 2025, 13(7), 2261; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13072261 - 15 Jul 2025
Viewed by 295
Abstract
Despite notable advancements in smart home technologies, residential energy management continues to face critical challenges. These include the complex integration of intermittent renewable energy sources, issues related to data latency, interoperability, and standardization across diverse systems, the inflexibility of centralized control architectures in [...] Read more.
Despite notable advancements in smart home technologies, residential energy management continues to face critical challenges. These include the complex integration of intermittent renewable energy sources, issues related to data latency, interoperability, and standardization across diverse systems, the inflexibility of centralized control architectures in dynamic environments, and the difficulty of accurately modeling and influencing occupant behavior. To address these challenges, this study proposes an intelligent multi-agent system designed to accurately estimate and control energy consumption in residential buildings, with the overarching objective of optimizing energy usage while maintaining occupant comfort and satisfaction. The methodological approach employed is a hybrid framework, integrating multi-agent system architecture with system dynamics modeling and agent-based modeling. This integration enables decentralized and intelligent control while simultaneously simulating physical processes such as heat exchange, insulation performance, and energy consumption, alongside behavioral interactions and real-time adaptive responses. The system is tested under varying conditions, including changes in building insulation quality and external temperature profiles, to assess its capability for accurate control and estimation of energy use. The proposed tool offers significant added value by supporting real-time responsiveness, behavioral adaptability, and decentralized coordination. It serves as a risk-free simulation platform to test energy-saving strategies, evaluate cost-effective insulation configurations, and fine-tune thermostat settings without incurring additional cost or real-world disruption. The high fidelity and predictive accuracy of the system have important implications for policymakers, building designers, and homeowners, offering a practical foundation for informed decision making and the promotion of sustainable residential energy practices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Development of Energy and Environment in Buildings)
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34 pages, 2504 KiB  
Review
Review of Challenges in Heat Exchanger Network Development for Electrified Industrial Energy Systems
by Stanislav Boldyryev, Oleksandr S. Ivashchuk, Goran Krajačić and Volodymyr M. Atamanyuk
Energies 2025, 18(14), 3685; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18143685 - 12 Jul 2025
Viewed by 319
Abstract
Shifting towards electrified industrial energy systems is pivotal for meeting global decarbonization objectives, especially since process heat is a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions in the industrial sector. This review examines the changing role of heat exchanger networks (HENs) within electrified process [...] Read more.
Shifting towards electrified industrial energy systems is pivotal for meeting global decarbonization objectives, especially since process heat is a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions in the industrial sector. This review examines the changing role of heat exchanger networks (HENs) within electrified process industries, where electricity-driven technologies, including electric heaters, steam boilers, heat pumps, mechanical vapour recompression, and organic Rankine cycles, are increasingly supplanting traditional fossil-fuel-based utilities. The analysis identifies key challenges associated with multi-utility integration, multi-pinch configurations, and low-grade heat utilisation that influence HEN design, retrofitting, and optimisation efforts. A comparative evaluation of various methodological frameworks, including mathematical programming, insights-based methods, and hybrid approaches, is presented, highlighting their relevance to the specific constraints and opportunities of electrified systems. Case studies from the chemicals, food processing, and cement sectors demonstrate the practicality and advantages of employing electrified heat exchanger networks (HENs), particularly in terms of energy efficiency, emissions reduction, and enhanced operational flexibility. The review concludes that effective strategies for the design of HENs are crucial in industrial electrification, facilitating increases in efficiency, reductions in emissions, and improvements in economic feasibility, especially when they are integrated with renewable energy sources and advanced control systems. Future initiatives must focus on harmonising technical advances with system-level resilience and economic sustainability considerations. Full article
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16 pages, 2609 KiB  
Article
Comparative Life Cycle and Techno-Economic Assessment of Constructed Wetland, Microbial Fuel Cell, and Their Integration for Wastewater Treatment
by Nicholas Miwornunyuie, Samuel O. Alamu, Guozhu Mao, Nihed Benani, James Hunter and Gbekeloluwa Oguntimein
Clean Technol. 2025, 7(3), 57; https://doi.org/10.3390/cleantechnol7030057 - 10 Jul 2025
Viewed by 398
Abstract
This study systematically compares the environmental and economic performance of three wastewater treatment systems: constructed wetlands (CWs), microbial fuel cells (MFCs), and their integration (CW–MFC). Lab-scale units of each system were constructed using a multi-media matrix (gravel, zeolite, and granular activated carbon), composite [...] Read more.
This study systematically compares the environmental and economic performance of three wastewater treatment systems: constructed wetlands (CWs), microbial fuel cells (MFCs), and their integration (CW–MFC). Lab-scale units of each system were constructed using a multi-media matrix (gravel, zeolite, and granular activated carbon), composite native wetland species (Juncus effusus, Iris sp., and Typha angustifolia), carbon-based electrodes (graphite), and standard inoculum for CW and CW–MFC. The MFC system employed carbon-based electrodes and proton-exchange membrane. The experimental design included a parallel operation of all systems treating domestic wastewater under identical hydraulic and organic loading rates. Environmental impacts were quantified across construction and operational phases using life cycle assessment (LCA) with GaBi software 9.2, employing TRACI 2021 and ReCiPe 2016 methods, while techno-economic analysis (TEA) evaluated capital and operational costs. The key results indicate that CW demonstrates the lowest global warming potential (142.26 kg CO2-eq) due to its reliance on natural biological processes. The integrated CW–MFC system achieved enhanced pollutant removal (82.8%, 87.13%, 78.13%, and 90.3% for COD, NO3, TN, and TP) and bioenergy generation of 2.68 kWh, balancing environmental benefits with superior treatment efficiency. In contrast, the stand-alone MFC shows higher environmental burdens, primarily due to energy-intensive material requirements and fabrication processes. TEA results highlight CW as the most cost-effective solution (USD 627/m3), with CW–MFC emerging as a competitive alternative when considering environmental benefits and operational efficiencies (USD 718/m3). This study highlights the potential of hybrid systems, such as CW–MFC, to advance sustainable wastewater treatment technologies by minimizing environmental impacts and enhancing resource recovery, supporting their broader adoption in future water management strategies. Future research should focus on optimizing materials and energy use to improve scalability and feasibility. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Water and Wastewater Treatment Technologies)
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19 pages, 1845 KiB  
Article
Genetic Basis and Simulated Breeding Strategies for Enhancing Soybean Seed Protein Content Across Multiple Environments
by Xu Sun, Bo Hu, Wen-Xia Li and Hai-Long Ning
Plants 2025, 14(14), 2117; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14142117 - 9 Jul 2025
Viewed by 406
Abstract
Soybeans are a primary source of plant-based protein, with seeds containing approximately 40% protein—a key quality trait. Selecting superior hybrid combinations and managing progeny effectively are crucial for developing high-protein soybean varieties. Using a recombinant inbred line population (RIL3613) derived from Dongnong L13 [...] Read more.
Soybeans are a primary source of plant-based protein, with seeds containing approximately 40% protein—a key quality trait. Selecting superior hybrid combinations and managing progeny effectively are crucial for developing high-protein soybean varieties. Using a recombinant inbred line population (RIL3613) derived from Dongnong L13 × Heihe 36 and its previously constructed high-density genetic linkage map, QTLs and QTL × environment interactions (QEIs) associated with seed protein content (SPC) were identified through the bi-parental population (BIP) model and multi-environment trials (MET) model in QTL IciMapping v4.2. Candidate genes were then predicted via sequence alignment and haplotype analysis between the parents. Finally, simulated breeding was conducted using the B4L function in the In Silico Breeding (ISB) module of the Blib platform to determine optimal breeding strategies across diverse environments. The analysis identified 19 QTLs associated with SPC and 97 QEIs linked to SPC. These QTLs collectively explained 84.442% of the phenotypic variance, with four QTLs exhibiting significant contributions. A key candidate gene, Glyma.12G231400, associated with soybean SPC, was predicted within the 38,995,090–39,293,825 bp interval on chromosome 12. Across 11 environments, three to six optimal breeding schemes were selected, all employing modified pedigree selection. These findings enhance our understanding of the genetic basis of soybean protein formation and provide technological support for molecular breeding for seed quality improvement. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Crop Genetics and Breeding)
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44 pages, 1067 KiB  
Review
Toward Adaptive and Immune-Inspired Viable Supply Chains: A PRISMA Systematic Review of Mathematical Modeling Trends
by Andrés Polo, Daniel Morillo-Torres and John Willmer Escobar
Mathematics 2025, 13(14), 2225; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13142225 - 8 Jul 2025
Viewed by 637
Abstract
This study presents a systematic literature review on the mathematical modeling of resilient and viable supply chains, grounded in the PRISMA methodology and applied to a curated corpus of 235 peer-reviewed scientific articles published between 2011 and 2025. The search strategy was implemented [...] Read more.
This study presents a systematic literature review on the mathematical modeling of resilient and viable supply chains, grounded in the PRISMA methodology and applied to a curated corpus of 235 peer-reviewed scientific articles published between 2011 and 2025. The search strategy was implemented across four major academic databases (Scopus and Web of Science) using Boolean operators to capture intersections among the core concepts of supply chains, resilience, viability, and advanced optimization techniques. The screening process involved a double manual assessment of titles, abstracts, and full texts, based on inclusion criteria centered on the presence of formal mathematical models, computational approaches, and thematic relevance. As a result of the selection process, six thematic categories were identified, clustering the literature according to their analytical objectives and methodological approaches: viability-oriented modeling, resilient supply chain optimization, agile and digitally enabled supply chains, logistics optimization and network configuration, uncertainty modeling, and immune system-inspired approaches. These categories were validated through a bibliometric analysis and a thematic map that visually represents the density and centrality of core research topics. Descriptive analysis revealed a significant increase in scientific output starting in 2020, driven by post-pandemic concerns and the accelerated digitalization of logistics operations. At the methodological level, a high degree of diversity in modeling techniques was observed, with an emphasis on mixed-integer linear programming (MILP), robust optimization, multi-objective modeling, and the increasing use of bio-inspired algorithms, artificial intelligence, and simulation frameworks. The results confirm a paradigm shift toward integrative frameworks that combine robustness, adaptability, and Industry 4.0 technologies, as well as a growing interest in biological metaphors applied to resilient system design. Finally, the review identifies research gaps related to the formal integration of viability under disruptive scenarios, the operationalization of immune-inspired models in logistics environments, and the need for hybrid approaches that jointly address resilience, agility, and sustainability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section D2: Operations Research and Fuzzy Decision Making)
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35 pages, 17292 KiB  
Article
VMD-SE-CEEMDAN-BO-CNNGRU: A Dual-Stage Mode Decomposition Hybrid Deep Learning Model for Microseismic Time Series Prediction
by Mingyi Cui, Enke Hou and Pengfei Hou
Mathematics 2025, 13(13), 2121; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13132121 - 28 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 473
Abstract
Coal mine disaster safety monitoring often employs microseismic technology for its high sensitivity and real-time capability. However, nonlinear, non-stationary, and multi-scale signals limit traditional time series models (e.g., ARMA, ARIMA). This paper proposes a hybrid deep learning model—VMD-SE-CEEMDAN-BO-CNNGRU—integrating variational mode decomposition, sample entropy, [...] Read more.
Coal mine disaster safety monitoring often employs microseismic technology for its high sensitivity and real-time capability. However, nonlinear, non-stationary, and multi-scale signals limit traditional time series models (e.g., ARMA, ARIMA). This paper proposes a hybrid deep learning model—VMD-SE-CEEMDAN-BO-CNNGRU—integrating variational mode decomposition, sample entropy, CEEMDAN, Bayesian optimization, and a CNN-GRU architecture. Microseismic data from the 08 working face in D mine (Weibei mining area) were used to predict daily maximum energy, average energy, and frequency. The model achieved high predictive performance with R2 values of 0.93, 0.89, and 0.88, significantly outperforming baseline models lacking modal decomposition. Comparative experiments verified the superiority of the VMD-first, SE-reconstruction, and CEEMDAN-second decomposition strategy, yielding up to 13% greater accuracy than reverse-order schemes. The model maintained R2 above 0.80 on another dataset from the 03 working face in W mine (Binchang mining area), demonstrating robust generalization. Although performance declined during fault disturbances, accuracy for average energy and frequency rebounded post-disturbance, indicating strong adaptability. Overall, the VSCB-CNNGRU model enhances both accuracy and stability in microseismic prediction, supporting dynamic risk assessment and early warning in coal mining. Full article
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35 pages, 2010 KiB  
Article
Intelligent Transmission Control Scheme for 5G mmWave Networks Employing Hybrid Beamforming
by Hazem (Moh’d Said) Hatamleh, As’ad Mahmoud As’ad Alnaser, Roba Mahmoud Ali Aloglah, Tomader Jamil Bani Ata, Awad Mohamed Ramadan and Omar Radhi Aqeel Alzoubi
Future Internet 2025, 17(7), 277; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi17070277 - 24 Jun 2025
Viewed by 321
Abstract
Hybrid beamforming plays a critical role in evaluating wireless communication technology, particularly for millimeter-wave (mmWave) multiple-input multiple-out (MIMO) communication. Several hybrid beamforming systems are investigated for millimeter-wave multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication. The deployment of huge grant-free transmission in the millimeter-wave (mmWave) band is [...] Read more.
Hybrid beamforming plays a critical role in evaluating wireless communication technology, particularly for millimeter-wave (mmWave) multiple-input multiple-out (MIMO) communication. Several hybrid beamforming systems are investigated for millimeter-wave multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication. The deployment of huge grant-free transmission in the millimeter-wave (mmWave) band is required due to the growing demands for spectrum resources in upcoming enormous machine-type communication applications. Ultra-high data speed, reduced latency, and improved connection are all promised by the development of 5G mmWave networks. Yet, due to severe route loss and directional communication requirements, there are substantial obstacles to transmission reliability and energy efficiency. To address this limitation in this research we present an intelligent transmission control scheme tailored to 5G mmWave networks. Transport control protocol (TCP) performance over mmWave links can be enhanced for network protocols by utilizing the mmWave scalable (mmS)-TCP. To ensure that users have the stronger average power, we suggest a novel method called row compression two-stage learning-based accurate multi-path processing network with received signal strength indicator-based association strategy (RCTS-AMP-RSSI-AS) for an estimate of both the direct and indirect channels. To change user scenarios and maintain effective communication constantly, we utilize the innovative method known as multi-user scenario-based MATD3 (Mu-MATD3). To improve performance, we introduce the novel method of “digital and analog beam training with long-short term memory (DAH-BT-LSTM)”. Finally, as optimizing network performance requires bottleneck-aware congestion reduction, the low-latency congestion control schemes (LLCCS) are proposed. The overall proposed method improves the performance of 5G mmWave networks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Wireless and Mobile Networking—2nd Edition)
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68 pages, 2430 KiB  
Review
Unlocking the Future: Carbon Nanotubes as Pioneers in Sensing Technologies
by Nargish Parvin, Sang Woo Joo, Jae Hak Jung and Tapas K. Mandal
Chemosensors 2025, 13(7), 225; https://doi.org/10.3390/chemosensors13070225 - 21 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 986
Abstract
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have emerged as pivotal nanomaterials in sensing technologies owing to their unique structural, electrical, and mechanical properties. Their high aspect ratio, exceptional surface area, excellent electrical conductivity, and chemical tunability enable superior sensitivity and rapid response in various sensor platforms. [...] Read more.
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have emerged as pivotal nanomaterials in sensing technologies owing to their unique structural, electrical, and mechanical properties. Their high aspect ratio, exceptional surface area, excellent electrical conductivity, and chemical tunability enable superior sensitivity and rapid response in various sensor platforms. This review presents a comprehensive overview of recent advancements in CNT-based sensors, encompassing both single-walled (SWCNTs) and multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs). We discuss their functional roles in diverse sensing applications, including gas sensing, chemical detection, biosensing, and pressure/strain monitoring. Particular emphasis is placed on the mechanisms of sensing, such as changes in electrical conductivity, surface adsorption phenomena, molecular recognition, and piezoresistive effects. Furthermore, we explore strategies for enhancing sensitivity and selectivity through surface functionalization, hybrid material integration, and nanostructuring. The manuscript also covers the challenges of reproducibility, selectivity, and scalability that hinder commercial deployment. In addition, emerging directions such as flexible and wearable CNT-based sensors, and their role in real-time environmental, biomedical, and structural health monitoring systems, are critically analyzed. By outlining both current progress and existing limitations, this review underscores the transformative potential of CNTs in the design of next-generation sensing technologies across interdisciplinary domains. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Carbon Nanotubes in Sensing)
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