Technology Reports of Kansai University

Technology Reports of Kansai University (ISSN: 04532198) is a monthly peer-reviewed and open-access international Journal. It was first built in 1959 and officially in 1975 till now by kansai university, japan. The journal covers all sort of engineering topic, mathematics and physics. Technology Reports of Kansai University (TRKU) was closed access journal until 2017. After that TRKU became open access journal. TRKU is a scopus indexed journal and directly run by faculty of engineering, kansai university.

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Submission Deadline

Volume - 66 , Issue 01
20 Jan 2024
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Upcoming Publication

Volume - 66 , Issue 01
31 Jan 2024

Aim and Scope

Technology Reports of Kansai University (ISSN: 04532198) is a peer-reviewed journal. The journal covers all sort of engineering topic as well as mathematics and physics. the journal's scopes are in the following fields but not limited to:

Electrical Engineering and Telecommunication Section:

Electrical Engineering, Telecommunication Engineering, Electro-mechanical System Engineering, Biological Biosystem Engineering, Integrated Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Hardware-software co-design and interfacing, Semiconductor chip, Peripheral equipments, Nanotechnology, Advanced control theories and applications, Machine design and optimization , Turbines micro-turbines, FACTS devices , Insulation systems , Power quality , High voltage engineering, Electrical actuators , Energy optimization , Electric drives , Electrical machines, HVDC transmission, Power electronics.

Computer Science Section :

Software Engineering, Data Security , Computer Vision , Image Processing, Cryptography, Computer Networking, Database system and Management, Data mining, Big Data, Robotics , Parallel and distributed processing , Artificial Intelligence , Natural language processing , Neural Networking, Distributed Systems , Fuzzy logic, Advance programming, Machine learning, Internet & the Web, Information Technology , Computer architecture, Virtual vision and virtual simulations, Operating systems, Cryptosystems and data compression, Security and privacy, Algorithms, Sensors and ad-hoc networks, Graph theory, Pattern/image recognition, Neural networks. Shenyang Jianzhu Daxue Xuebao (Ziran Kexue Ban)/Journal of Shenyang Jianzhu University (Natural Science) General Medicine (ISSN:1311-1817) Chinese Journal of Evidence-Based Medicine Zhongguo yi liao qi xie za zhi = Chinese journal of medical instrumentation Lizi Jiaohuan Yu Xifu/Ion Exchange and Adsorption Kexue Tongbao/Chinese Science Bulletin Dalian Haishi Daxue Xuebao/Journal of Dalian Maritime University

Civil and architectural engineering :

Architectural Drawing, Architectural Style, Architectural Theory, Biomechanics, Building Materials, Coastal Engineering, Construction Engineering, Control Engineering, Earthquake Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Geotechnical Engineering, Materials Engineering, Municipal Or Urban Engineering, Organic Architecture, Sociology of Architecture, Structural Engineering, Surveying, Transportation Engineering.

Mechanical and Materials Engineering :

kinematics and dynamics of rigid bodies, theory of machines and mechanisms, vibration and balancing of machine parts, stability of mechanical systems, mechanics of continuum, strength of materials, fatigue of materials, hydromechanics, aerodynamics, thermodynamics, heat transfer, thermo fluids, nanofluids, energy systems, renewable and alternative energy, engine, fuels, nanomaterial, material synthesis and characterization, principles of the micro-macro transition, elastic behavior, plastic behavior, high-temperature creep, fatigue, fracture, metals, polymers, ceramics, intermetallics.

Chemical Engineering :

Chemical engineering fundamentals, Physical, Theoretical and Computational Chemistry, Chemical engineering educational challenges and development, Chemical reaction engineering, Chemical engineering equipment design and process design, Thermodynamics, Catalysis & reaction engineering, Particulate systems, Rheology, Multifase flows, Interfacial & colloidal phenomena, Transport phenomena in porous/granular media, Membranes and membrane science, Crystallization, distillation, absorption and extraction, Ionic liquids/electrolyte solutions.

Food Engineering :

Food science, Food engineering, Food microbiology, Food packaging, Food preservation, Food technology, Aseptic processing, Food fortification, Food rheology, Dietary supplement, Food safety, Food chemistry.

Physics Section:

Astrophysics, Atomic and molecular physics, Biophysics, Chemical physics, Civil engineering, Cluster physics, Computational physics, Condensed matter, Cosmology, Device physics, Fluid dynamics, Geophysics, High energy particle physics, Laser, Mechanical engineering, Medical physics, Nanotechnology, Nonlinear science, Nuclear physics, Optics, Photonics, Plasma and fluid physics, Quantum physics, Robotics, Soft matter and polymers.

Mathematics Section:

Actuarial science, Algebra, Algebraic geometry, Analysis and advanced calculus, Approximation theory, Boundry layer theory, Calculus of variations, Combinatorics, Complex analysis, Continuum mechanics, Cryptography, Demography, Differential equations, Differential geometry, Dynamical systems, Econometrics, Fluid mechanics, Functional analysis, Game theory, General topology, Geometry, Graph theory, Group theory, Industrial mathematics, Information theory, Integral transforms and integral equations, Lie algebras, Logic, Magnetohydrodynamics, Mathematical analysis.

Latest Articles of

Technology Reports of Kansai University

Journal ID : TRKU-12-09-2021-11494
Total View : 447

Title : Some heterocyclic amines as hazard in Vietnam’s well done protein rich foods

Abstract :

PhIP (2-Amino-1-methyl-6-phenylimidazo[4,5-b] pyridine), MeIQx (2-Amino-3,8-dimethylimidazo[4,5-f] quinoxaline) are among the most abundant heterocyclic aromatic amines (HAAs) in cooked meals, particularly rich in protein and lipid. HAAs is formed from the reaction of creatine or creatinine, aminoacidic and reducing sugar at high temperature (> 150oC), in approximately 10 min. International Agency for Research of Cancer has mentioned PhIP as a cancer precursor and it was assessed to be 100 times, and more than 2000 times more mutant than aflatoxin B1 and benzo [a] pyrene, respectively. National Cancer Center (Japan) and Harvard University have reported on the relation between consuming meat cooked at high temperature and risk of cancer. In Vietnam, consumption of fried food, fast food is increasing steady during recent year, with the CAGR of more than 15%, however, there is no data on this issue on cooked meat. The aim of this study was to analyze PhIP and MeIQx in fried food regularly presented in the daily meals of people from the North of Vietnam; and to analyze PhIP in the hair of selected meat eaters to check the presence of this HCA accumulated in hair. A survey has performed on the daily meals of 300 individuals from Hanoi, and outside of Hanoi (Ha Nam and Hung Yen provinces). In Hanoi, more than 65% of surveyors have consumed more than 85g of pork, beef, poultry, freshwater and sea fish, while in Ha Nam and Hung Yen only poultry and freshwater fish were eaten >85g per meal by more than 65% population. In Ha Nam and Hung Yen, people prefer eating fried to grilled meat except poultry among surveyors. In Hanoi, adversely, people prefer grilled to fried meat; half of population consumed grilled or fried food more than 1-3 times/month. LC/MS/MS has been carried out to analyze PhIP and MeIQx in 14 fried and grilled food samples (represented the regular meals) and 9 hair samples, from 3 groups of 25-39 years old, 40-49 years old and 50-59-year-old of meat-eaters. The max contain of PhIP of 77.21 ng/g has been found in grilled beef (surface sample), but it was not detected in fried sea fish and freshwater fish. MeIQx has been found in few samples and it was of 20.4 ng/g in grilled beef as well. In hair samples only PhIP has been studied as it has been mentioned as a good biomarker for HAA accumulation in the body [6]. In this study PhIP was detected at the max level of 21.22ng/g among meat eaters, however, it was not detected in the hair of the eldest group, 50-59-year-old.

Full article
Journal ID : TRKU-11-09-2021-11493
Total View : 368

Title : Sustainable Urban Renewal Strategies of Traditional Urban Fabric Areas - Suleimani/ Sarshaqam Traditional Area as Case Study

Abstract :

Traditional areas represent the present of the past reality, which is reflected in its buildings and spaces. They are places of continuous life; carrying the history of the city in all its physical and objective dimensions, making them living areas that form an essential part of the city, and giving it a vision of another era. This paper explores the changes that occurred in the urban fabric of the traditional areas of disconnection, isolation and deterioration in the internal spaces. These changes led to the incompatibility of the characteristics of the fabric with the areas’ function (residential use), as a result of changing the movement axes systems, where the streets and roads penetrated the urban fabric in light of the change of planning priorities from fulfilling human requirements to trying to fulfill the machine requirements that has come to dominate contemporary planning thinking. The traditional Sarshaqam district of Suleimani was chosen as a case study, as it is an area that has undergone changes in its traditional fabric at the local and global levels. This was done by adopting a spatial analytical methodology based on 'space syntax' method and techniques, and the application of (GIS) program to quantitatively investigate the spatial organization of a traditional area and its transformation. The research examines the need for a clear and accurate perception of the change in the traditional urban fabric of the traditional (historical) urban areas, resulting from the changes in movement axes and the penetration of modern streets within the fabric. Accordingly, the hypothesis was formulated as follows: The syntactic properties of traditional urban areas, including the urban fabric, have been subjected to change due to the formal changes represented in penetrating parts of the traditional fabric by the modern streets. Results showed that the construction of the new streets or expanding them have clearly affected traditional urban areas. Also, many of its features have changed, causing them to lose parts of their traditional fabric, or losing the fabric's privacy and its distinctive identity.

Full article

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