Chalmers Open Digital Repository
Welcome to Chalmers Open Digital Repository!
Here you can find:
- Student theses and papers
- Digital special collections, such as Chalmers modellkammare
- Selected project reports
Research publications, reports and dissertations can be found in research.chalmers.se
Communities in Chalmers ODR
Select a community to browse its collections.
Recent Submissions
- Cirkulär masshantering: en kvalitativ studie baserad på litteratur och intervjuer i bygg- och anläggningssektorn(2026) Persson, Ludvig; Renkvist, RufusHanteringen av schaktmassor inom bygg- och anläggningssektorn präglas idag av linjära materialflöden där massor i stor utsträckning deponeras snarare än återanvänds. Sverige har en mycket låg cirkularitetsgrad, trots att den teoretiska potentialen bedöms vara betydligt högre. Syftet med denna studie är att undersöka hur organisatoriska, regulatoriska och praktiska faktorer påverkar möjligheten till ökad återvinning och återbruk av massor, med en fallstudie hos Skanska Industrial Solutions. Studien genomfördes som en kvalitativ undersökning baserad på litteraturstudie och 24 semistrukturerade intervjuer med aktörer från olika delar av värdekedjan. Resultaten visar att de främsta hindren utgörs av otydliga regelverk kring klassificering av massor, bristande ekonomiska incitament samt sen och fragmenterad planering mellan aktörer. Gränsdragningen mellan avfall och produkt upplevs som särskilt problematisk och leder i det dagliga arbetet till en försiktighetsprincip där tekniskt återanvändbara massor ändå väljs bort. Därtill identifieras interna målkonflikter inom organisationer som ett betydande hinder, där olika affärsenheter inte alltid har samstämmiga incitament för cirkulära lösningar. Studien rekommenderar tydligare kravställning i upphandlingar, ekonomiska styrmedel samt branschgemensamma riktlinjer för klassificering och riskbedömning som centrala åtgärder för att möjliggöra en mer resurseffektiv och hållbar masshantering.
- Analyzing Bottlenecks and Capacity Scalability in Engine Manufacturing(2026) Hässel, Gustav; Rehn, JacobThis master thesis investigates the production capacity of the D4/D6 engine lines at Volvo Penta’s manufacturing facility in Vara. The study leverages the combined strengths of Value Stream Mapping and the Theory of Constraints to identify systemic bottlenecks and evaluate optimal staffing configurations under varying production volumes. The research focuses on analyzing a gradual increase in customer demand to determine the scalabil- ity of the current assembly process. Through the development of a capacity model, the study identifies critical constraints that emerge as production scales. A key finding of the analysis is that the current production flow, in its existing configuration, possesses a maximum capacity of 31 engines per day shift, a significant increase from the current demand of 18 engines, without the immediate necessity for operational rebalancing. The analysis specifically identifies the point where the Longest Operation Time (LOT) creates a physical bottleneck. This shows that beyond a certain volume, adding more staff will no longer increase output without changes to the station layout. This serves as a deci- sion support tool for Volvo Penta, highlighting when infrastructure investments become necessary to meet forecasted demand.
- Model-Based Robust Control of an Ultralight Fixed-Wing Tailsitter(2026) Edman, Gunnar; Ohlsson, RobinDevelopment of fixed-wing VTOL UAVs is an active area of research, enabling increased range and top-speed far surpassing conventional quad-rotors, while preserving the landing flexibility. A subset of this research is the fixed-wing tailsitter, which achieves vertical landing by pitching the entire airframe up into hover. This thesis investigates model-based robust control of an ultralight 250 gram tailsitter UAV which aims to autonomously land vertically in real-world conditions. A 6-DOF model adapted for the unique challenges of tailsitters at hover was developed, extracting aerodynamic coefficients through CFD simulation. By incorporating propwash dynamics, the model ensures control surfaces maintain authority as airspeed approaches zero, enabling continuous simulation from cruise to hover. To account for the significant nonlinearities during transition, an LPV model was developed, scheduled over a grid of airspeed and angle of attack to cover the flight envelope. From this, a MIMO H∞ controller was developed to stabilize the vehicle’s coupled dynamics. Simulation results demonstrate successful trajectory tracking through transition and descent, showcasing that the LPV captures the nonlinear dynamics. Furthermore, wind gust simulations utilizing the Dryden wind model were used to evaluate the operational limits of the aircraft. These tests revealed that the gain-scheduled LQR baseline demonstrated higher overall performance and superior disturbance rejection. Ultimately, the results indicate the aircraft can only handle low to moderate wind conditions, which is attributed to its low inertia and control authority.
- Explainable AI in Healthcare: Physicians Perspectives and Technical Evaluation of AI-Based Decision Support and Explainability Methods(2026) Tomasson, Moa; Westerkull, SagaArtificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly integrated into healthcare, particularly in clinical decision support and predictive modeling. However, the limited interpretability of many machine learning models remains a major challenge for clinical implementation, motivating growing interest in explainable artificial intelligence (XAI). This thesis investigates XAI in healthcare from both technical and clinical perspectives. The clinical perspective was explored through qualitative interviews with physicians focusing on AI-based decision support systems and the role of explainable AI in clinical practice. The findings revealed a cautiously optimistic view of AI-supported decision-making, while emphasizing that clinically useful explanations should be concise, intuitive, and seamlessly integrated into existing workflows. The technical part of the study investigated XAI methods for survival prediction in lymphoma patients using both tabular clinical data and medical imaging data. Multiple survival modelling approaches, including Cox regression, DeepSurv, and convolutional neural network models, were implemented and evaluated using several post-hoc explainability methods across the different data modalities. While both modalities demonstrated strong predictive performance, the tabular models achieved slightly stronger results with more stable, interpretable explanations. Furthermore, different XAI approaches highlighted complementary but inconsistent patterns, illustrating challenges related to the robustness and reliability of post-hoc explanations. Overall, the findings demonstrated that successful clinical integration of AI depends as much on providing reliable, clinically meaningful explanations as it does on achieving strong predictive performance.
- Optimization of a Megawatt Truck Charging Station with Local Battery Storage - A study on cost optimization and peak load management in megawatt charging systems(2026) Danielsson, Filip; Karlsson, Hugo; Pettersson, Oscar; Zayton, Oliver; Åhman, Axel; Öberg, SimonThis thesis evaluates the design and economic feasibility of a megawatt charging station using a local battery energy storage system with a limited grid connection. The study investigates when local battery storage should be used, how the number of chargers should be dimensioned and which parameters have the largest impact on investment decisions. The conclusions are based on a linear optimization model, which minimizes system cost by sizing the system using connection and BESS, a simulation model that verifies the optimization and determines the number of chargers needed and an investment calculation that calculates the financial viability of the charging station. The linear optimization results show that a higher battery cost leads to a smaller battery system and a larger grid connection as battery energy capacity and power capacity decrease. Additionally, with greater electricity price variation, it becomes more beneficial to have a larger battery capacity. For the base case, the optimal configuration under assumptions used in this study consisted of seven MCS chargers, two power distribution centers, a grid connection of approximately 642 kW, a battery energy capacity of 647 kWh and a battery power capacity of 264 kW. The simulation showed that eliminating queue time is not economically justified, since the additional reduction in waiting cost from installing another charger does not outweigh the additional investment cost. The investment calculation indicates that the charging station is profitable under the assumptions made in this study, with a positive NPV of 18.2 MSEK and a DPP below the assumed 10-year battery lifetime. Therefore, the results indicate that a local battery storage system is more beneficial when there are high charging peaks and a variation in electricity prices present. However, profitability is sensitive to demand level, battery cost, electricity price and retail price.
