Browsing by Author "Ekanayaka, L"
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- item: Conference-Full-textDesign and analysis of a mems based transdermal drug delivery system(IEEE, 2020-07) Perera, KNM; Awantha, WVI; Wanasinghe, AT; Herath, HMDP; Paththinige, SSHG; Ekanayaka, L; Amarasinghe, YWR; Weeraddana, C; Edussooriya, CUS; Abeysooriya, RPThe design and analysis of a Micro Electromechanical System-based (MEMS-based) Transdermal Drug Delivery System are presented in the research article. A conceptual design for the delivery of Levodopa was proposed by the authors. Major components of the system were identified as a microfluidic pump, microneedle array and the microfluidic channels connecting the system. The working principles of these components were selected according to the persisting requirements and design considerations. Simulations were conducted to evaluate the performance and to optimize the design of the system. A fabrication method for the system was proposed by the authors as a stacked layer. The results of the simulations conducted were presented. The simulations show positive results with the performance of the system and do not suggest a mode of mechanical failure of the system at the given boundary conditions. The paper concludes with recommendations for future work.
- item: Thesis-AbstractRemote sensing technology on managing agriculture based settlements in Sri Lanka(2015-01-29) Yapa, N; Ekanayaka, LThe history of the Uda Walawe Irrigation scheme in Sri Lanka goes back to 1967 as a part of the country‘s new postcolonial vision for economic development and modernization. It was a success story over the past five decades. Today, it is capable of supplying water to another 5000 hectares of land which were recently added to the current irrigation area (i.e. command area). The agriculture-related management practices behind these achievements have been made through field level observations and measurements while mass scale irrigation schemes especially in developed countries use the state of the art technology of Remote Sensing. These traditional methods pose a risk of not being able to retrieve critical information in time with the required level of accuracy. Also it was revealed that the scheme is experiencing water management problems due to the lack of information on agricultural areas. Conversely, the remote sensing technologies have been improving further beyond producing ground readings and allows access to information such as ground water mapping, evapotranspiration, water quality, vegetation indices and population estimation. This research was initiated to investigate how application of remote sensing technology would affect the agricultural development in Sri Lanka. The research was carried out within a limited scope due to resource limitations. Uda Walawe command area was selected as the study area and the Block Manager was identified as the agent who is most capable of utilizing relevant information and showing positive impact on management over a carefully identified agriculture-related activity (i.e. water release plan). A significant outcome of the project was to produce a quantifiable measure to the impact through descriptive analysis. The other outcome of this research was a list of agriculture related managerial issues that could be addressed using Remote Sensing technology. The study mainly focuses on the necessity of deploying Remote Sensing technology for managing irrigation schemes in Sri Lanka.