Single droplet impingement of urea water solution on heated porous surfaces

Author(s):  
C. Kuhn ◽  
D. Schweigert ◽  
C. Kuntz ◽  
M. Börnhorst
Author(s):  
Yoichiro Fukuchi ◽  
Tomoki Kondo ◽  
Keita Ando

Abstract In semiconductor industry, liquid jet cleaning plays an important role because of its high cleaning efficiency and low environmental load. However, its cleaning mechanism is not revealed in detail because the experimental observation of high-speed and sub-micron droplets is challenging. Furthermore, higher impact velocity may give rise to surface erosion due to water-hammer shock loading from the impingement. To study cleaning mechanisms and surface erosion, numerical simulation of droplet impingement accounting for both viscosity and compressibility is an effective approach. In the previous study, wall-shear-flow generation has evaluated from the simulation of high-speed single droplet impingement. To evaluate more practical model of jet cleaning application, simulation of two droplets simplifying mono-dispersed splay of droplet train is favorable. Here, we numerically simulated impingement of two droplets, which allows for evaluating water-hammer pressure and wall shear stress. We consider the case of two water droplets (200 μm in diameter) that collides continuously, at speed 50 m/s, at the inter-droplet distance from 250 to 400 μm, with a no-slip rigid wall covered with a water layer (100 μm in thickness). The simulation is based on compressible Navier-Stokes equations for axisymmetric flow and the mixture of two components appears in numerically diffusion interface expressed by the volume average and advection equation. The simulation is solved by finite-volume WENO scheme that can capture both shock waves and material interface. In our simulation, the impingement of second droplet impingement gain higher shear stress than the single droplet impingement. At the case that the inter-droplet distance is 300 μm, maximum shear stress is 30.22 kPa (at the second droplet impingement), which is much larger than at the first droplet impingement (8.42 kPa). This result indicates how the second droplet impingement make wall shear flow induced by first droplet impingement stronger. From the parameter study of the inter-droplet distance, we can say that wall shear stress gets stronger as water layer thickness decreases. Furthermore, the maximum wall pressure is 1.96 MPa at the second droplet impingement, which is larger than at the first droplet impingement (1.46 MPa). From this study, the evaluation of surface erosion caused by jet cleaning is expected. The simulation suggests that multiple droplets impingement continuously may gain higher cleaning efficiency, which will give us a fundamental insight into liquid jet cleaning technologies. For further study, simulation of water column impingement and comparing the result of impingement of two droplets are expected.


Author(s):  
Lu Qiu ◽  
Swapnil Dubey ◽  
Fook Hoong Choo ◽  
Fei Duan

Single droplet based investigations have been performed for hundreds of years. However, in many industrial applications, such as printing, spray cooling and coating etc, numerous droplets will be produced. Droplet train, therefore, is a physical model to approach the complex situation. When the wall temperature is higher than the boiling point, the problem becomes even complex. The subcooling of the droplet, the superheat of the wall also influence the hydrodynamic pattern of the droplet impingement. The hydrodynamic behavior of the water droplet train impinging onto a hot surface (up to 220 °C) is investigated. A droplet train generator is employed to produce stable high velocity (around 6.35 to 19.13 m/s) droplet train (with a diameter around 0.1 mm) at the droplet frequency ranges from 27990 Hz to 55560 Hz. The hot surface is made by copper and heated with cartridge heaters. The effect of wall superheat on flow pattern is experimentally examined and reported. The results show that the wall temperature plays an significant role to the impingement. It influences the spreading speed, stable spreading diameter and splashing angle apparently.


2020 ◽  
pp. 139-143

Natural dyes were followed and prepared from a pomegranate, purple carrot, and eggplant peel. The absorbance spectra was measured in the wavelength range 300-800 nm. The linear properties measurements of the prepared natural dye freestanding films were determined include absorption coefficient (α0), extinction coefficient (κ), and linear refraction index (n). The nonlinear refractive index n2 and nonlinear absorption coefficient β2 of the natural dyes in the water solution were measured by the optical z-scan technique under a pumped solid state laser at a laser wavelength of 532 nm. The results indicated that the pomegranate dye can be promising candidates for optical limiting applications with significantly low optical limiting of 3.5 mW.


2015 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-185 ◽  
Author(s):  
О.O. Brovko ◽  
◽  
L.A. Gorbach ◽  
О.D. Lutsyk ◽  
L.M. Sergeeva ◽  
...  

MRS Advances ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (61) ◽  
pp. 3141-3152
Author(s):  
Alma C. Chávez-Mejía ◽  
Génesis Villegas-Suárez ◽  
Paloma I. Zaragoza-Sánchez ◽  
Rafael Magaña-López ◽  
Julio C. Morales-Mejía ◽  
...  

AbstractSeveral photocatalysts, based on titanium dioxide, were synthesized by spark anodization techniques and anodic spark oxidation. Photocatalytic activity was determined by methylene blue oxidation and the catalytic activities of the catalysts were evaluated after 70 hours of reaction. Scanning Electron Microscopy and X Ray Diffraction analysis were used to characterize the catalysts. The photocatalyst prepared with a solution of sulfuric acid and 100 V presented the best performance in terms of oxidation of the dye (62%). The electric potential during the synthesis (10 V, low potential; 100 V, high potential) affected the surface characteristics: under low potential, catalyst presented smooth and homogeneous surfaces with spots (high TiO2 concentration) of amorphous solids; under low potential, catalyst presented porous surfaces with crystalline solids homogeneously distributed.


2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (10) ◽  
pp. 909-922 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikos Nikolopoulos ◽  
George Strotos ◽  
Konstantinos-Stephen P. Nikas ◽  
Manolis Gavaises ◽  
Andreas Theodorakakos ◽  
...  

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