Magnetization and AC loss in a superconductor with an elliptical cross-section and arbitrary aspect ratio

2002 ◽  
Vol 377 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 156-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bennie ten Haken ◽  
Jan-Jaap Rabbers ◽  
Herman H.J. ten Kate
1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (4) ◽  
pp. 667-669 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kosuke Nagaya ◽  
Yasuo Hirata ◽  
Toyoaki Tsurumi ◽  
Sadahiko Takeda ◽  
Ken-ichi Nagai ◽  
...  

The maximum stress in elliptical cross-section coil springs with a certain aspect ratio becomes small as compared to the other springs used in practical machines. This article presents a simplified stress expression for designing elliptical cross-section coil springs. The stresses obtained by the present design formula are compared with those by calculated using numerical methods. It is ascertained that the present formula is applicable to design the elliptical cross-section coil springs.


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 61-75
Author(s):  
J.L. de Oliveira ◽  
A.G. Barbosa de Lima ◽  
R. Pereira Ramos ◽  
H. Luma Fernandes Magalhães ◽  
W.R. Gomes dos Santos ◽  
...  

In the oil industry, pipelines (circular ducts) are widely used for the transportation of oil and yours derived. Because of their advantages, such as low operating cost and increased safety during transportation, pipelines have become indispensable for transporting oil in large quantities and for long distances. As an alternative to this problem, the transport of oil and water can be accomplished using ducts with an elliptical cross-section. Thus, this work has the objective of studying the flow of oil and water in cylindrical ducts with an elliptical cross-section by using the Ansys CFX software. Results of the velocity, pressure and volumetric fraction distributions of the oil and water phases are presented and analyzed. By applying the same inlet velocity to oil and water, revealed that the elliptical duct, with aspect ratio equal to 5.0, has a pressure drop less (84.2%) than the pressure drop obtained for one duct of circular cross-section (aspect ratio equal to 1.0).


2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
D. C. Langer ◽  
B. A. Fleck ◽  
D. J. Wilson

This study examines a horizontal wall jet impinging onto a forward facing vertical step in a cross-flow. Planar laser induced fluorescence (PLIF) experiments in a 68×40 mm2 water channel indicate how the wall-jet flow after impinging onto the step becomes a vertical jet with an elliptical cross section. This study proposes predictive empirical correlations for the aspect ratio and perimeter of the jet’s elliptical cross section based on the step geometry and the inlet flow conditions. A numerical model is also presented, which was produced from a commercial Reynolds averaged Navier–Stokes computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code with the k-ϵ closure model. The experimental results were well represented by correlations for the perimeter P and aspect ratio S using the parameters H (the step height), L∘ (the distance from the jet represented as a point source to the step), and R (the velocity ratio). The CFD simulation was able to predict the trends in the perimeter (under different conditions), aspect ratio, and the shape of the concentration profile, but overpredicted the jet’s perimeter by approximately 50%. The results of these tests are required as input parameters when modeling jet trajectories.


2003 ◽  
Vol 125 (2) ◽  
pp. 217-220
Author(s):  
Gerald L. McIntyre ◽  
Allan D. Kraus

The spine (fin) efficiency is abandoned and the input admittance, defined as the ratio of the heat dissipated by the spine to the temperature excess at the spine base, is established as the parameter for comparison of the performance of the spines of circular, square and elliptical cross section. It is shown that the square cross section outperforms the circular cross section and by adjusting the aspect ratio of the elliptical spine, the spine can meet and eventually surpass the performance of the square spine.


2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 286-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
István Ecsedi ◽  
Attila Baksa

The object of this article is the Saint–Venant torsion of anisotropic, homogeneous bar with solid elliptical cross section. A general solution of the Saint–Venant torsion for anisotropic elliptical cross section is presented and some known results are reformulated. The case of non-warping cross section is analysed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
B. P. Kondratyev ◽  
N. G. Trubitsyna

AbstractIn this paper the problem of the tidal potential of a homogeneous gravitating torus with an elliptical cross-section sleeve is solved. In particular, the potentials in analytical form in the vicinity of the center of the torus and its external region are found. This torus can serve as a gravitational model of the Kuiper belt.


1952 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-48
Author(s):  
R. A. Clark ◽  
T. I. Gilroy ◽  
E. Reissner

Abstract This paper is concerned with the application of the theory of thin shells to several problems for toroidal shells with elliptical cross section. These problems are as follows: (a) Closed shell subjected to uniform normal wall pressure. (b) Open shell subjected to end bending moments. (c) Combination of the results for the first and second problems in such a way as to obtain results for the stresses and deformations in Bourdon tubes. In all three problems the distribution of stresses is axially symmetric but only in the first problem are the displacements axially symmetric. The magnitude of stresses and deformations for given loads depends in all three problems on the magnitude of the two parameters bc/ah and b/c where b and c are the semiaxes of the elliptical section, a is the distance of the center of the section from the axis of revolution, and h is the thickness of the wall of the shell. For sufficiently small values of bc/ah trigonometric series solutions are obtained. For sufficiently large values of bc/ah asymptotic solutions are obtained. Numerical results are given for various quantities of practical interest as a function of bc/ah for the values 2, 1, 1/2, 1/4 of the semiaxes ratio b/c. It is suggested that the analysis be extended to still smaller values of b/c and to cross sections other than elliptical.


1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (01) ◽  
pp. 78-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.K. Perkins ◽  
J.A. Gonzalez

Abstract When a cool fluid such as water is injected into a hot reservoir, a growing region of cooled rock is established around the injection well. The rock matrix within the cooled region contracts, and a thermoelastic stress field is induced around the well. For typical waterflooding of a moderately deep reservoir, horizontal earth stresses may be reduced by several hundred psi. If the injection pressure is too high or if suspended solids in the water plug the formation face at the perforations, the formation will be fractured hydraulically. As the fracture grows, the flow system evolves from an essentially circular geometry in the plan view to one characterized more nearly as elliptical. This paper considers thermoelastic stresses that would result from cooled regions of fixed thickness and of elliptical cross section. The stresses for an infinitely thick reservoir have been deduced from information available in public literature. A numerical method has been developed to calculate thermoelastic stresses induced within elliptically shaped regions of finite thickness. Results of these two approaches were combined, and empirical equations were developed to give an approximate but convenient, explicit method for estimating induced stresses. An example problem is given that shows how this theory can be applied to calculate the fracture lengths, bottomhole pressures (BHP's), and elliptical shapes of the flood front as the injection process progresses. Introduction When fluids are injected into a well, such as during waterflooding or other secondary or tertiary recovery processes, the temperatures of the injected fluids are typically cooler than the in-situ reservoir temperatures. A region of cooled rock forms around each injection well, and this region grows as additional fluid is injected. Formation rock within the cooled region contracts, and this leads to a decrease in horizontal earth stress near the injection well. In Ref. 1, the magnitude of the reduction in horizontal earth stress was given for the case of a radially symmetrical cooled region. Another factor, which may occur simultaneously, is the plugging of formation rock by injected solids. There is extensive literature indicating that waters normally available for injection contain suspended solids. Laboratory tests demonstrate that these waters, when injected into formation rocks, can plug the face of the rock or severely limit injectivity. In field operations, injection often simply continues at a BHP that is high enough to initiate and extend hydraulic fractures." The injected fluid then can leak off readily through the large fracture face area. Because of the lowering of horizontal earth stresses that results from cold fluid injection, hydraulic fracturing pressures can be much lower than would be expected for an ordinary low-leakoff hydraulic fracturing treatment. For this reason, the well operator may not be aware that injected fluid is being distributed through an extensive hydraulic fracture. If injection conditions are such that a hydraulic fracture is created, then the flow system will evolve from an essentially circular geometry in the plan view to one characterized more nearly as elliptical. In this paper, thermoelastic stresses for cooled regions of fixed thickness and of elliptical cross section are determined, and a theory of hydraulic fracturing of injection wells is developed. Conditions under which secondary fractures (perpendicular to the primary, main fracture) will open also are discussed. Finally, an example problem is given to illustrate how this theory can be applied to calculate fracture lengths, BHP'S, and elliptical shapes of the flood front as the injection process progresses. Thermoelastic Stresses in Regions of Elliptical Cross Section If fluid of constant viscosity is injected into a line crack (representing a two-wing, vertical hydraulic fracture), the flood front will progress outward. so its outer boundary at any time can be described approximately as an ellipse that is confocal with the line crack. If the injected fluid is at a temperature different from the formation temperature, a region of changed rock temperature with fairly sharply defined boundaries will progress outward from the injection well but lag behind the flood front. The outer boundary of the region of changed temperature also will be elliptical in its plan view and confocal with the line crack (see Fig. 1). Stresses within the region of altered temperature, as well as stress in the surrounding rock, which remains at its initial temperature, will be changed because of the expansion or contraction of the rock within the region of altered temperature. The thermoelastic stresses within an infinitely tall cylinder of elliptical cross section can be determined from information available in the literature. 10 The interior thermoelastic stresses perpendicular and parallel to the major axes of the ellipse are given by Eqs. 1 and 2, respectively. SPEJ P. 78^


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