scholarly journals Impact of a crushing ice particle onto a dry solid wall

Author(s):  
I. V. Roisman ◽  
C. Tropea

This is a theoretical study about ice particle impact onto a rigid wall. It is motivated by the need to model the process of ice crystal accretion or damage caused by an ice particle impacts. A quasi-one-dimensional model of ice particle impact and deformation is developed. Spherical, cylindrical and conical shapes of the ice crystals are analysed. The model is able to predict particle residual height, the force produced by impact and the collision duration. The theoretical predictions agree well with the available experimental data.

2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (23) ◽  
pp. 13013-13022 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Murphy

Abstract. A parcel and a one-dimensional model are used to investigate the temperature dependence of ice crystal number density. The number of ice crystals initially formed in a cold cirrus cloud is very sensitive to the nucleation mechanism and the detailed history of cooling rates during nucleation. A possible small spread in the homogeneous freezing threshold due to varying particle composition is identified as a sensitive nucleation parameter. In a parcel model, the slow growth rate of ice crystals at low temperatures inherently leads to a strong increase in ice number density at low temperatures. This temperature dependence is not observed. The model temperature dependence occurs for a wide range of assumptions and for either homogeneous or, less strongly, heterogeneous freezing. However, the parcel model also shows that random temperature fluctuations result in an extremely wide range of ice number densities. A one-dimensional model is used to show that the rare temperature trajectories resulting in the lowest number densities are disproportionately important. Low number density ice crystals sediment and influence a large volume of air. When such fall streaks are included, the ice number becomes less sensitive to the details of nucleation than it is in a parcel model. The one-dimensional simulations have a more realistic temperature dependence than the parcel mode. The one-dimensional model also produces layers with vertical dimensions of meters even if the temperature forcing has a much broader vertical wavelength. Unlike warm clouds, cirrus clouds are frequently surrounded by supersaturated air. Sedimentation through supersaturated air increases the importance of any process that produces small numbers of ice crystals. This paper emphasizes the relatively rare temperature trajectories that produce the fewest crystals. Other processes are heterogeneous nucleation, sedimentation from the very bottom of clouds, annealing of disordered to hexagonal ice, and entrainment.


1985 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 348-353 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Badr

This paper describes a theoretical study on the formation of stratified combustible mixtures in closed long vertical flame tubes. The concentration profiles of the fuel (methane) in air, just before ignition took place, were predicted using a one-dimensional model involving molecular and convective diffusional processes. Phenomenological and experimental justification of the one-dimensional assumption was given and some of the predicted data were compared with experiment for different test conditions. The model appears to have successfully predicted the concentration profiles in some situations where other models failed.


2009 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 401-417
Author(s):  
Sergio A. Montes

Abstract The flow of a power law fluid within the cavity of a multi-speed Mooney rheometer is studied by means of finite difference techniques with the aim of quantifying the edge effects that occur in the vicinity of the rotor corner. As expected, a significant concentration of shear stress occurs near the rotor edge. As the power law index varies, significant stagnation zones are found within the cavity, which combined with thin-shearing behavior near the moving surfaces, yield complex shear rate distributions. However, when torque is calculated, the edge effect can be described by a factor which is numerically very similar to a factor obtained from one-dimensional models described in the literature. Comparison of theoretical predictions and experimental data was found to be satisfactory.


2015 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Arris S. Tijsseling ◽  
Qingzhi Hou ◽  
Zafer Bozkuş

An improved one-dimensional (1D) model—compared to previous work by the authors—is proposed, which is able to predict the acceleration and shortening of a single liquid slug propagating in a straight pipe with a downstream bend. The model includes holdup at the slug's tail and flow separation at the bend. The obtained analytical and numerical results are validated against experimental data. The effects of holdup, driving pressure and slug length are examined in a parameter variation study.


1993 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 1027-1032 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. C. Yang ◽  
F. B. Cheung ◽  
J. H. Koo

A one-dimensional material erosion model has been developed to describe the simultaneous processes of thermochemical ablation and mechanical erosion of ablatives exposed to high-temperature particle-laden flows. The model accounts for the effect of mechanical erosion due to thermochemical weakening of the material and the influence of particle impact on the thermochemical ablation. Numerical calculations of the erosion depth (i.e., surface recession) have been made for various thermal and particle loading conditions. The predicted results are found to agree reasonably well with available experimental data.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. McMasters

The laser flash method for measuring thermal diffusivity is well established and has been in use for many years. Early analysis methods employed a simple model, in which one dimensional transient conduction was assumed, with insulated surfaces during the time subsequent to the flash. More recently, models of grater sophistication have been applied to flash diffusivity experiments. These models have been matched to experimental data using nonlinear regression and assume one-dimensional conduction. The advanced models have achieved highly accurate agreement with experimental data taken from thin samples, on the order of one millimeter in thickness. As samples become thicker, models which neglect edge losses can lose some conformity to the experimental data. The present research involves the application of a two dimensional model which allows for penetration of the laser flash into the sample. The accommodation of the flash penetration is important for porous materials, where the coarseness of the porosity is more than one percent of the sample thickness. Variability of the area of incidence of the flash is also investigated to determine the effect on the model and the results. Statistical methods are used in order to make a determination as to the validity of the two dimensional model, as compared with the one dimensional analysis method.


2013 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 39-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylwia Polesek-Karczewska ◽  
Dariusz Kardaś ◽  
Izabela Wardach-Święcicka ◽  
Arkadiusz Grucelski ◽  
Sławomir Stelmach

Abstract In the present paper, the one-dimensional model for heat and mass transfer in fixed coal bed was proposed to describe the thermal and flow characteristics in a coke oven chamber. For the purpose of the studied problem, the analysis was limited to the calculations of temperature field and pyrolytic gas yield. In order to verify the model, its theoretical predictions for temperature distribution during wet coal charge carbonization were compared with the measurement results found in the literature. In general, the investigation shows good qualitative agreement between numerical and experimental data. However, some discrepancy regarding the temperature characteristics at the stage of evaporation was observed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 129 (2) ◽  
pp. 201
Author(s):  
С.Е. Савотченко

A theoretical study of the features of the localization of fields (light beam) near a plane defect in media with a stepwise defocusing nonlinearity of the Kerr type is carried out. A one-dimensional model is used based on a generalization of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation with a point potential that simulates the interaction of excitations with a plane defect, and a nonlinear term in which the coefficients of the linear and nonlinear responses abruptly change in depending on the field amplitude in the medium. It is found two types of symmetric localized stationary states in different energy ranges. The influence of the intensity of the interaction of excitations with a defect on the profile of localization of states and the conditions for their existence is studied.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 1020
Author(s):  
Doston Shayunusov ◽  
Dmitry Eskin ◽  
Boris V. Balakin ◽  
Svyatoslav Chugunov ◽  
Stein Tore Johansen ◽  
...  

Water droplets released from the sea surface represent one of the major causes of ice accretion on marine vessels. A one-dimensional model of the freezing of a spherical water droplet moving in cold air was developed. The crystallization model allows one to obtain an analytical solution if a uniform temperature distribution over the liquid’s core is assumed. The model was validated using STAR CCM+ Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code. A collision of a partially frozen droplet with a solid wall assuming the plastic deformation of an ice crust was also considered. The ratio of the crust deformation to the crust thickness was evaluated. It was assumed that if this ratio were to exceed unity, the droplet would stick to the wall’s surface due to ice bridge formation caused by the water released from the droplet’s core.


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