NUMERICAL ANALYSIS OF IDEALLY-EXPANDED SUPERSONIC JETS WITH NONEQUILIBRIUM HOMOGENEOUS CONDENSATION

2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (05) ◽  
pp. 1350024
Author(s):  
M. M. A. ALAM ◽  
T. SETOGUCHI ◽  
S. MATSUO

Steam or moist air is used as working gas in a wide range of engineering applications of supersonic jets. In these cases, nonequilibrium homogeneous condensation may occur at the downstream of nozzle throat. The surrounding gas will be heated by the release of latent heat of condensation, and may results a change in the flowfield. The present report will describe numerical investigations predicting the effect of nonequilibrium condensation on the flow characteristics of ideally-expanded supersonic free jets. A TVD numerical method is applied to solve RANS and droplet growth equations. The predicted results are compared with the experimental data.

2014 ◽  
Vol 06 (06) ◽  
pp. 1450070
Author(s):  
M. M. A. ALAM ◽  
T. SETOGUCHI ◽  
H. D. KIM

Spontaneous condensation of moist air in supersonic jets is of considerable interest in a variety of natural and industrial processes. During impingement of supersonic moist air jets, the nonequilibrium homogeneous condensation can be experienced at the region between downstream of nozzle exit and an obstacle. The subsequent release of latent heat thus results in a deceleration of the flow and a rise in pressure, known traditionally as the condensation shock; likely have strong effect on the flow features. The present paper reported of the effect of spontaneous nonequilibrium homogeneous condensation of moist air on the aerodynamic and oscillatory flow features of supersonic jets impinging on cavity. A total variation diminishing (TVD) scheme was used to solve the time dependent Favre averaged Navier–Stokes equations, and the droplet growth equation of liquid phase production for simulating the condensing jets. Both qualitative and quantitative validations of the numerical model were accomplished, and the results showed a good agreement between the computed results and experimental data. Predicted flow and oscillatory features of jets were presented.


2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (8) ◽  
pp. 879-915 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bona Lu ◽  
Yan Niu ◽  
Feiguo Chen ◽  
Nouman Ahmad ◽  
Wei Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Gas-solid fluidization is intrinsically dynamic and manifests mesoscale structures spanning a wide range of length and timescales. When involved with reactions, more complex phenomena emerge and thus pose bigger challenges for modeling. As the mesoscale is critical to understand multiphase reactive flows, which the conventional two-fluid model without mesoscale modeling may be inadequate to resolve even using extremely fine grids, this review attempts to demonstrate that the energy-minimization multiscale (EMMS) model could be a starting point to develop such mesoscale modeling. Then, the EMMS-based mesoscale modeling with emphasis on formulation of drag coefficients for different fluidization regimes, modification of mass transfer coefficient, and other extensions are discussed in an attempt to resolve the emerging challenges. Its applications with examples of development of novel fluid catalytic cracking and methanol-to-olefins processes prove that the mesoscale modeling plays a remarkable role in improving the predictions in hydrodynamic behaviors and overall reaction rate. However, the product content primarily depends on the chemical kinetic model itself, suggesting the necessity of an effective coupling between chemical kinetics and flow characteristics. The mesoscale modeling can be believed to accelerate the traditional experimental-based scale-up process with much lower cost in the future.


1965 ◽  
Vol 111 (474) ◽  
pp. 391-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew McGhie ◽  
James Chapman ◽  
J. S. Lawson

In the preceding paper the effect of experimental distraction was examined and the findings discussed. The present report is concerned with a similar study of the effect of distraction on tests which involve another aspect of schizophrenic performance, that of psychomotor ability. Earlier studies (Chapman and McGhie, 1961, 1962) produced both clinical and experimental evidence that auditory distraction disrupted the motor responses of some schizophrenic patients. As the previous experimental findings were based on two tests involving only very limited areas of psychomotor performance, it was necessary to examine patients on a wide range of psychomotor tests. A second aim of the present investigation was to assess any differential effects due to variation in the sensory modality of the distracting stimuli.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 1074-1090
Author(s):  
Nassrin Jassim Hussien Al-Mansori ◽  
Laith Shaker Ashoor Al-Zubaidi

Forecasting techniques are essential in the planning, design, and management of water resource systems. The numerical model introduced in this study turns governing differential equations into systems of linear or non-linear equations in the flow field, thereby revealing solutions. This one-dimensional hydrodynamic model represents the varied unsteady flow found in natural channels based on the Saint-Venant Equations. The model consists of the equations for the conservation of mass and momentum, which are recognized as very powerful mathematical tools for studying an important class of water resource problems. These problems are characterized by time dependence of flow and cover a wide range of phenomena. The formulations, held up by the four-point implicit finite difference scheme, solve the nonlinear system of equations using the Newton-Raphson iteration method with a modified Gaussian elimination technique. The model is calibrated using data on the Euphrates River during the early spring flood in 2015. It is verified by its application to an ideal canal and to the reach selected at the Euphrates River; this application is also used to predict the effect of hydraulic parameters on the river’s flow characteristics. A comparison between model results and field data indicates the feasibility of our technique and the accuracy of results (R2 = 0.997), meaning that the model is ready for future application whenever field observations are available. 


Author(s):  
Р.Р. Симашов ◽  
С.В. Чехранов

В работе приводятся обобщающие зависимости коэффициентов расхода сопловых аппаратов со сверхзвуковыми осесимметричными соплами в широком диапазоне изменения определяющих геометрических и режимных параметров. Предложена двухпараметрическая функция, учитывающая влияние расположения сопел в сопловом аппарате и степени конфузорности дозвуковой части осесимметричного сопла на коэффициент расхода. Показано слабое влияние на коэффициент расхода относительного радиуса закругления стенки в узкой части сопла и относительной длины дозвуковой части сопла в области их оптимальных значений определенных по минимуму потерь кинетической энергии. Переменные режимы работы сопла учитываются зависимостью относительного коэффициента расхода в функции от числа Рейнольдса в критическом сечении сопла. Полученные в работе эмпирические зависимости позволяют использовать их при моделировании переменных режимов и многорежимной оптимизации малорасходных турбин. The research presents generalizing dependences of mass flow rates in supersonic axisymmetric nozzle diaphragms n a wide range of variation of the governing geometric and operating parameters. A two-parameter function is proposed that takes into account the influence of the location of the nozzles in the nozzle apparatus and the degree of compression of the flow of the subsonic part of the nozzle on the mass flow rate. It is shown that the relative radius of rounding of the nozzle wall in the vicinity of the throat section and the relative length of the subsonic part of the nozzle in the region of their optimal values determined by the minimum of kinetic energy losses have a weak effect on the flow rate. Variable duties of nozzle operation are taken into account by the dependence of the relative flow rate as a function of the Reynolds number in the throat of the nozzle. The empirical dependencies obtained in this work make it possible to use them in modeling variable modes and multi-mode optimization of low-consumption turbines.


Author(s):  
Y Chung ◽  
H Kim ◽  
S Choi ◽  
C Bae

Misfiring in spark ignition engines should be avoided, otherwise unburned fuel and oxygen are brought into the catalyst, and subsequent combustion greatly increases the temperature, possibly resulting in immediate damage to the catalyst. As a new concept of misfire detection method, the signal fluctuation of a wide-range oxygen sensor has been introduced to monitor the fluctuation of the oxygen concentration at the exhaust manifold confluence point. The current research aims to develop a tool that is capable of predicting the variation in oxygen concentration at the exhaust manifold confluence point, and to investigate the flow characteristics of the misfired gas in the exhaust manifold under misfiring conditions in a cylinder. The oxygen concentration at the confluence point could be predicted by comparing the gas flowrate from the misfiring cylinder with the total exhaust gas flowrate. The gas flowrates from each of the cylinders were calculated using a one-dimensional engine cycle simulation including a gas dynamic model of the intake and exhaust systems. The variation in oxygen concentration was also determined experimentally using a fast-response hydrocarbon analyser. The trend of the oxygen concentration fluctuation calculated by the analytical model was compared with the experimental results. The analytical model could duplicate the measured trend of the fluctuation of oxygen concentration at the confluence point, which was characterized by twin peaks for one misfiring. The twin peaks are mainly caused by the mixing of the misfired gas with the burned gas from normally operating cylinders. The effects of engine load and speed on the characteristics of the variation in oxygen concentration were also investigated analytically and experimentally.


Author(s):  
Tirumaleswar Reddy ◽  
Prashanth Patil ◽  
Anca Zamfir

Identification and treatment of application flows are important to many application providers and network operators. They often rely on these capabilities to deploy and/or support a wide range of applications. These applications generate flows that may have specific characteristics such as bandwidth or latency that can be met if made known to the network. Historically, this functionality has been implemented to the extent possible using heuristics that inspect and infer flow characteristics. Heuristics may be based on port numbers, network identifiers (e.g., subnets or VLANs, Deep Flow Inspection (DFI), or Deep Packet Inspection (DPI)). However, many application flows in current usages are dynamic, adaptive, time-bound, encrypted, peer-to-peer (P2P), asymmetric, used on multipurpose devices, and/ or have different priorities depending on the direction of the flow, user preferences, and other factors. Any combination of these properties renders heuristic-based techniques less effective and may result in compromises to application security or user privacy. Application-enabled collaborative networking (AECN) is a framework in which applications explicitly signal their flow characteristics and requirements to the network. This provides network nodes with knowledge of the application flow characteristics, which enables them to apply the correct flow treatment and provide feedback to applications accordingly. This chapter describes how an application enabled collaborative networking framework contributes to solve the encountered problems.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 (DPC) ◽  
pp. 001963-001976
Author(s):  
Rabindra Das ◽  
Steven Rosser ◽  
Frank Egitto

The wide range of applications for medical electronics drives unique requirements that can differ significantly from commercial & military electronics. To accomplish this, new packaging structures need to be able to integrate more dies with greater function, higher I/O counts, smaller die pad pitches, and high reliability, while being pushed into smaller and smaller footprints. As a result, the microelectronics industry is moving toward alternative, innovative approaches as solutions for squeezing more function into smaller packages. In the present report, key enablers for achieving reduction in size, weight, and power (SWaP) in electronic packaging for a variety of medical applications are discussed. Advanced microelectronics packaging solutions with embedded passives are enabling SWaP reductions. Implementation of these solutions has realized up to 27X reduction in physical size for existing PWB assemblies, with significant reductions in weight. Shorter interconnects can also reduce or eliminate the need for termination resistors for some net topologies. Successful miniaturized products integrate the following design techniques and technologies: component footprint reduction, thin high density interconnects substrate technologies, I/O miniaturization and IC assembly capabilities. This paper presents fabrication and electrical characterization of embedded actives and passives on organic multilayered substrates. We have designed and fabricated several printed wiring board (PWB) and flip-chip package test vehicles focusing on embedded chips, resistors, and capacitors. Embedded passive technology further enhances miniaturization by enabling components to be moved from the surface of the substrate to its internal layers. The use of thin film resistor material allows creating individual miniaturized buried resistors. These resistors provide additional length and width reduction with negligible increases to the overall substrate and module (SiP) height. Resistor values can vary from 5 ohm to 50 Kohm with tolerances from 5 to 20% and areas as small as 0.2 mm2. The embedded resistors can be laser trimmed to a tolerance of <5% for applications that require tighter tolerance. The electrical properties of embedded capacitors fabricated from polymer-ceramic nanocomposites showed a stable capacitance and low loss over a wide frequency and temperature range. A few test vehicles were assembled to do system level analysis. Manufacturing methods and materials for producing advanced organic substrates and flex along with ultra fine pitch assemblies are discussed. A case study detailing the fabrication of a flexible substrate for use in an intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) catheter demonstrates how the challenges of miniaturization are met. These challenges include use of ultra-thin polymer films, extreme fine-feature circuitization, and assembly processes to accommodate die having reduced die pad pitch. In addition, new technologies for embedding a variety of active chips are being developed. A variety of active chips, including a chip having dimensions of one millimeter square, have been embedded and electrically connected to develop high performance packages.


Author(s):  
Muthuram A ◽  
Thanigaiarasu S ◽  
Rakesh Divvela ◽  
Rathakrishnan Ethirajan

AbstractEffect of nozzle geometries on the propagation of twin jet issuing from nozzles with circle-circle, circle-ellipse, circle-triangle, circle-square, circle-hexagon and circle-star geometrical combinations was investigated for Mach numbers 0.2, 0.4, 0.6 and 0.8. In all the cases, both jets in the twin jet had the same Mach number. All the twin jets of this study are free jets, discharged into stagnant ambient atmosphere. The result of the twin jets issuing from circle-circle nozzle is kept as the reference in this study. For all the twin jet nozzles, the inter nozzle spacing; the distance between the nozzle axes (S) was 20 mm and all the nozzles had an equivalent area of 78.5 mm2. Thus for all the cases of the present study, S/D ratio is 2. The results show that the mixing of the combined jet, after the merging point is strongly influenced by the combined effect of the nozzle geometry and jet Mach number. Among the six different twin jet nozzle configuration studied, circle-square combination is found to be the most superior mixing promoter.


Author(s):  
Hooman Foroughi ◽  
Masahiro Kawaji

The flow characteristics of a highly viscous oil and water mixture in a circular microchannel have been investigated. Water and silicone oil with a viscosity of 863 mPa.s were injected into a fused silica microchannel with a diameter of 250 μm. Before each experiment, the microchannel was initially saturated with either oil or water. In the initially oil-saturated case, different liquid-liquid flow patterns were observed and classified over a wide range of oil and water flow rates. As a special case, the flow of water at zero oil flow rate in a microchannel initially filled with silicone oil was also studied. When the microchannel was initially saturated with water, the oil formed a jet in water at the injection point but developed an instability at the oil-water interface downstream and eventually broke up into droplets.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document