scholarly journals Development of Velocity Interferometer and its Application to Piston Motion Measurement in a Compression Tube of Free Piston Shock Tube.

1999 ◽  
Vol 65 (638) ◽  
pp. 3294-3304
Author(s):  
Kensuke KOREMOTO ◽  
Tokitada HASHIMOTO ◽  
Kazuyoshi TAKAYAMA ◽  
Katsuhiro ITOH
1995 ◽  
Vol 43 (499) ◽  
pp. 446-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hisashi KIHARA ◽  
Shigeru ASO ◽  
Michio NISHIDA

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Champagne ◽  
L. Weiss

There is a growing opportunity and need for research that investigates alternate power sources. One such source is low temperature waste heat, or energy cast off to the environment as part of some larger process. Through the capture and use of this abundant energy source for power production, it is possible to enhance the overall operating efficiency of the larger system. This presents significant potential for sustainability increase and energy savings. One potential system that can operate from these sources is a low temperature, small-scale steam expander. Investigations of one such device called a Free Piston Expander (FPE) are presented in this work. In final form, the FPE will be a MEMS based device capable of operation as part of a complete low temperature steam system. In this present study, a millimeter scale device is constructed and tested to yield insight into critical operational parameters for future microfabricated designs. Construction of this testbed device is via concentric copper tubing, allowing an effective baseline study of these determining parameters. Parameters studied include device cross sectional area and shape as well as operational pressure. Once consistent parameters are determined, three separate variations of circular FPE design are further tested. These FPEs are designed to either constrain piston rotation or allow for rotational freedom during operation. Testing is performed on these devices for consistency in piston motion. Piston motion is characterized based on a single expansion and reaction of the piston.


2011 ◽  
Vol 83 ◽  
pp. 66-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vishakantaiah Jayaram ◽  
Singh Preetam ◽  
K. P. J. Reddy

Indigenously designed and fabricated free piston driven shock tube (FPST) was used to generate strong shock heated test gases for the study of aero-thermodynamic reactions on ceramic materials. The reflected shock wave at the end of the shock tube generates high pressure and temperature test gas (Argon, Ar) for short duration. Interaction of materials with shock heated Ar gas leads to formation of a new solid or stabilization of a material in new crystallographic phase. In this shock tube, the generated shock waves was utilized to heat Ar to a very high temperature (11760 K) at about 40-55 bar for 2-4 ms. We confirmed the phase transformation and electronic structure of the material after exposure to shock by XRD and XPS studies. This high enthalpy gas generated in the shock-tube was utilized to synthesize cubic perovskite CeCrO3from fluorite Ce0.5Cr0.5O2+δoxide. We were able to demonstrate that this ceramic materials undergoes phase transformations with the interaction of high enthalpy gas under shock dynamic loading.


2016 ◽  
Vol 179 ◽  
pp. 1166-1175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boru Jia ◽  
Rikard Mikalsen ◽  
Andrew Smallbone ◽  
Zhengxing Zuo ◽  
Huihua Feng ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Amir Al-Falahi ◽  
M. Z. Yusoff ◽  
T. Yusaf

The aim of this work is to provide a comparative experimental study on the performance of the conventional shock tube and a free-piston compressor. Experimental measurements of shock strength, peak pressure and surface temperature change of air-air as a driver/driven gas are then presented and compared with another set of experimental measurements using gas combination of He-air. The results provide very good estimates for the above mentioned parameters obtained after diaphragm rupture and also provide significant information on the role of the free piston in the facility operation conditions over the full length of the facility.


Author(s):  
Chao Yong ◽  
Eric J. Barth

In conventional internal combustion engines, valves are opened and closed using a cam surface. The cam is kinematically related to the piston positions through the crankshaft and timing belt. In contrast, there is no crankshaft or kinematic cam surface in a free-piston engine to physically realize this mechanism. As a consequence, a free-piston engine has variable stroke lengths, which presents a challenge for active piston motion and precise stroke length control. This paper presents a virtual-cam based approach to relate free-piston motion to actuated engine valve control within a clear and familiar intuitive physical context. The primary functionality of the virtual cam control framework is to create a variable index, which is adjustable from cycle to cycle, for the exhaust/injection valves and spark timing similar to the function of physical cams in conventional engines. Since the cam is virtually created, it can be dynamically rebuilt to comply with cycle-to-cycle variations such as amount of the air/fuel supply, engine load and stroke length. This index rebuilding process is based on a cycle-to-cycle adaptive control method that uses the knowledge obtained from previous cycles to adjust the cam parameters. Preliminary experimental results are presented for a novel liquid-piston free-piston engine intended as a compact and efficient energy source for untethered power dense pneumatic systems such as untethered robots.


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