scholarly journals Computational Study of the Time-dependent Flow Field of a Water-Molasses Mixture Inside a Stirred Vessel

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suci Madhania ◽  
Tantular Nurtono ◽  
Sugeng Winardi ◽  
Yuswan Muharam ◽  
Widodo Wahyu Purwanto
Author(s):  
Ralf E. Walraevens ◽  
Heinz E. Gallus ◽  
Alexander R. Jung ◽  
Jürgen F. Mayer ◽  
Heinz Stetter

A study of the unsteady flow in an axial flow turbine stage with a second stator blade row is presented. The low aspect ratio blades give way to a highly three-dimensional flow which is dominated by secondary flow structures. Detailed steady and unsteady measurements throughout the machine and unsteady flow simulations which include all blade rows have been carried out. The presented results focus on the second stator flow. Secondary flow structures and their origins are identified and tracked on their way through the passage. The results of the time-dependent secondary velocity vectors as well as flow angles and Mach number distributions as perturbation from the time-mean flow field are shown in cross-flow sections and azimuthal cuts throughout the domain of the second stator. At each location the experimental and numerical results are compared and discussed. A good overall agreement in the time-dependent flow behaviour as well as in the secondary flow structures is stated.


Author(s):  
E L L Pereira ◽  
C J Deschamps ◽  
F A Ribas

An experimentally validated numerical analysis of reciprocating refrigeration compressors is presented. The finite-volume methodology is adopted to solve the flow field and a one-degree-of-freedom model is used to describe the valve dynamics. The variation of the computation domain, associated with the valve and piston displacements, is taken into account and the time-dependent flow field and the valve dynamics are coupled and solved simultaneously. The three-dimensional formulation considered in the analysis allowed the simulation of actual suction and discharge muffler geometries. Numerical results were validated with reference to experimental data for valve displacement and pressure in the suction and compression chambers obtained in a calorimeter facility. A study was carried out to identify the contributions of mufflers and valves to the compressor thermodynamic losses.


2004 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 400-415 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amador M. Guzmán ◽  
Rodrigo A. Escobar ◽  
Cristina H. Amon

Computational investigations of flow mixing and oxygen transfer characteristics in an intravenous membrane oxygenator (IMO) are performed by direct numerical simulations of the conservation of mass, momentum, and species equations. Three-dimensional computational models are developed to investigate flow-mixing and oxygen-transfer characteristics for stationary and pulsating balloons, using the spectral element method. For a stationary balloon, the effect of the fiber placement within the fiber bundle and the number of fiber rings is investigated. In a pulsating balloon, the flow mixing characteristics are determined and the oxygen transfer rate is evaluated. For a stationary balloon, numerical simulations show two well-defined flow patterns that depend on the region of the IMO device. Successive increases of the Reynolds number raise the longitudinal velocity without creating secondary flow. This characteristic is not affected by staggered or non-staggered fiber placement within the fiber bundle. For a pulsating balloon, the flow mixing is enhanced by generating a three-dimensional time-dependent flow characterized by oscillatory radial, pulsatile longitudinal, and both oscillatory and random tangential velocities. This three-dimensional flow increases the flow mixing due to an active time-dependent secondary flow, particularly around the fibers. Analytical models show the fiber bundle placement effect on the pressure gradient and flow pattern. The oxygen transport from the fiber surface to the mean flow is due to a dominant radial diffusion mechanism, for the stationary balloon. The oxygen transfer rate reaches an asymptotic behavior at relatively low Reynolds numbers. For a pulsating balloon, the time-dependent oxygen-concentration field resembles the oscillatory and wavy nature of the time-dependent flow. Sherwood number evaluations demonstrate that balloon pulsations enhance the oxygen transfer rate, even for smaller flow rates.


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