The Simulation of the Un-Saturated Flow in the Dual-Scale Porous Media under Constant Flow Rate

2013 ◽  
Vol 753-755 ◽  
pp. 2747-2751
Author(s):  
Xin Ye ◽  
Shi Lin Yan

Considering the un-saturated in the experiment, the purpose of this paper is achieving a simple 1d molds unsaturated simulation of the filling process through the compiled software pore-flow and compare the single-scale result with the dual-scale result.

2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 617-624
Author(s):  
Yan Shilin ◽  
Yan Fei ◽  
Li Dequan ◽  
Li Yongjing

AbstractFibre fabrics in liquid composite moulding can be considered as dual-scale porous media. In different gap scales, an unsaturated flow is produced during the mould filling process. This particular flow behaviour deviates from the traditional Darcy’s law, which is used to calculate the filling pressure and will cause errors. To prove the mechanism of this unsaturated flow, an experimental device was set up with a one-dimensional constant flow rate. The influencing factors, such as injected media, flow velocity and fibre fabric, were investigated in this study. Based on the experimental data, several useful conclusions were drawn, providing good references for optimising the process parameters and controlling the product quality.


2014 ◽  
Vol 977 ◽  
pp. 515-519
Author(s):  
Rong Rong Jin ◽  
Jia Hang Wang

The paper establishes dimensionless mathematical models of the fluid flow in semi-infinite porous media with constant flow rate. Exact analytical solutions of these dimensionless mathematical models are derived by new definitions of dimensionless variables and Laplace transformation. Comparison curves of dimensionless moving boundary under different values of dimensionless Threshold Pressure Gradient (TPG) are plotted from newly proposed exact analytical solutions. An example is used to demonstrate pressure distribution in different positions with different TPG. It is shown that for the constant flow rate condition, the moving boundary extends to infinite in porous media with increasing production time. Steeper pressure curve is observed in larger TPG, which also exhibits greater pressure drop gradient and shorter pressure propagation distance at the same production time.


2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Il Doh ◽  
Young-Ho Cho

A pumpless fuel supply using pressurized fuel with autonomous flow regulation valves is presented. Since micropumps and their control circuitry consume a portion of the electrical power generated in fuel cells, fuel supply without micropumps makes it possible to provide more efficient and inexpensive fuel cells than conventional ones. The flow regulation valves in the present system maintain the constant fuel flow rate from the pressurized fuel chamber even though the fuel pressure decreases. They autonomously adjust fluidic resistance of the channel according to fuel pressure so as to maintain constant flow rate. Compared to previous pumpless fuel supply methods, the present method offers more uniform fuel flow without any fluctuation using a simple structure. The prototypes were fabricated by a polymer micromolding process. In the experimental study using the pressurized deionized water, prototypes with pressure regulation valves showed constant flow rate of 5.38 ± 0.52 μl/s over 80 min and 5.89 ± 0.62 μl/s over 134 min, for the initial pressure in the fuel chamber of 50 and 100 kPa, respectively, while the other prototypes having the same fluidic geometry without flow regulation valves showed higher and gradually decreasing flow rate. The present pumpless fuel supply method providing constant flow rate with autonomous valve operation will be beneficial for the development of next-generation fuel cells.


2018 ◽  
Vol 851 ◽  
pp. 507-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Inghilesi ◽  
Claudia Adduce ◽  
Valentina Lombardi ◽  
Federico Roman ◽  
Vincenzo Armenio

Unconfined three-dimensional gravity currents generated by lock exchange using a small dividing gate in a sufficiently large tank are investigated by means of large eddy simulations under the Boussinesq approximation, with Grashof numbers varying over five orders of magnitudes. The study shows that, after an initial transient, the flow can be separated into an axisymmetric expansion and a globally translating motion. In particular, the circular frontline spreads like a constant-flow-rate, axially symmetric gravity current about a virtual source translating along the symmetry axis. The flow is characterised by the presence of lobe and cleft instabilities and hydrodynamic shocks. Depending on the Grashof number, the shocks can either be isolated or produced continuously. In the latter case a typical ring structure is visible in the density and velocity fields. The analysis of the frontal spreading of the axisymmetric part of the current indicates the presence of three regimes, namely, a slumping phase, an inertial–buoyancy equilibrium regime and a viscous–buoyancy equilibrium regime. The viscous–buoyancy phase is in good agreement with the model of Huppert (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 121, 1982, pp. 43–58), while the inertial phase is consistent with the experiments of Britter (Atmos. Environ., vol. 13, 1979, pp. 1241–1247), conducted for purely axially symmetric, constant inflow, gravity currents. The adoption of the slumping model of Huppert & Simpson (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 99 (04), 1980, pp. 785–799), which is here extended to the case of constant-flow-rate cylindrical currents, allows reconciling of the different theories about the initial radial spreading in the context of different asymptotic regimes. As expected, the slumping phase is governed by the Froude number at the lock’s gate, whereas the transition to the viscous phase depends on both the Froude number at the gate and the Grashof number. The identification of the inertial–buoyancy regime in the presence of hydrodynamic shocks for this class of flows is important, due to the lack of analytical solutions for the similarity problem in the framework of shallow water theory. This fact has considerably slowed the research on variable-flow-rate axisymmetric gravity currents, as opposed to the rapid development of the knowledge about cylindrical constant-volume and planar gravity currents, despite their own environmental relevance.


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