Experimental and Numerical Study on Cooling Process of Sinter

2013 ◽  
Vol 816-817 ◽  
pp. 216-220
Author(s):  
Lian Lian Guo ◽  
Jing Fu Wang ◽  
Yin Zhi Wang

By means of thermal analysis, specific heat values of sinter with different temperatures are measured and the linear function which along with the change of temperature is got. According to the actual condition, the porous medium model which describes the cooling process is established. The influences on cooling process of specific heat with fixed and variational values are compared. With the variational specific heat, the effects on cooling process of sinter initial temperature and air temperature are discussed. The result shows that both increasing sinter initial temperature and cold air temperature can improve the exhaust heat utilization, but the later delay the cooling time.

1978 ◽  
Vol 56 (10) ◽  
pp. 1390-1394
Author(s):  
K. P. Srivastava

An extensive numerical study on specific heat at constant volume (Cv) for ordered and isotopically disordered lattices has been made. Cv at various temperatures for ordered and disordered linear and two-dimensional lattices have been compared and no appreciable difference in Cv between these two structures has been observed. Effect of concentration of light atoms on Cv for three-dimensional isotopically disordered lattices has also been shown.In spite of taking next-nearest-neighbour interaction into account, no substantial change in Cv between the ordered and isotopically disordered linear lattices has been found. It is shown that the low lying modes contribute substantially at low temperatures.


1865 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 71-202 ◽  

I. About the year 1780 it was distinctly proved that the same weights of different bodies require unequal quantities of heat to raise them through the same temperature, or on cooling through the same number of thermometric degrees, give out unequal quantities of heat. It was recognized that for different bodies the unequal quantities of heat, by which the same weights of different bodies are heated through the same range, must be determined as special constants, and considered as characteristic of the individual bodies. This newly discovered property of bodies Wilke designated as their specific heat , while Crawford described it as the comparative heat, or as the capacity of bodies for heat . I will not enter upon the earliest investigations of Black, Irvine, Crawford, and Wilke, with reference to which it may merely be mentioned that they depend essentially on the thermal action produced when bodies of different temperatures are mixed, and that Irvine appears to have been the first to state definitely and correctly in what manner this thermal action (that is, the temperature resulting from the mixture) depends on the original temperature, the weights, and the specific heats of the bodies used for the mixture. Lavoisier and Laplace soon introduced the use of the ice-calorimeter as a method for determining the specific heat of bodies; and J. T. Mayer showed subsequently that this determination can be based on the observation of the times in which different bodies placed under comparable conditions cool to the same extent by radiation. The knowledge of the specific heats of solid and liquid bodies gained during the last century, and in the first sixteen years of the present one, by these various methods, may be left unmentioned. The individual determinations then made were not so accurate that they could be compared with the present ones, nor was any general conclusion drawn in reference to the specific heats of the various bodies. 2. Dulong and Petit’s investigations, the publication of which commenced in 1818, brought into the field more accurate determinations, and a general law. The investigations of the relations between the specific heats of the elements and their atomic weights date from this time, and were afterwards followed by similar investigations into the relations of the specific heats of compound bodies to their composition. In order to give a general view of the results of these investigations, it is desirable to present, for the elements mentioned in the sequel, a synopsis of the atomic weights assumed at different times, and of certain numbers which stand in the closest connexion with these atomic weights.


2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 929-938
Author(s):  
Nour Lajimi ◽  
Noureddine Boukadida

This paper presents a numerical study of local thermal behavior. Vertical walls are equipped with alveolar structure and/or simple glazing in East, South and West frontages. Local temperature is assumed to be variable with time or imposed at set point temperature. Results principally show that the simple glazing number has a sensitive effect on convection heat transfer and interior air temperature. They also show that the diode effect is more sensitive in winter. The effect of alveolar structure and simple glazing on the power heating in case with set point temperature is also brought out.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 15-18
Author(s):  
Tatiany Carvalho dos Santos ◽  
Richard Stephen Gates ◽  
Ilda De Fátima Ferreira Tinôco ◽  
Sérgio Zolnier ◽  
Letícia Cibele da Silva Ramos Freitas

The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of different air velocities and temperature at the feeder on mean surface temperature of Japanese quail during the initial stage of laying. The experiment was carried out at the Center for Research in Environment and Agroindustry Systems Engineering (AMBIAGRO), Department of Agricultural Engineering, Federal University of Viçosa, Viçosa/MG, Brazil. A total of 216 Japanese quail in the initial laying phase were placed in four environmental chambers with different temperatures and air velocity, where they were housed and distributed randomly in 2 galvanized wire cages, with 3 partitions each and 27 birds/cage, and a density of approximately 155.6 cm²/bird. The experimental design consisted of randomized blocks with replications of two treatments (air velocity at the feeder: 0, 1, 2, and 3 m/s and air temperature: 17, 23, 29 and 35°C). The mean surface temperature was analyzed by Two-Way ANOVA, with treatment means separated by the Tukey test (P < 0.05). There was a significant positive correlation between air temperature and mean surface temperature (MST). Air velocity is important in removing heat from the surface of birds.


2003 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 719-722 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sérgio Fonsêca Guimarães ◽  
Atílio Storti Filho

Matrinxã is a very promising amazonian fish for fish culture in Brazil. This study is aimed at determining the approximate tolerated temperature range in this species. Groups of ten young matrinxã specimens (15.1±0.8 cm average length and 58.3±10.3 g average weight) were subjected to 9 different temperatures for 24 hours without previous acclimation. Fish were transferred from an initial temperature of 27ºC to those ranging from 12 to 39ºC at 3ºC intervals. Both 12ºC and 39ºC temperatures were lethal for this species with 100% mortality rate. Following 2 minutes of exposure to 39ºC fish changed behavior, showing an increase in opercular movements and erratic swimming; mortality reached 100% after 18 minutes. At 12ºC, fish lost equilibrium immediately after exposure and started swimming erratically; after only 4 minutes fish became lethargic and remained immobile on the bottom of the tank. Total mortality was only evident following 24 hours. At 15ºC matrinxã lost equilibrium after 5 to 6 minutes of exposure but mortality was only 20% after 24 hours. Fish tolerated well temperatures ranging from 18 to 36ºC with 100% survival after 24 hours. This preliminary study suggests that temperatures between 18 and 36ºC are the approximate range normally tolerated by this species, although survival at other temperatures may be increased by gradually acclimating fish to the more severe increases or decreases in temperature. In addition, it indicates that matrinxã may be cultivated over a wide geographical area.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 7628-7636
Author(s):  
D. Belakhal ◽  
Kouider Rahmani ◽  
Amel Elkaroui Elkaroui ◽  
Syrine Ben Haj Ayech ◽  
Nejla Mahjoub Saïd ◽  
...  

In the current investigation, numerical study of a thermal jet of asymmetric (rectangular and elliptical) and axisymmetric (circular) geometry was investigated with variable density to verify the impact of the ratio of density and geometry on the generation of entropy. The central jet was brought to different temperatures (194, 293 and 2110 K) to obtain density ratios (0.66, 1 and 7.2) identical to a mixture jet ((Air-CO2), (Air-Air) and (Air-He)), respectively. Solving the three-dimensional numerical resolution of the Navier Stocks for turbulent flow permanent enclosed on the turbulence model K-εstandard was made. The results acquired are compared with that carried out in previous experimental studies, where it was concluded that, the axisymmetric (circular) geometry increases the entropy generation.


Author(s):  
Tomas Vilniškis ◽  
Tomas Januševicius

In this article was analyzed acoustic efficiency of two different construction noise barriers. Field measurements of noise tests were carried out before and behind a wooden barrier, which height was 2.9 meters and a wooden wall with equipped roof, which height was 3.2 m. As is known the length of the wall, height, surface roughness, shape and material of the wall – key aspects of determining the effectiveness of noise barrier. Different materials, depending on their characteristics of the hard or soft, porous or dense, interact differently with the sound of waves. Article contains research results of noise measurements at positive and negative air temperature. There analyzing wooden noise barrier acoustic efficiency at different temperatures and the effects of temperature to the diffraction of sound waves through the peak of the barrier. Test results show, that noise barrier without structural changes reduced noise level to 14–22 dB, noise barrier with structural changes reduced noise level to 20–23,1 dB, when air temperature was positive. When air temperature was negative, noise barrier without structural changes reduced noise level to 15,5–21,4 dB, noise level with structural changes to 19–26,6 dB.


Author(s):  
Zhong Lei ◽  
Jian Deng ◽  
Wei Li ◽  
Xiaoli Wu ◽  
Chunrui Deng

Abstract Core melting and molten migration behavior are hot and difficult issues in the field of nuclear reactor severe accident research. The Moving Particle Semi-implicit (MPS) meshless method has potential to simulate free-surface and multiphase flows. In this study, the MPS method was utilized to simulate the melting process of UO2-Zr rod-type fuel elements. The models of heat conduction with phase change, simplified UO2-Zr eutectic reaction, viscous flow and surface tension were implemented with the framework of standard MPS method. Then, the improved MPS code was used to simulate and analyze the process of high-temperature melting and characteristics of molten migration and solidification in the coolant channel, aiming at revealing the severe accidents for light water reactors (LWR), particularly the early core damage. The results showed that compared with the case of higher initial temperature, when the initial temperature of molten UO2 is lower, more molten UO2 will solidify on the surface of rod cluster, and the blockage of upper flow channel caused by molten UO2 is more serious. In addition, this study also demonstrated the potential of the MPS method for the study of complicated severe accident phenomena in not only traditional LWR but also advanced nuclear reactors in the future.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document