The Effect of the Long Fiber Bundles Bulk Density on Filtration Efficiency

2013 ◽  
Vol 838-841 ◽  
pp. 2648-2653
Author(s):  
Zhong Bin Liu ◽  
Huan Wang ◽  
Juan Tang

In the paper, taking the particles suspension for filtered object, the effect of the long fiber bundles bulk density on filtration efficiency was studied through the filtration experiments with the designed experimental equipment. And combining with the filtering model of long fiber bundle filter to do fluid analysis, the result show that, for the filtering velocity is 72m / h, in the filtration efficiency, filtration cycle, backwashing and other aspects of comprehensive performance of long fiber high efficient filter are best when the packed density is 73kg/m3.

2013 ◽  
Vol 791-793 ◽  
pp. 1541-1545
Author(s):  
Zhong Bin Liu ◽  
Huan Wang ◽  
Juan Tang

on the base of dynamic model of long fiber high efficient filter, simulation model of filtration process of long fiber high efficient filter was established. Fluid simulation software was utilized to do the numerical simulation of filtration process of long fiber high efficient filter and the curve of filter effluent concentration, porosity distribution along the height of filter layer and filtering precision vary with time was obtained. The simulation results showed that simulation model can be used to measure and calculate the filtering precision, effective filtration cycle and filter effluent concentration of long fiber bundles filter under the conditions of different initial filter speed, other fiber diameter, and various fiber bundles loading quantity.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mutsuaki Edama ◽  
Tomoya Takabayashi ◽  
Hirotake Yokota ◽  
Ryo Hirabayashi ◽  
Chie Sekine ◽  
...  

Abstract Background For the anterior talofibular ligament (ATFL), a three-fiber bundle has recently been suggested to be weaker than a single or double fiber bundle in terms of ankle plantarflexion and inversion braking function. However, the studies leading to those results all used elderly specimens. Whether the difference in fiber bundles is a congenital or an acquired morphology is important when considering methods to prevent ATFL damage. The purpose of this study was to classify the number of fiber bundles in the ATFL of fetuses. Methods This study was conducted using 30 legs from 15 Japanese fetuses (mean weight, 1764.6 ± 616.9 g; mean crown-rump length, 283.5 ± 38.7 mm; 8 males, 7 females). The ATFL was then classified by the number of fiber bundles: Type I, one fiber bundle; Type II, two fiber bundles; and Type III, three fiber bundles. Results Ligament type was Type I in 5 legs (16.7%), Type II in 21 legs (70%), and Type III in 4 legs (13.3%). Conclusions The present results suggest that the three fiber bundles of the structure of the ATFL may be an innate structure.


2017 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 85-99
Author(s):  
Josiney A. Souza ◽  
Hélio V. M. Tozatti

This paper studies dispersiveness of semiflows on fiber bundles. The main result says that a right invariant semiflow on a fiber bundle is dispersive on the base space if and only if there is no almost periodic point and the semiflow is dispersive on the total space. A special result states that linear semiflows on vector bundles are not dispersive.


2016 ◽  
Vol 87 (11) ◽  
pp. 1387-1393 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatsuya Ishikawa ◽  
KyoungHou Kim ◽  
Yutaka Ohkoshi

In the needle-punching process, the barbs of a needle catch fibers and orient them along the thickness direction of the fabric. The oriented fibers form a pillar-shaped fiber bundle, which acts as a bonding point of the fabric. The structure of the pillar-shaped fiber bundle thus governs the mechanical properties of needle-punched nonwoven fabric, and both are largely affected by the needle-punching conditions. However, the three-dimensional structure of pillar-shaped fiber bundles and their development under different needle-punching conditions have not been revealed. In the present study, we visualized the three-dimensional structure of a pillar-shaped fiber bundle in needle-punched nonwoven fabric, employing X-ray micro-computed tomography (XCT) on the basis of the difference in the X-ray absorption coefficient between polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and polyethylene fibers. For a material density ratio of less than 1.4 and PET fibers having a diameter of 40 µm, the pillar-shaped bundles of PET fibers were visualized by erasing 20-µm polyethylene fibers in XCT images. Furthermore, we investigated the effects of the penetration depth of the needle on the development of pillar-shaped fiber bundles. The number of fibers constituting a pillar largely increased at a penetration depth of 19.0 mm, and pillars protruded from the bottom surface of the fabric and formed a stitch structure. The XCT applied in this study is thus effective in analyzing the structure of pillar-shaped fiber bundles quantitatively without affecting the structure of the nonwoven fabric.


Author(s):  
Edgar Lara-Curzio

The effect of oxidation on the stress-rupture behavior of fiber bundles was modeled. It is shown that oxidation-induced fiber strength degradation results in the delayed failure of the associated fiber bundle and that the fiber bundle strength decreases with time as t−1/4. It is also shown that the temperature dependence of the bundle loss of strength reflects the thermal dependence of the mechanism controlling the oxidation of the fibers. The effect of gauge length on the fiber bundle strength was also analyzed. Numerical examples are presented for the special case of Nicalon™ fibers.


Author(s):  
Mohsen Shahinpoor ◽  
Martin W. J. Burmeister ◽  
Wesley Hoffman

Abstract Presented are the details for design and fabrication of a novel micro-robotic actuator in a few micron-size range. The model is in the form of contractile fiber bundles embedded in or around micron size helical compression springs. The fiber bundle is assumed to consist of a parallel array of contractile fibers made form either electrically or chemically (pH muscles) contractile ionic polymeric muscles such as polyacrylic acid plus sodium acrylate cross-linked with bisacrylamide (PAAM) or polyacrylonitrile (PAN) fibers or electrically contractile shape-memory alloy (SMA) fiber bundles. The proposed model considers the electrically or pH-induced contraction of the ionic polymeric fibers as well as resistive heating of the SMA fiber bundles in case of shape-memory alloys. A theoretical model is also presented for the dynamic modeling of such micron size robotic actuators. These robotic micro-actuators will open a new frontier to the micro-universes of biological, scientific, medical and engineering systems. On the fabrication side, helical compression springs and bellows in a few microns size range have been manufactured in our laboratories to serve as the main resilient structure for the micro-robotic actuator. In principle, any size micro-robotic linear actuator can be fabricated and tested in our laboratory. For the case of ionic polymeric gel fibers the model consists of an encapsulated hermetically sealed, helical compression spring-loaded cylindrical linear actuators containing a counterionic solution or electrolyte such as water+acetone, a cylindrical helical compression micro-spring and a collection of polymeric gel fibers (polyelectrolytes) such as polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) polyacrylic acid (PAA) or polyacrylamide. Furthermore, the helical micro-spring not only acts as a compression spring between the two hermetically sealed circular end-caps but contains snugly the polymeric gel fiber bundle and also acts as the cathode (anode) electrode -while the two actuator end-caps act as the other cathode (anode) electrodes. In this fashion, a DC electric field of a few volts per centimeter per gram of polymer gel can cause the polymer gel fiber bundle to contract (expand). This causes the compression spring to contract and pull the two end-caps closer to each other against the elastic resistance of the helical spring. By reversing the action by means of reversing the electric field polarities the gel is allowed to expand while the compression spring is also expanding and helping the linear expansion of the actuator since the polymeric gel muscle expands due to the induced alkalinity along the helical spring body. Thus, electrical control of the expansion and the contraction of the micro-robotic linear actuator is possible. A mathematical model is presented based on the proposed composite structure that takes into account all pertinent variables such as the pH of the gel fiber bundle, the pH of the surrounding medium, the hyperelastic parameters of the fiber bundle, the electrical variables of the gel, the electric field strength, the pH field strength and all pertinent dimensions followed by some numerical and experimental simulations and data. For the second model, we consider the fiber bundle of SMA to be either circumscribed inside a micron size helical compression spring with flat heads or in parallel with a number helical compression springs, end-capped by two parallel circular plates with embedded electrodes to which the ends of the SMA fibers are secured. Thus, the fibers can be electrically heated and subsequently contracted to compress the helical compression spring back and forth. Design details are first described. In essence the dynamic behavior of the actuator depends on the interaction between the current supplied to the wires and the heat transfer from the wires. Further, a mathematical model is presented to simulate the electro-thermo-mechanics of motion of such actuators. The proposed model takes into account all pertinent variables such as the strain ϵ, the temperature of the fibers T(t) as a function of time t, the ambient temperature T0, the martensite fraction ξ, the helical compression spring constant k and the overall heat transfer coefficient h. Numerical simulations are then carried out and the results are compared with experimental observations of a number of fabricated systems in a size range of a few mcrons.


2011 ◽  
Vol 90-93 ◽  
pp. 994-998
Author(s):  
Shan Shan Xia ◽  
Wen Cheng Jin ◽  
Wen Huang ◽  
Hong Yin Yang

Because of good mechanical properties of the fiber composites, the fiber bundles without the resin curing process and with the features of high modulus, high strength and good performance of creasing resistance etc, can be used in prestressed structures. According to the strength properties of the fiber, the tensile characteristic function of the fiber bundles is derived. The tensile test is designed and the parameters of the weibull distribution are estimated based on the result of the test. The ultimate strength of fiber is inversely proportional to the length of fiber. The calculating strength should be reduced in design, because the discreteness of the strength of the fiber bundle in test is much larger than the calculated values.


2011 ◽  
Vol 52-54 ◽  
pp. 2065-2070 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Ming Wei ◽  
Song He Meng ◽  
Cheng Hai Xu

Most of fracture processes of carbon/carbon composites (C/Cs) have been found to profoundly affected by their interfacial properties. A fiber-bundle pull-out test is utilized to determine the interface strength between fiber bundles and matrix of two kinds of C/Cs. Pre-fracture observations revealed that amount of voids and gaps existed in the interface, which make the interface strength decreases. The interfacial shear strengths of two kinds of C/Cs were all very low. Post-fracture observations revealed that a shear fracture was successfully induced within the carbon matrices at the loaded fiber bundle interface.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 693
Author(s):  
Junjun Wang ◽  
Fuwu Yan ◽  
Na Fang ◽  
Dong Yan ◽  
Guoqing Zhang ◽  
...  

The forthcoming implementation of the China VI emission regulations, which are currently the most stringent around the world targeted at light-duty gasoline engine vehicles, will not only further restrict the emissions of gaseous pollutants, but also put forward, for the first time, the requirements of particulate number (PN) emissions with a limit set at 6 × 1011#/km. To achieve the stringent emission targets, the ceramic wall-flow gasoline particulate filter (GPF) will be effective to achieve the reduction of the particulate number tailpipe emissions in a way similar to the widely applied diesel particulate filter (DPF) in diesel engines. This paper investigated the effect of a coated gasoline particulate filter (GPF) on the PN emission and engine performance. The effects of two factors, including the washcoat powder material bulk density and type of coating, were studied with regard to three primary performances of GPF, including high three-way catalytic performance, low pressure drop, and high PN filtration efficiency, according to the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) requirements. The outcomes show that the use of high bulk density materials resulted in a low washcoat volume and hence a decrease of flow resistance and backpressure, in addition to high PN filtration efficiency. The type of coating had notable influence on the backpressure and PN filtration efficiency. The coating length and coating amount both had notable influence on the backpressure and PN filtration efficiency.


1975 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 376-383 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. K. Smrz

AbstractThe theory of Yang-Mills fields is explicity formulated in terms of the theory of connections in principal and associated fiber bundles. Special attention is paid to the fiber bundles with Lorentz and Poincaré structures. Equations of the form ∇ψ = 0, where ∇ is a generalized convariant derivative, are shown to contain “mass” terms if the connection in the Poincaré fiber bundle is cononically associated to the connection in the Lorentz fiber bundle.


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