shock cell
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2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (47) ◽  
pp. e2103228118
Author(s):  
Chloé Roffay ◽  
Guillaume Molinard ◽  
Kyoohyun Kim ◽  
Marta Urbanska ◽  
Virginia Andrade ◽  
...  

During osmotic changes of their environment, cells actively regulate their volume and plasma membrane tension that can passively change through osmosis. How tension and volume are coupled during osmotic adaptation remains unknown, as their quantitative characterization is lacking. Here, we performed dynamic membrane tension and cell volume measurements during osmotic shocks. During the first few seconds following the shock, cell volume varied to equilibrate osmotic pressures inside and outside the cell, and membrane tension dynamically followed these changes. A theoretical model based on the passive, reversible unfolding of the membrane as it detaches from the actin cortex during volume increase quantitatively describes our data. After the initial response, tension and volume recovered from hypoosmotic shocks but not from hyperosmotic shocks. Using a fluorescent membrane tension probe (fluorescent lipid tension reporter [Flipper-TR]), we investigated the coupling between tension and volume during these asymmetric recoveries. Caveolae depletion and pharmacological inhibition of ion transporters and channels, mTORCs, and the cytoskeleton all affected tension and volume responses. Treatments targeting mTORC2 and specific downstream effectors caused identical changes to both tension and volume responses, their coupling remaining the same. This supports that the coupling of tension and volume responses to osmotic shocks is primarily regulated by mTORC2.


2021 ◽  
Vol 930 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petrônio A.S. Nogueira ◽  
Peter Jordan ◽  
Vincent Jaunet ◽  
André V.G. Cavalieri ◽  
Aaron Towne ◽  
...  

We present an analysis of the linear stability characteristics of shock-containing jets. The flow is linearised around a spatially periodic mean, which acts as a surrogate for a mean flow with a shock-cell structure, leading to a set of partial differential equations with periodic coefficients in space. Disturbances are written using the Floquet ansatz and Fourier modes in the streamwise direction, leading to an eigenvalue problem for the Floquet exponent. The characteristics of the solution are directly compared with the locally parallel case, and some of the features are similar. The inclusion of periodicity induces minor changes in the growth rate and phase velocity of the relevant modes for small shock amplitudes. On the other hand, the eigenfunctions are now subject to modulation related to the periodicity of the flow. Analysis of the spatio-temporal growth rates led to the identification of a saddle point between the Kelvin–Helmholtz mode and the guided jet mode, characterising an absolute instability mechanism. Frequencies and mode shapes related to the saddle points for two conditions (associated with axisymmetric and helical modes) are compared with screech frequencies and the most energetic coherent structures of screeching jets, resulting in a good agreement for both. The analysis shows that a periodic shock-cell structure has an impulse response that grows upstream, leading to oscillator behaviour. The results suggest that screech can occur in the absence of a nozzle, and that the upstream reflection condition is not essential for screech frequency selection. Connections to previous models are also discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Panunzi ◽  
Jacopo Taddeucci ◽  
Valeria Cigala ◽  
Ulrich Kueppers ◽  
Danilo Mauro Palladino ◽  
...  

<p>Explosive volcanic eruptions eject a mixture of gas and pyroclasts into the atmosphere at a range of velocities. Directly above the vent, in the gas-thrust region, a supersonic jet may be generated that strongly controls the eruptive dynamics. To improve our quantitative understanding of volcanic supersonic jets, the effect on particles within them, and their acoustic emission, we have performed small-scale explosive eruptions in the laboratory using a shock-tube. The shock-tube is composed of 3 parts, a bottom (5.6 m long, elevated pressure) and a top (48mm long, ambient pressure) plexiglass cylinder (5 mm inner diameter), separated by an electrovalve.</p><p>We have run experiments using ambient air as gas and sand, with diameter between 0.1 and 0.3 mm, as particles. The gas volume was fixed while the pressure ratio (the shock-tube reservoir to ambient pressure ratio) was varied from about 4 to 8.4 to obtain supersonic flows. During the experiments, the jet was recorded with a high-speed camera operating at 34660 fps, and the resulting noise acoustic emission with microphones (6 Hz-140 kHz; 1000 kfps) positioned at 90° from the jet axis.</p><p>Among the acoustic signals produced by a supersonic jet (jet noise) we have particularly focussed on the broad-band shock noise (BBSN) that is emitted by the interaction between shock cells and the turbulence in the jet. We estimated the jet velocity using an acoustic model based on the identification of the peak frequency of the BBSN. We also identified the BBSN frequency and its variation over time by applying the complex Morlet wavelet transformation. As expected, the BBSN frequency is inversely proportional to the gas velocity. Concerning the video recording, we analysed the shock cells behaviour and their temporal oscillation due to the presence of particles. Finally, the particle ejection rate was calculated in every video frame.</p><p>We found that the acoustic signal and shock cells are influenced by the presence of particles. In fact, fluctuations in particle concentration are well visible and decelerate the flowing gas. As a consequence, there is a temporary decrease of the stand-off-distance between the vent and the first shock-cell and concurrent rise of the BBSN frequency. We noticed, in some cases, that the shock-cells disappear during a short time interval. The BBSN frequency and the stand-off-distance behaviour over time follow the oscillation of the particle ejection rate confirming their sensitivity to particle load variation.</p><p>The future prospectives of this embryonal study could lead to new instruments for determining either the amount of pyroclasts inside the volcanic jets and their exit velocity on the basis of the recorded acoustic signals.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chloé Roffay ◽  
Guillaume Molinard ◽  
Kyoohyun Kim ◽  
Victoria Barbarassa ◽  
Marta Urbanska ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTDuring osmotic changes of their environment, cells actively regulate their volume and plasma membrane tension that can passively change through osmosis. How tension and volume are coupled during osmotic adaptation remains unknown, as a quantitative characterization is lacking. Here, we performed dynamic membrane tension and cell volume measurements during osmotic shocks. During the first few seconds following the shock, cell volume varied to equilibrate osmotic pressures inside and outside the cell, and membrane tension dynamically followed these changes. A theoretical model based on the passive, reversible unfolding of the membrane as it detaches from the actin cortex during volume increase, quantitatively describes our data. After the initial response, tension and volume recovered from hypoosmotic shocks but not from hyperosmotic shocks. During these asymmetric recoveries, tension and volume remained coupled. Pharmacological disruption of the cytoskeleton and functional inhibition of ion channels and mTOR all affected tension and volume responses, proving that a passive mechanism is necessary and critical for the cell to adapt fast. The coupling between them was, nonetheless, maintained for a few exceptions suggesting that volume and tension regulations are independent from the regulation of their coupling.


Author(s):  
Priyadharshini Murugesan ◽  
Arjun Biju Kumar ◽  
Akhil Teja Kambhampati ◽  
Shashank Pillai ◽  
Girish Chandar Chandrasekar ◽  
...  

Correlations for the supersonic jet characteristics, the mean shock cell length and the supersonic core length, have been obtained in terms of the jet parameters. The jet parameters considered in this study are the exit diameter of the nozzle (de), the design Mach number (Me), the nozzle pressure ratio (NPR) and the ratio of specific heats of the medium (γ). The parameters were varied as follows: exit diameters, from 0.5 to 25 mm; Mach number from 1 to 3; the NPR from 2.14 to 35. Initially, working fluid used is cold air and then effect of variation of γ is taken into consideration. The computational model has been validated and then used for all the numerical simulations. A quadratic fit for both characteristics has been obtained which is applicable to any supersonic jet. The correlations developed are valid within the respective ranges of the parameters stated above.


Actuators ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhash Ranjan ◽  
Mrinal Kaushik ◽  
Dipankar Deb ◽  
Vlad Muresan ◽  
Mihaela Unguresan

This work explores the extent of jet mixing for a supersonic jet coming out of a Mach 1.8 convergent-divergent nozzle, controlled with two short rectangular vortex-generating actuators located diametrically opposite to each other with an emphasis on numerical methodology. The blockage ratio offered by the tabs is around 0.05. The numerical investigations were carried out by using a commercial computational fluid dynamics (CFD) package and all the simulations were performed by employing steady Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations and shear-stress transport k−ω turbulence model on a three-dimensional computational space for more accuracy. The numerical calculations are administered at nozzle pressure ratios (NPRs) of 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8, covering the overexpanded, the correctly expanded and the underexpanded conditions. The centerline pressure decay and the pressure profiles are plotted for both uncontrolled and the controlled jets. Numerical schlieren images are used to capture the barrel shock, the expansion fans and the Mach waves present in the flow field. Mach contours are also delineated at varying NPRs indicating the number of shock cells, their length and the variation of the shock cell structure and strength, to substantiate the prominent findings. The outcomes of this research are observed to be in sensible concurrence with the demonstrated exploratory findings. A reduction in the jet core length of 75% is attained with small vortex-generating actuators, compared to an uncontrolled jet, corresponding to nozzle pressure ratio 5. It was also seen that the controlled jet gets bifurcated downstream of the nozzle exit at a distance of about 5 D, where D is the nozzle exit diameter. Furthermore, it was fascinating to observe that the jet spread increases downstream of the nozzle exit for the controlled jet, as compared to the uncontrolled jet at any given NPR.


2019 ◽  
Vol 871 ◽  
pp. 305-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huan-Hao Zhang ◽  
Nadine Aubry ◽  
Zhi-Hua Chen ◽  
Wei-Tao Wu ◽  
Sha Sha

The three-dimensional flow characteristics of the compressible vortex ring generated by under-expanded circular jets with two typical pressure ratios, i.e. $n=1.4$ (moderate) and 4.0 (high), are investigated numerically with the use of large-eddy simulations. Our results illustrate that these two pressure ratios correspond to different shock structures (shock cell and Mach disc, respectively) within the jet. These two typical types of flow structures and characteristics are discussed and validated with experiments, and the different generation mechanisms of the secondary vortex rings are compared. Moreover, detailed information about the evolution of the secondary vortex ring, primary vortex ring and turbulence transition features, including the radial and azimuthal modes, is investigated. The geometric features and mixing effects of the jets are also explored.


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