axial location
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junhui Liu ◽  
Yu Yu Khine ◽  
Mohammad Saleem ◽  
Omar Lopez Rodriguez ◽  
Ephraim J. Gutmark

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 121
Author(s):  
Hanan Purana Putera ◽  
Tomy Listyanto

The research aimed to determine drying characteristics, developing drying schedule, and its relationship to the axial position of the sample on the stem, board thickness, specific gravity, and percentage of heartwood.This research used cemara gunung (Casuarina junghuhniana Miq.) as samples with 6 replications and 2 factors that are the axial location (bottom, middle, and top) and board thickness (2 cm, 3 cm, and 4 cm). The drying schedule development followed the Terazawa Method, in which the samples were dried within a temperature of 100°C for 72 h. The proper schedule was then applied and evaluated. The research obtained 11 variations of the drying schedule.The chi-square analysis results indicated that the board thickness and percentage of heartwood were significantly correlated with the development of the drying schedule. The drying schedule using board thickness of 2 cm, 3 cm, and 4 cm can be dried with an initial temperature of 60°C, 50°C, and 47°C, respectively. The wet-bulb depression was 4°C, 2°C, and 2°C, respectively, and the final temperature was 90°C, 80°C,and 65°C, respectively.  Keywords: axial, board-thickness, Casuarina junghuhniana, drying-schedule, Terazawa method


Author(s):  
Shan Ma ◽  
Wuli Chu ◽  
Xiaolin Sun ◽  
Zhengtao Guo ◽  
Song Yan

The axial location of full-span boundary layer suction is studied to explore the influences of suction slot on the cascade performance. At the design condition, the slot with 50% axial location shows a superior capability to reduce the total pressure loss. At the near stall condition, the more upstream of the suction slot is moved, the more total pressure loss is reduced, and the suction slot with a location of 0.7 axial chord length cannot effectively reduces the total pressure loss in all conditions. Moreover, a rearranged segmented suction slot according to the distribution characteristics of the flow reversal region is developed and compared with full-span boundary layer suction. The segmented suction slot shows significant advantages in delaying the stall occurrence, and the stall point is delayed from 7.9° to 10.0° compared with the baseline. According to a quantitative analysis method selected to measure the performances of flow control technologies, the wake loss is significantly reduced by the segmented suction slot. Finally, a set of micro-vortex generator is introduced in the cascade with a segmented suction slot, and the conclusion indicates that the portion near the end-wall is very effective to reduce the flow loss.


Author(s):  
Zhiyuan Cao ◽  
Wei Guo ◽  
Cheng Song ◽  
Bo Liu

Tandem configuration is an effective methodology to reduce flow separation on compressor blade suction surface and to improve blade loading. However, in modern highly loaded cases, corner separation remains as its single blade counterpart. In this study, non-axisymmetric endwall profiling (NAEP) was utilized in a highly loaded tandem cascade (diffusion factor D = 0.69), aiming at reducing its severe corner separation and revealing the unique flow mechanism while NAEP is utilized in tandem cascade. NAEP was designed in both forward (F) blade and rare (R) blade separately, and was investigated numerically in tandem environment. Results show that, NAEP in F blade passage can effectively eliminate the corner separation and reduce loss generation, whereas NAEP in R blade passage has no positive effect on corner separation and even promotes loss production. The optimal NAEP approximately removes the corner separation completely, with loss coefficient reducing by as much as 37.8%. The optimal NAEP for the tandem cascade features optimal axial location at the origin of corner separation. There is an optimal NAEP height (0.02 of blade height), under which NAEP can achieve pretty good control effect while the peak of NAEP varies in a large axial location range. In the tandem configuration, it is found that NAEP transfers blade loading from R blade to F blade; the static pressure increases significantly for the entire cascade, but the static pressure distribution of F blade does not exhibit as the design intent of NAEP. In addition, it is interesting to find that the flow turning near endwall reduces after endwall profiling, which is unique in tandem cascade and is contrast to the view on conventional configuration. On the contrary, NAEP in R blade has no influence on the corner separation of the tandem cascade; due to the decrement of cross-passage pressure gradient for R blade, the flow overturning near endwall reduces.


2020 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
pp. 100757 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel X. Hammer ◽  
Zhuolin Liu ◽  
Jenna A. Cava ◽  
Joseph Carroll ◽  
Osamah Saeedi
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Zhiyuan Cao ◽  
Cheng Song ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Limin Gao

Air injection is an effectively methodology to suppress flow separation and to improve blade loading of airfoils and compressors. In order to remove corner separations in a cascade, investigation of endwall slotted injection was carried out numerically in this study. Based on endwall slot schemes of other flow control methods, six different endwall slots were designed, aiming at revealing the axial location effect and pitchwise location effect. For each endwall slot, numerical simulations were performed with six different injection directions to uncover the injection direction effect. Results showed that endwall slotted injection can effectively remove the corner separation. The overall loss coefficient and endwall loss coefficient of the cascade were reduced by 10.3% and 36.8% at most, respectively. Injection from leading edge and mid-chord can reduce endwall loss; however, the optimal axial location of endwall slot is near the trailing edge, where the corner separation is located. Different with other flow control methods, in general, the optimal pitchwise location of endwall slot is not close to suction surface but 0.16 pitch away from it. Injection near the suction surface is more sensitive to injection direction compared with injection at 0.16 pitch away from suction surface. Injection with velocity components both downstream and toward suction surface promises optimal control effect on corner separation. However, at mid-span, trailing edge separation is deteriorated and the flow turning angle is reduced, the flow mechanism being that the low-momentum fluid migrates along spanwise.


Author(s):  
John S. Wilson ◽  
W. Robert Taylor ◽  
John Oshinski

Abstract Background Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) of the aortic wall offers the potential to improve patient-specific diagnostics and prognostics of diverse aortopathies by quantifying regionally heterogeneous aortic wall strain in vivo. However, before regional mapping of strain can be used to clinically assess aortic pathology, an evaluation of the natural variation of normal regional aortic kinematics is required. Method Aortic spiral cine DENSE CMR was performed at 3 T in 30 healthy adult subjects (range 18 to 65 years) at one or more axial locations that are at high risk for aortic aneurysm or dissection: the infrarenal abdominal aorta (IAA, n = 11), mid-descending thoracic aorta (DTA, n = 17), and/or distal aortic arch (DAA, n = 11). After implementing custom noise-reduction techniques, regional circumferential Green strain of the aortic wall was calculated across 16 sectors around the aortic circumference at each location and normalized by the mean circumferential strain for comparison between individuals. Results The distribution of normalized circumferential strain (NCS) was heterogeneous for all locations evaluated. Despite large differences in mean strain between subjects, comparisons of NCS revealed consistent patterns of strain distribution for similar groupings of patients by axial location, age, and/or mean displacement angle. NCS at local systole was greatest in the lateral/posterolateral walls in the IAAs (1.47 ± 0.27), medial wall in anteriorly displacing DTAs (1.28 ± 0.20), lateral wall in posteriorly displacing DTAs (1.29 ± 0.29), superior curvature in DAAs < 50 years-old (1.93 ± 0.22), and medial wall in DAAs > 50 years (2.29 ± 0.58). The distribution of strain was strongly influenced by the location of the vertebra and other surrounding structures unique to each location. Conclusions Regional in vivo circumferential strain in the adult aorta is unique to each axial location and heterogeneous around its circumference, but can be grouped into consistent patterns defined by basic patient-specific metrics following normalization. The heterogeneous strain distributions unique to each group may be due to local peri-aortic constraints (particularly at the aorto-vertebral interface), heterogeneous material properties, and/or heterogeneous flow patterns. These results must be carefully considered in future studies seeking to clinically interpret or computationally model patient-specific aortic kinematics.


Author(s):  
T. Soworka ◽  
T. Behrendt ◽  
C. Hassa ◽  
J. Heinze ◽  
E. Magens ◽  
...  

Abstract Future rich-burn/quick-quench/lean-burn (RQL) burners for aero engines face the challenge to further reduce the emission of soot. Alternative ways of fuel injection are therefore in the focus of modern RQL combustion systems. This contribution aims to investigate experimentally the influence of fuel injection on the reacting flow field, with the emphasis on soot production in the primary zone. For the test, a Rolls-Royce prototype burner was used in two different configurations which differ only in the axial location of jet in cross flow fuel injection and thereby provoke different ways of fuel atomization. In the upstream configuration the burner features characteristics of a pre-filming airblast atomizer. Whereas with the fuel tip in downstream position solely Jet-in-Cross-Flow fuel atomisation is expected. The burner was tested at realistic aero engine combustor conditions (p30 = 9.28 bar, T30 = 603 K, AFR = 7.6). Several optical measurement techniques were used to characterise the reacting flow field. Their difficult application in a rich burn environment is described briefly. The structure of the reacting flow field is illustrated by Particle-Image-Velocimetry (PIV). Planar Mie scattering and Planar Laser-Induced Fluorescence (PLIF) are used to characterise the placement of liquid and gaseous fuel respectively. The location and structure of heat release zones are captured in terms of OH* and CO2* chemiluminescence. Finally Laser-Induced-Incandescence (LII) is used to obtain three dimensional soot distributions in the primary zone. On this basis 20% less soot was measured for the upstream configuration at the axial location of maximal soot concentration. This remarkable difference could be attributed to the different placement of liquid fuel and the resulting better mixing.


Author(s):  
Lance Alleyne ◽  
Danny Cheung ◽  
James Rees ◽  
Dominic King ◽  
Sandra Prew ◽  
...  

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