expansion cooling
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

35
(FIVE YEARS 4)

H-INDEX

9
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seungtaek Lee ◽  
Juho Lee ◽  
Yeonguk Kim ◽  
Seokyong Jeong ◽  
Dong Eon Kim ◽  
...  

AbstractIn their supercritical state simple fluids are generally thought to assume a homogeneous phase throughout all combinations of pressures and temperatures, although various response functions or transport properties may exhibit anomalous behavior, characterizing a state point as either more gas-like or liquid-like, respectively. While a large body of results has been compiled in the last two decades regarding the details of the supercritical phase in thermodynamic equilibrium, far less studies have been dedicated to out-of-equilibrium situations that nevertheless occur along with the handling of substances such as carbon dioxide or Argon. Here we consider successive compression-expansion cycles of equal amounts of Argon injected into a high-pressure chamber, traversing the critical pressure at two times the critical temperature. Due to expansion cooling, the fluid temporarily becomes sub-critical, and light scattering experiments show the formation of sub-micron-sized droplets and nanometer-scale clusters, both of which are distinct from spontaneous density fluctuations of the supercritical background and persist for a surprisingly long time. A kinetic rate model of the exchange of liquid droplets with the smaller clusters can explain this behavior. Our results indicate non-equilibrium aspects of supercritical fluids that may prove important for their processing in industrial applications.


Author(s):  
V Venkateswara Rao ◽  
Santanu Prasad Datta

Abstract A comprehensive exergy, exergo-economic and sustainability assessment of seven conventional to hybrid air-conditioning systems comprising direct and indirect evaporative coolers with direct expansion system, and their several combinations integrated into an 8-story domestic building for 5 different cities corresponding to arid, semi-arid, humid sub-tropical, tropical wet and dry, and tropical wet climatic zones across India are investigated based on simulation output from EnergyPlus. The exergetic performances are reported for varying dead state temperatures ranging from 5°C to 40°C while saturated humidity ratio and pressure at system outlet are two other dead state properties. The results reveal that the specific exergy of moist air and exergetic efficiency decrease with increasing dead state temperature and become least at a dead state temperature near to American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) comfort temperature of 23°C. In arid, semi-arid and humid subtropical climates, the three-stage evaporative cooling system exhibited the lowest exergy destruction of 100 J kg−1 and the highest exergy efficiency of 90% at a dead state temperature of 40°C. The two-stage direct evaporative-direct expansion cooling system exhibited superior exergy efficiency of around 90% in tropical wet and dry and tropical wet zones. Further, the Grassmann diagram based on the climate of Hyderabad indicated that the three-stage cooling system is energetically and exergetically optimum with exergy destruction of 28.86%.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 52
Author(s):  
Alana Mirely Félix Moreira ◽  
Cicera Denise Pinheiro Bezerra Borges ◽  
Larissa Araújo Lopes Barreto ◽  
Manassés Tercio Vieira Grangeiro ◽  
Viviane Maria Gonçalves De Figueiredo

INTRODUCTION: The usage of ceramic materials as a restoration strategy faces some problems, such as interferences between porcelain and zirconia, being the first one used as ceramic cover and the second one as infrastructure or coping. OBJECTIVE: review the literature on bi-layer ceramic crowns, through the types of ceramics, ceramic processing and residual stress.METHODOLOGY: Databases for this review were Bireme, Pubmed, Scielo and Virtual Libraries. Keywords were searched on Mesh. Inclusion criteria were Studies, Laboratorial and Clinical, Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis, papers and specific literature regarding the theme, in both English and Portuguese. Exclusion criteria were letter to the editor, clinical case and opinion piece, literatures that don’t face the theme and papers that analyze other odontological ceramics. Literature and papers were selected through summaries and abstracts. FINAL CONSIDERATIONS: Residual tension in bi-layers ceramics crowns with zirconia infrastructure and porcelain cover occur due to a lot of factors such as coefficient of thermal expansion, cooling speed, processing, and thickness of ceramic cover.


2014 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1349-1355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Karimi ◽  
Matthias Heuchel ◽  
Thomas Weigel ◽  
Karl Kratz ◽  
Andreas Lendlein

2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 2315-2324 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Hiranuma ◽  
N. Hoffmann ◽  
A. Kiselev ◽  
A. Dreyer ◽  
K. Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract. In this paper, the effect of the morphological modification of aerosol particles with respect to heterogeneous ice nucleation is comprehensively investigated for laboratory-generated hematite particles as a model substrate for atmospheric dust particles. The surface-area-scaled ice nucleation efficiencies of monodisperse cubic hematite particles and milled hematite particles were measured with a series of expansion cooling experiments using the Aerosol Interaction and Dynamics in the Atmosphere (AIDA) cloud simulation chamber. Complementary offline characterization of physico-chemical properties of both hematite subsets were also carried out with scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering (DLS), and an electro-kinetic particle charge detector to further constrain droplet-freezing measurements of hematite particles. Additionally, an empirical parameterization derived from our laboratory measurements was implemented in the single-column version of the Community Atmospheric Model version 5 (CAM5) to investigate the model sensitivity in simulated ice crystal number concentration on different ice nucleation efficiencies. From an experimental perspective, our results show that the immersion mode ice nucleation efficiency of milled hematite particles is almost an order of magnitude higher at −35.2 °C < T < −33.5 °C than that of the cubic hematite particles, indicating a substantial effect of morphological irregularities on immersion mode freezing. Our modeling results similarly show that the increased droplet-freezing rates of milled hematite particles lead to about one order magnitude higher ice crystal number in the upper troposphere than cubic hematite particles. Overall, our results suggest that the surface irregularities and associated active sites lead to greater ice activation through droplet freezing.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 23757-23780
Author(s):  
N. Hiranuma ◽  
N. Hoffmann ◽  
A. Kiselev ◽  
A. Dreyer ◽  
K. Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract. In this paper, the effect of the morphological modification of aerosol particles with respect to heterogeneous ice nucleation is comprehensively investigated for laboratory-generated hematite particles as a model substrate for atmospheric dust particles. The surface area-scaled ice nucleation efficiencies of monodisperse cubic hematite particles and milled hematite particles were measured with a series of expansion cooling experiments using the Aerosol Interaction and Dynamics in the Atmosphere (AIDA) cloud simulation chamber. Complementary off-line characterization of physico-chemical properties of both hematite subsets were also carried out with scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering (DLS), and an electro-kinetic particle charge detector to further constrain droplet-freezing measurements of hematite particles. Additionally, an empirical parameterization derived from our laboratory measurements was implemented in the single-column version of the Community Atmospheric Model version 5 (CAM5) to investigate the model sensitivity in simulated ice crystal number concentration on different ice nucleation efficiencies. From an experimental perspective, our results show that the immersion mode ice nucleation efficiency of milled hematite particles is almost an order of magnitude higher at −35.2 °C < T < −33.5 °C than that of the cubic hematite particles, indicating a substantial effect of morphological irregularities on immersion mode freezing. Our modeling results similarly show that the increased droplet-freezing rates of milled hematite particles lead to about one order magnitude higher ice crystal number in the upper troposphere than cubic hematite particles. Overall, our results suggest that the surface irregularities and associated active sites lead to greater ice activation through droplet-freezing.


2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 2083-2110 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Wagner ◽  
O. Möhler ◽  
H. Saathoff ◽  
M. Schnaiter ◽  
T. Leisner

Abstract. The heterogeneous ice nucleation ability of oxalic acid in the immersion mode has been investigated by controlled expansion cooling runs with airborne, ternary solution droplets composed of, (i), sodium chloride, oxalic acid, and water (NaCl/OA/H2O) and, (ii), sulphuric acid, oxalic acid, and water (H2SO4/OA/H2O). Polydisperse aerosol populations with median diameters ranging from 0.5–0.7 μm and varying solute concentrations were prepared. The expansion experiments were conducted in the AIDA aerosol and cloud chamber of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology at initial temperatures of 244 and 235 K. In the ternary NaCl/OA/H2O system, solid inclusions of oxalic acid, presumably nucleated as oxalic acid dihydrate, were formed by temporarily exposing the ternary solution droplets to a relative humidity below the efflorescence point of NaCl. The matrix of the crystallised NaCl particulates triggered the precipitation of the organic crystals which later remained as solid inclusions in the solution droplets when the relative humidity was subsequently raised above the deliquescence point of NaCl. The embedded oxalic acid crystals reduced the critical ice saturation ratio required for the homogeneous freezing of pure NaCl/H2O solution droplets at a temperature of around 231 K from 1.38 to about 1.32. Aqueous solution droplets with OA inclusions larger than about 0.27 μm in diameter efficiently nucleated ice by condensation freezing when they were activated to micron-sized cloud droplets at 241 K, i.e., they froze well above the homogeneous freezing temperature of pure water droplets of about 237 K. Our results on the immersion freezing potential of oxalic acid corroborate the findings from a recent study with emulsified aqueous solutions containing crystalline oxalic acid. In those experiments, the crystallisation of oxalic acid diyhdrate was triggered by a preceding homogeneous freezing cycle with the emulsion samples. The expansion cooling cycles with ternary H2SO4/OA/H2O solution droplets were aimed to analyse whether those findings can be transferred to ice nucleation experiments with airborne oxalic acid containing aerosol particles. Under our experimental conditions, the efficiency by which the surface of homogeneously nucleated ice crystals triggered the precipitation of oxalic acid dihydrate was very low, i.e., less than one out of a hundred ice crystals that were formed by homogeneous freezing in a first expansion cooling cycle left behind an ice-active organic crystal that acted as immersion freezing nucleus in a second expansion cooling cycle.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document