2,906,714 research outputs found
Effects of Horizontal Vibration on Hopper Flows of Granular Material
This study experimentally examines the flow of glass spheres in a wedge-shaped hopper that is vibrated hoizontally. When the hopper is discharged without vibration, discharge occurs as a funnel flow, with the material exiting the central region of the hopper and stagnant material along the sides. With vibration, the discharge of the material occurs in reverse, with the material along the sides exiting first, followed by the material in the central region. These patterns are observed with flow visualization and high-speed photography. The study also includes measurements of the discharge rate, which increases with the amplitude of the velocity of vibration
Low frequency sound attenuation in a flow duct using a thin slow sound material
We present a thin subwavelength material that can be flush mounted to a duct
and which gives a large wide band attenuation at remarkably low frequencies in
air flow channels. To decrease the material thickness, the sound is slowed in
the material using folded side branch tubes. The impedance of the material is
compared to the optimal value, which differs greatly from the characteristic
impedance. In particular, the viscous and thermal effects have to be very small
to have high transmission losses. Grazing flow on this material increases the
losses at the interface between the flow and the material
Simulation of material flow through a sample divider
The prerequisite for a modem approach to innovative procedures of the development of current or even newly created equipment for the transport of particulate materials is the utilization of simulation methods, such as the Discrete Element Method (DEM). This article focuses on the basic, or initial, validation of movement of material through the sample divider. The mechanical-physical properties of brown coal were measured. Based on these parameters the preliminary input values for EDEM Academic were selected, and a simulation of the dividing process was run. The key monitored parameters included density and friction coefficient. Experiments on a realistic model of the equipment were performed and assessed. The total weights of brown coal at the exit from the divider were determined for a specific speed of the divider. The aim of this task was to simulate the realistically determined weight division of the brown coal sample. The result from the DEM was compared with the results of measurement on a realistic model.Web of Science12119919
Method of making a rocket nozzle
A method is described for forming the interior of a nozzle having uneven walls so that a throat of smooth converging and diverging sides is provided for passing flow. A metallic insert material is placed within the flow passageway adjacent to the area where the sharper throat constriction is to be formed, so that the material will flow through the inlet into the throat space when liquefied
Non-linear oscillatory rheological properties of a generic continuum foam model: comparison with experiments and shear-banding predictions
The occurence of shear bands in a complex fluid is generally understood as
resulting from a structural evolution of the material under shear, which leads
(from a theoretical perspective) to a non-monotonic stationnary flow curve
related to the coexistence of different states of the material under shear. In
this paper we present a scenario for shear-banding in a particular class of
complex fluids, namely foams and concentrated emulsions, which differs from
other scenarii in two important ways. First, the appearance of shear bands is
shown to be possible both without any intrinsic physical evolution of the
material (e.g. via a parameter coupled to the flow such as concentration or
entanglements) and without any finite critical shear rate below which the flow
does not remain stationary and homogeneous. Secondly, the appearance of shear
bands depends on the initial conditions, i.e., the preparation of the material.
In other words, it is history dependent. This behaviour relies on the tensorial
character of the underlying model (2D or 3D) and is triggered by an initially
inhomogeneous strain distribution in the material. The shear rate displays a
discontinuity at the band boundary, whose amplitude is history dependent and
thus depends on the sample preparation.Comment: 18 pages - 17 figure
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