18 research outputs found

    A Thickened-Hole Model for Large Eddy Simulations over Multiperforated Liners

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    International audienceIn aero-engines, mutiperforation cooling systems are often used to shield the combustor wall and ensure durability of the engine. Fresh air coming from the casing goes through thousands of angled perforations and forms a film which protects the liner. When performing Large Eddy Simulations (LES) of a real engine, the number of sub-millimetric holes is far too large to allow a complete and accurate description of each aperture. Homogeneous models allow to simulate multiperforated plates with a mesh size bigger than the hole but fail in representing the jet penetration and mixing. A heterogeneous approach is proposed in this study, where the apertures are thickened if necessary so that the jet-crossflow interaction is properly represented. Simulations using homogeneous and thickened-hole models are compared to a fully resolved computation for various grid resolutions in order to illustrate the potential of the method

    Simulation aux grandes échelles: instabilités thermo-acoustiques, combustion diphasique et couplages multi-physiques

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    La combustion turbulente, que ce soit dans des configurations de laboratoire ou dans des configurations réelles industrielles, met en oeuvre un nombre important de physiques fortement couplées: chimie, turbulence, multi-phasique, thermique, etc. Pour répondre aux demandes de plus en plus exigeantes des concepteurs, qui doivent proposer des solutions concurrentielles tout en respectant les contraintes environnementales de bruit et d'émission de polluants, la simulation numérique est devenue incontournable. Plus précisément, la simulation maintenant utilisée comme outil de conception, doit être fiable et précise. Dans le domaine de la combustion turbulente, à fort caractère instationnaire, la Simulation aux Grandes Echelles (SGE) s'est récemment imposée. Cette technique s'est en effet avérée capable de prédire finement le comportement des brûleurs dans des environnements complexes, et permet aujourd'hui d'aborder des problématiques encore mal maîtrisées telles que les instabilités thermo-acoustiques ou la combustion diphasique. On donne ici quelques exemples de problèmes encore ouverts dans ce domaine

    Physical hydrodynamic propulsion model study for creeping viscous flow through a ciliated porous tube

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    The present investigation focuses on a mathematical study of creeping viscous flow induced by metachronal wave propagation in a horizontal ciliated tube containing porous media. Creeping flow limitations are imposed i.e. inertial forces are small compared with viscous forces and therefore very low Reynolds number (Re<<1) is taken into account. The wavelength of metachronal wave is also considered as very large for cilia movement. The physical problem is linearized and exact solutions are developed for the differential equation problem. Mathematica software is used to compute and illustrate numerical results. The influence of slip parameter and Darcy number on velocity profile, pressure gradient and trapping of bolus are discussed with the aid of graphs. It is found that with increasing magnitude of slip parameter the trapped bolus inside the streamlines increases in size. The study is relevant to biological propulsion of medical micro-machines in drug delivery

    Hydrodynamics of ciliary propulsion

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    International audienceA numerical approach is developed to study the effect on a fluid of the regular oscillations of an array of flexible cilia which hinge around points on a wall. The specific application studied concerns the ctenophore Pleurobrachia pileus, a small marine invertebrate of quasi-spherical shape and diameter of the order of the centimeter which swims in water thanks to the rhythmic beating of eight rows of hair-like cilia aligned along its body. Only one row of cilia is studied here, in a three-dimensional setting. The technique presented is general enough to allow its application to a variety of fluid-structure interaction problems. The physical mechanisms of the propulsion are highlighted, by analysing the results of three-dimensional simulations. A parametric study involving natural and non-natural parameters leads to a better understanding of the propulsive characteristics of ctenophores; results show that the specific power expended increases with the increase of the beating frequency of the row of cilia, in agreement with experiments

    Passive separation control using a self-adaptive hairy coating

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    A model of hairy medium is developed using a homogenized approach, and the fluid flow around a circular cylinder partially coated with hair is analysed by means of numerical simulations. The capability of this coating to adapt to the surrounding flow is investigated, and its benefits are discussed in the context of separation control. This fluid\u2013structure interaction problem is solved with a partitioned approach, based on the direct resolution of the Navier\u2013Stokes equations together with a nonlinear set of equations describing the dynamics of the coating. A volume force, arising from the presence of a cluster of hair, provides the link between the fluid and the structure problems. For the structure part, a subset of reference elements approximates the whole layer. The dynamics of these elements is governed by a set of equations based on the inertia, elasticity, interaction and losses effects of articulated rods. The configuration chosen is that of the two-dimensional flow past a circular cylinder at Re=200, a simple and well-documented test case. Aerodynamics performances quantified by the Strouhal number, the drag and the maximum lift in the laminar unsteady regime are modified by the presence of the coating. A set of parameters corresponding to a realistic coating (length of elements, porosity, rigidity) is found, yielding an average drag reduction of 15% and a decrease of lift fluctuations by about 40%, associated to a stabilization of the wake

    Impact of microbial inoculum storage on dark fermentative H2 production

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    International audienceComplex organic substrates represent an important and relevant feedstock for producing hydrogen by Dark Fermentation (DF). Usually, an external microbial inoculum originated from various natural environments is added to seed the DF reactors. However, H2 yields are significantly impacted by the inoculum origin and the storage conditions as microbial community composition can fluctuate. This study aims to determine how the type and time of inoculum storage can impact the DF performances. Biochemical Hydrogen Potential tests were carried out using three substrates (glucose, the organic fraction of municipal solid waste, and food waste), inocula of three different origins, different storage conditions (freezing or freeze-drying) and duration. As a result, H2 production from glucose with the differently stored inocula was significantly impacted (positively or negatively) and was inoculum-origin-dependent. For complex substrates, hydrogen yields with the stored inocula were not statistically different from the fresh inocula, offering the possibility to store an inoculum
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