136 research outputs found
Magnetic levitation of large liquid volume
It is well known from experiments and industrial applications of cold crucible melting that an intense AC magnetic field can be used to levitate large volumes of liquid metal in the terrestrial conditions. The levitation confinement mechanism for large volumes of fluid is considerably different from the case of a small droplet, where surface tension plays a key role in constraining the liquid outflow at the critical bottom point. The dynamic interaction between the oscillatory motion of the free surface and the effects of turbulent flow is analysed using a unified numerical model, which describes the time dependent behaviour of the liquid metal and the magnetic field. The MHD modified k-? turbulence model is used to describe the mixing and damping properties at smaller scales not resolved by the macro model. The numerical multiphysics simulations suggest that it is possible to levitate a few kilograms of liquid metal in a cold crucible without requiring mechanical support from the container walls. Possible applications to the processing of reactive metals are discussed
Use of a Static Magnetic Field in Measuring the Thermal Conductivity of a Levitated Molten Droplet
Numerical models are used to analyze the complex behaviour of magnetically levitated droplets in the context of determining their thermophysical properties. We focus on a novel method reported in Tsukada et al. [4] which uses periodic laser heating to determine the thermal conductivity of an electromagnetically levitated droplet in the presence of a static DC field to suppress convection. The results obtained from the spectral-collocation based free surface code SPHINX and the commercial package COMSOL independently confirm and extend previous findings in [4]. By including the effects of turbulence and movement of the free surface SPHINX can predict the behaviour of the droplet in dynamic regimes with and without the DC magnetic field. COMSOL is used to investigate arbitrary amplitude axial translational oscillations when the spherical droplet is displaced off its equilibrium. The results demonstrate that relatively small amplitude oscillations could cause significant variation in Joule heating and redistribution of the temperature. The effect of translational oscillations on the lumped circuit inductance is analysed. When a fixed voltage drive is applied across the terminals of the levitation coil, this effect will cause the coil current to change and a correction is needed to the electromagnetic force acting on the droplet
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Vacuum arc remelting time dependent modelling
Vacuum arc remelting (VAR) aims at production of high quality, segregation-free alloys. The quality of the produced ingots depends on the operating conditions which could be monitored and analyzed using numerical modelling. The remelting process uniformity is controlled by critical medium scale time variations of the order 1-100 s, which are physically initiated by the droplet detachment and
the large scale arc motion at the top of liquid pool [1,2].
The newly developed numerical modelling tools are addressing the 3-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic and thermal behaviour in the liquid zone and the adjacent ingot, electrode and crucible
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A two dimensional unstructured staggered mesh method with special treatment of tangential velocity
A two dimensional staggered unstructured discretisation scheme for the solution of fluid flow problems has been developed. This scheme stores and solves the velocity vector resolutes normal and parallel to each cell face and other scalar variables (pressure, temperature) are stored at cell centres. The coupled momentum; continuity and energy equations are solved, using the well known pressure correction algorithm SIMPLE. The method is tested for accuracy and convergence behaviour against standard cell-centre solutions in a number of benchmark problems: The Lid-Driven Cavity, Natural Convection in a Cavity and the Melting of Gallium in a rectangular domain
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Thin sample alloy solidification in electromagnetic driven convection
During the directional solidification of Ga-In25%wt., density variations in the liquid cause plumes of solute to be ejected from the interface through natural convection. This can lead to the formation of chimneys during solidification and ultimately freckles. The application of external magnetic fields can be used to suppress these plumes. Two magnetic systems are considered. The first is a rotating magnetic wheel, which provides conditions analogous to forced convection at the solidification interface. The forced convection causes preferential growth of secondary branches and causes the plumes to be transported downstream and back into the bulk. The second is through the application of a static magnetic field that interacts with inherent thermoelectric currents, generating a Lorentz force that drives fluid flow within the inter-dendritic region. However, in the bulk where there are no thermoelectric currents, electromagnetic damping dominates and plumes are stunted. Using a fully coupled transient numerical model each of these systems has been analysed. Comparisons to experiments are given for the cases of natural and forced convection. The experimental setup uses a Hele-Shaw cell with an electric heater and Peltier cooler, allowing for control over the thermal gradient and cooling rate
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Experimental and numerical study of the cold crucible melting process
The cold crucible, or induction skull melting process as is otherwise known, has the potential to produce high purity melts of a range of difficult to melt materials, including Ti–Al and Ti6Al4V alloys for Aerospace, Ti–Ta and other biocompatible materials for surgical implants, silicon for photovoltaic and electronic applications, etc. A water cooled AC coil surrounds the crucible causing induction currents to melt the alloy and partially suspend it against gravity away from water-cooled surfaces.
Strong stirring takes place in the melt due to the induced electromagnetic Lorentz forces and very high temperatures are attainable under the right conditions (i.e., provided contact with water cooled walls is minimised). In a joint numerical and experimental research programme, various aspects of the design and operation of this process are investigated to increase our understanding of the physical mechanisms involved and to maximise process efficiency. A combination of FV and Spectral CFD techniques are used at Greenwich to tackle this problem numerically, with the experimental work taking place at Birmingham University. Results of this study, presented here, highlight the influence of turbulence and free surface behaviour on attained superheat and also discuss coil design variations and dual frequency options that may lead to winning crucible designs
Contactless ultrasound generation in a crucible
Ultrasound treatment is used in light alloys during solidification to refine microstructure, remove gas, or disperse immersed particles. A mechanical sonotrode immersed in the melt is most effective when probe tip vibrations lead to cavitation. Liquid contact with the probe can be problematic for high temperature or reactive melts leading to contamination. An alternative contactless method of generating ultrasonic waves is proposed, using electromagnetic (EM) induction. As a bonus, the EM force induces vigorous stirring distributing the effect to treat larger volumes of material. In a typical application, the induction coil surrounding the crucible— also used to melt the alloy—may be adopted for this purpose with suitable tuning. Alternatively, a top coil, immersed in the melt (but still contactless due to EM force repulsion) may be used. Numerical simulations of sound, flow, and EM fields suggest that large pressure amplitudes leading to cavitation may be achievable with this method
Architecturally diverse proteins converge on an analogous mechanism to inactivate Uracil-DNA glycosylase
Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) compromises the replication strategies of diverse viruses from unrelated lineages. Virally encoded proteins therefore exist to limit, inhibit or target UDG activity for proteolysis. Viral proteins targeting UDG, such as the bacteriophage proteins ugi, and p56, and the HIV-1 protein Vpr, share no sequence similarity, and are not structurally homologous. Such diversity has hindered identification of known or expected UDG-inhibitory activities in other genomes. The structural basis for UDG inhibition by ugi is well characterized; yet, paradoxically, the structure of the unbound p56 protein is enigmatically unrevealing of its mechanism. To resolve this conundrum, we determined the structure of a p56 dimer bound to UDG. A helix from one of the subunits of p56 occupies the UDG DNA-binding cleft, whereas the dimer interface forms a hydrophobic box to trap a mechanistically important UDG residue. Surprisingly, these p56 inhibitory elements are unexpectedly analogous to features used by ugi despite profound architectural disparity. Contacts from B-DNA to UDG are mimicked by residues of the p56 helix, echoing the role of ugi’s inhibitory beta strand. Using mutagenesis, we propose that DNA mimicry by p56 is a targeting and specificity mechanism supporting tight inhibition via hydrophobic sequestration
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