3,280 research outputs found

    Numerical study of solid particle axial mixing in a fixed cylindrical drum with rotating paddles

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    Axial mixture characterization is a wide spread problem in granular particle blending processes such as in an horizontal drum mixer. The homogeneous mixture of particles is obtained by blending the particles via rotating paddles in a fixed cylindrical drum. This problem, common to many technological devices, is crucial in the manufacture of a broad variety of industrial products, such as polypropylene. The granular flow behavior in these systems is still poorly understood and the numerical study of such configurations receives increasing academic and industrial attention. In this paper, a study is conducted to investigate the effects of different aspects of the reactor design on the axial transport of monodisperse, uniform density and spherical polypropylene particles. Results show that principally the shape of the paddles is the important design consideration to enhance the axial transport of particles

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    High-Rayleigh-Number Convection in a Vertical Channel

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    See Also * Phys. Rev. Focus 17, story 9International audienceWe measure the relation between convective heat flux and temperature gradient in a vertical channel filled with water, the average vertical mass flux being zero. Compared to the classical Rayleigh-Bénard case, this situation has the advantage of avoiding plates and, thus, their neighborhood, in which is usually concentrated most of the temperature gradient. Consequently, inertial processes should control the convection, with poor influence of the viscosity. This idea gives a good account of our observations, if we consider that a natural vertical length, different from the channel width, appears. Our results also suggest that heat fluxes can be deduced from velocity measurements in free convective flows. This confers to our results a wide range of applications

    Cardiac motion assessement from echocardiographic image sequences by means of the structure multivector

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    International audienceWe recently contributed an algorithm for the estimation of cardiac deformation from echocardiographic image sequences based on the monogenic signal. By exploiting the phase information instead of the pixel intensity, the algorithm was robust to the temporal contrast variations normally encountered in cardiac ultrasound. In this paper we propose an improvement of that framework making use of an extension of the monogenic signal formalism, called structure multivector. The structure multivector models the image as the superposition of two perpendicular waves with associated amplitude, phase and orientation. Such a model is well adapted to describe the granular pattern of the characteristic speckle noise. The displacement is computed by solving the optical flow equation jointly for the two image phases. A local affine model accounts for typical cardiac motions as contraction/expansion and shearing; a coarse-to-fine B-spline scheme allows for a robust and effective computation of the model parameters and a pyramidal refinement scheme helps deal with large motions. Performance was evaluated on realistic simulated cardiac ultrasound sequences and compared to our previous monogenic-based algorithm and classical speckle tracking. Endpoint-error was used as accuracy metric. With respect to them we achieved error reductions of 13% and 30% respectively

    Effect of Discretization of Permeability Term and Mesh Size on Macro- and Meso-segregation Predictions

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    Macro- and meso-segregations correspond to heterogeneities of composition at the scale of a casting. They develop during the solidification. One of the parameters that has an essential effect on these segregations is the mush permeability which varies over a wide range of magnitude. We present simulation results for solidification of Sn-Pb alloy in a two-dimensional cavity. The role of discretization schemes and mesh size on the formation of channel segregates and macrosegregation is discussed

    Quasiparticle diffusion based heating in superconductor tunneling micro-coolers

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    In a hybrid Superconductor - Insulator - Normal metal tunnel junction biased just below the gap, the extraction of hot electrons out of the normal metal results in electronic cooling effect. The quasiparticles injected in the superconductor accumulate near the tunnel interface, thus increasing the effective superconductor temperature. We propose a simple model for the diffusion of excess quasiparticles in a superconducting strip with an additional trap junction. This diffusion model has a complete analytic solution, which depends on experimentally accessible parameters. We find that the accumulated quasiparticles near the junction reduce the efficiency of the device. This study is also relevant to more general situations making use of superconducting tunnel junctions, as low temperature detectors.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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