81 research outputs found
Enhanced reaction kinetics and reactive mixing scale dynamics in mixing fronts under shear flow for arbitrary Damk\"ohler numbers
Mixing fronts, where fluids of different chemical compositions mix with each
other, are typically subjected to velocity gradients, ranging from the pore
scale to the catchment scale due to permeability variations and flow line
geometries. A common trait of these processes is that the mixing interface is
strained by shear. Depending on the P\'eclet number , which represents the
ratio of the characteristic diffusion time to the characteristic advection
time, and the Damk\"ohler number , which represents the ratio of the
characteristic diffusion time to the characteristic reaction time, the local
reaction rates can be strongly impacted by the dynamics of the mixing
interface. This impact has been characterized mostly either in kinetics-limited
or in mixing-limited conditions, that is, for either very low or very high
. Here the coupling of shear flow and chemical reactivity is investigated
for arbitrary Damk\"ohler numbers, for a bimolecular reaction and an initial
interface with separated reactants. Approximate analytical expressions for the
global production rate and reactive mixing scale are derived based on a
reactive lamella approach that allows for a general coupling between stretching
enhanced mixing and chemical reactions. While for , reaction kinetics
and stretching effects are decoupled, a scenario which we name "weak
stretching", for , we uncover a "strong stretching" scenario where new
scaling laws emerge from the interplay between reaction kinetics, diffusion,
and stretching. The analytical results are validated against numerical
simulations. These findings shed light on the effect of flow heterogeneity on
the enhancement of chemical reaction and the creation of spatially localized
hotspots of reactivity for a broad range of systems ranging from kinetic
limited to mixing limited situations
Stability of a horizontal viscous fluid layer in a vertical time periodic electric field
The stability of a horizontal interface between two viscous fluids, one of
which is conducting and the other is dielectric, acted upon by a vertical
time-periodic electric field is considered. The two fluids are bounded by
electrodes separated by a finite distance. By means of Floquet theory, the
marginal stability curves are obtained, thereby elucidating the dependency of
the critical voltage and wavenumber upon the fluid viscosities. The limit of
vanishing viscosities is shown to be in excellent agreement with the marginal
stability curves predicted by means of a Mathieu equation. The methodology to
obtain the marginal stability curves developed here is applicable to any
arbitrary but time periodic-signal, as demonstrated for the case of a signal
with two different frequencies. As a special case, the marginal stability
curves for an applied ac voltage biased by a dc voltage are depicted. It is
shown that the mode coupling caused by the normal stress at the interface due
to the electric field leads to appearance of harmonic modes and subharmonic
modes. This is in contrast to the application of a voltage with a single
frequency which always leads to a harmonic mode. Whether a harmonic or
subharmonic mode is the most unstable one depends on details of the excitation
signal. It is also shown that the electrode spacing has a distinct effect on
the stability bahavior of the system
Collaborative Mapping of Archaeological Sites using multiple UAVs
UAVs have found an important application in archaeological mapping. Majority
of the existing methods employ an offline method to process the data collected
from an archaeological site. They are time-consuming and computationally
expensive. In this paper, we present a multi-UAV approach for faster mapping of
archaeological sites. Employing a team of UAVs not only reduces the mapping
time by distribution of coverage area, but also improves the map accuracy by
exchange of information. Through extensive experiments in a realistic
simulation (AirSim), we demonstrate the advantages of using a collaborative
mapping approach. We then create the first 3D map of the Sadra Fort, a 15th
Century Fort located in Gujarat, India using our proposed method. Additionally,
we present two novel archaeological datasets recorded in both simulation and
real-world to facilitate research on collaborative archaeological mapping. For
the benefit of the community, we make the AirSim simulation environment, as
well as the datasets publicly available
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