632 research outputs found
Development of a linearized unsteady aerodynamic analysis for cascade gust response predictions
A method for predicting the unsteady aerodynamic response of a cascade of airfoils to entropic, vortical, and acoustic gust excitations is being developed. Here, the unsteady flow is regarded as a small perturbation of a nonuniform isentropic and irrotational steady background flow. A splitting technique is used to decompose the linearized unsteady velocity into rotational and irrotational parts leading to equations for the complex amplitudes of the linearized unsteady entropy, rotational velocity, and velocity potential that are coupled only sequentially. The entropic and rotational velocity fluctuations are described by transport equations for which closed-form solutions in terms of the mean-flow drift and stream functions can be determined. The potential fluctuation is described by an inhomogeneous convected wave equation in which the source term depends on the rotational velocity field, and is determined using finite-difference procedures. The analytical and numerical techniques used to determine the linearized unsteady flow are outlined. Results are presented to indicate the status of the solution procedure and to demonstrate the impact of blade geometry and mean blade loading on the aerodynamic response of cascades to vortical gust excitations. The analysis described herein leads to very efficient predictions of cascade unsteady aerodynamic response phenomena making it useful for turbomachinery aeroelastic and aeroacoustic design applications
Development of unsteady aerodynamic analyses for turbomachinery aeroelastic and aeroacoustic applications
Theoretical analyses and computer codes are being developed for predicting compressible unsteady inviscid and viscous flows through blade rows. Such analyses are needed to determine the impact of unsteady flow phenomena on the structural durability and noise generation characteristics of turbomachinery blading. Emphasis is being placed on developing analyses based on asymptotic representations of unsteady flow phenomena. Thus, flow driven by small-amplitude unsteady excitations in which viscous effects are concentrated in thin layers are being considered. The resulting analyses should apply in many practical situations, lead to a better understanding of the relevent physics, and they will be efficient computationally, and therefore, appropriate for aeroelastic and aeroacoustic design applications. Under the present phase (Task 3), the effort was focused on providing inviscid and viscid prediction capabilities for subsonic unsteady cascade flows
Simulation of seismic events induced by CO2 injection at In Salah, Algeria
Date of Acceptance: 18/06/2015 Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank the operators of the In Salah JV and JIP, BP, Statoil and Sonatrach, for providing the data shown in this paper, and for giving permission to publish. Midland Valley Exploration are thanked for the use of their Move software for geomechanical restoration. JPV is a Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Early Career Research Fellow (Grant NE/I021497/1) and ALS is funded by a NERC Partnership Research Grant (Grant NE/I010904).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Synchronicity of historical dry spells in the Southern Hemisphere
A shift in climate occurred during the mid-1970s that affected the
hydroclimate of the Southern Hemisphere resulting in drying trends across
continental regions including Australia, New Zealand and southern and western
Africa. There is also anecdotal evidence of other periods of climatic
synchronicity in the Southern Hemisphere (e.g., the 1920s and 1940s),
indicating that the mid-1970s event may not be anomalous. This paper
identifies periods within the last ~120 years using statistical
analysis where dry spells (in terms of annual to multi-decadal rainfall
deficiencies) have coincided across the continental Southern Hemisphere in
order to characterize temporal consistency. It is shown that synchronicity of
dry spells is (a) most likely common over the last 120 years and (b)
associated with changes in the large-scale climate modes of the Pacific,
Indian and Southern Oceans. Importantly, the findings presented in this paper
have marked implications for drought management and drought forecasting
studies in the Southern Hemisphere
Pre-exposure to an electrical stimulus primes associative pairing of audio and electrical stimuli for dairy heifers in a virtual fencing feed attractant trial
This experiment examined whether pre-exposure to an electrical stimulus from electric fencing attenuates associative pairing of audio and electrical stimuli in dairy heifers. Two treatments were applied to 30 weaned heifers naive to electric fencing. Heifers in the ‘electric-fence’ treatment were exposed to an electrified perimeter fence and two periods of strip-grazing using electrified poly-wire. Control heifers remained naïve to electric fencing. The pairing of audio and electrical stimuli was assessed in a feed attractant trial using manually controlled training collars. Heifers received an audio stimulus (2 s; 84 dB) when they breached a virtual fence after which a short electrical stimulus (0.5 s; 120 mW) was administered if they continued to move forward. If the animal stopped moving forward no further stimuli were applied. By the third training session, electric-fence heifers received a lower proportion of electrical stimuli than control heifers (p = 0.03). The more exploratory interactions a heifer had with the electric fence, the lower the proportion of electrical stimuli she received during training (rs = −0.77, p = 0.002). We conclude that experience with electrical fencing enhanced the salience of the electrical stimulus delivered by manual collars used for virtual fence training
Links between the Big Dry in Australia and hemispheric multi-decadal climate variability – implications for water resource management
Southeast Australia (SEA) experienced a protracted drought during the
mid-1990s until early 2010 (known as the Big Dry or Millennium Drought) that
resulted in serious environmental, social and economic effects. This paper
analyses a range of historical climate data sets to place the recent drought
into context in terms of Southern Hemisphere inter-annual to multi-decadal
hydroclimatic variability. The findings indicate that the recent Big Dry in
SEA is in fact linked to the widespread Southern Hemisphere climate shift
towards drier conditions that began in the mid-1970s. However, it is shown
that this link is masked because the large-scale climate drivers responsible
for drying in other regions of the mid-latitudes since the mid-1970s did not
have the same effect on SEA during the mid- to late 1980s and early 1990s.
More specifically, smaller-scale synoptic processes resulted in elevated
autumn and winter rainfall (a crucial period for SEA hydrology) during the
mid- to late 1980s and early 1990s, which punctuated the longer-term drying.
From the mid-1990s to 2010 the frequency of the synoptic processes associated
with elevated autumn/winter rainfall decreased, resulting in a return to
drier than average conditions and the onset of the Big Dry. The findings
presented in this paper have marked implications for water management and
climate attribution studies in SEA, in particular for understanding and
dealing with "baseline" (i.e. current) hydroclimatic risks
An analysis for high Reynolds number inviscid/viscid interactions in cascades
An efficient steady analysis for predicting strong inviscid/viscid interaction phenomena such as viscous-layer separation, shock/boundary-layer interaction, and trailing-edge/near-wake interaction in turbomachinery blade passages is needed as part of a comprehensive analytical blade design prediction system. Such an analysis is described. It uses an inviscid/viscid interaction approach, in which the flow in the outer inviscid region is assumed to be potential, and that in the inner or viscous-layer region is governed by Prandtl's equations. The inviscid solution is determined using an implicit, least-squares, finite-difference approximation, the viscous-layer solution using an inverse, finite-difference, space-marching method which is applied along the blade surfaces and wake streamlines. The inviscid and viscid solutions are coupled using a semi-inverse global iteration procedure, which permits the prediction of boundary-layer separation and other strong-interaction phenomena. Results are presented for three cascades, with a range of inlet flow conditions considered for one of them, including conditions leading to large-scale flow separations. Comparisons with Navier-Stokes solutions and experimental data are also given
Unsteady Aerodynamic Models for Turbomachinery Aeroelastic and Aeroacoustic Applications
Theoretical analyses and computer codes are being developed for predicting compressible unsteady inviscid and viscous flows through blade rows of axial-flow turbomachines. Such analyses are needed to determine the impact of unsteady flow phenomena on the structural durability and noise generation characteristics of the blading. The emphasis has been placed on developing analyses based on asymptotic representations of unsteady flow phenomena. Thus, high Reynolds number flows driven by small amplitude unsteady excitations have been considered. The resulting analyses should apply in many practical situations and lead to a better understanding of the relevant flow physics. In addition, they will be efficient computationally, and therefore, appropriate for use in aeroelastic and aeroacoustic design studies. Under the present effort, inviscid interaction and linearized inviscid unsteady flow models have been formulated, and inviscid and viscid prediction capabilities for subsonic steady and unsteady cascade flows have been developed. In this report, we describe the linearized inviscid unsteady analysis, LINFLO, the steady inviscid/viscid interaction analysis, SFLOW-IVI, and the unsteady viscous layer analysis, UNSVIS. These analyses are demonstrated via application to unsteady flows through compressor and turbine cascades that are excited by prescribed vortical and acoustic excitations and by prescribed blade vibrations. Recommendations are also given for the future research needed for extending and improving the foregoing asymptotic analyses, and to meet the goal of providing efficient inviscid/viscid interaction capabilities for subsonic and transonic unsteady cascade flows
Protection against oxidation, by CVD or SPS coatings of hafnium carbide and silicon carbide, on carbon/carbon composites
protection of carbon/carbon composites against oxidation at high temperatures. However HfC and most of metallic carbides present a non stoechiometric composition with carbon vacancies. As a consequence, the oxidation resistance is poor at low temperatures (500-1000°C). In order to overcome this main drawback the HfC can be associated with silicon carbide (SiC) presenting a better oxidation resistance at lower temperatures.
Two coating routes have been studied; the first one is the Chemical Vapour Deposition which enables to obtain very thin coatings and the second one is the Spark Plasma Sintering technique which permits to get new microstructures of coatings.
On first hand, this study describes the CVD conditions for the deposition of HfC from the metallic hafnium pellets to get hafnium chlorides followed by the reduction of the chlorides by H2 and the deposition of HfC with the methane as carbon precursor. This enables to get an alternated multilayer microstructure made of a first layer of SiC on top of which the first layer of HfC is deposited and so on to a ten alternated layer deposit [1].
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