817 research outputs found

    Modeling and simulation of viscoelastic film retraction

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    In this paper, we investigate the retraction of a circular viscoelastic liquid film with a hole initially present in its center by means of finite element numerical simulations. We study the whole retraction process, aiming at understanding the hole opening dynamics both when the hole does not feel any confinement and when it interacts with the solid wall bounding the film. The retraction behavior is also interpreted through a simple toy model, that highlights the physical mechanism underlying the process.We consider three different viscoelastic constitutive equations, namely, Oldroyd-B, Giesekus (Gsk), and Phan Thien-Tanner (PTT) models, and several system geometries, in terms of the film initial radius and thickness. For each given geometry, we investigate the effects of liquid inertia, elasticity, and flow-dependent viscosity on the dynamics of the hole opening. Depending on the relative strength of such parameters, qualitatively different features can appear in the retracting film shape and dynamics.When inertia is relevant, as far as the opening hole does not interact withthe wall bounding the film, the influence of liquid elasticity is very moderate,and the retraction dynamics tends to the one of Newtonian sheets; whenthe hole starts to interact with the solid wall, hole radius/opening velocityoscillations are detected. Such oscillations enhance at increasing elasticity.From the morphological point of view, the formation of a rim at the edge ofthe retracting film is observed. If inertial forces become less relevant withrespect to viscous forces, R-oscillations disappear, the hole opening velocitygoes through a maximum and then monotonically decays to zero, and norim forms during the film retraction. Geometrical changes have the effect ofenlarging or reducing the portion of the retraction dynamics not influencedby the presence of the solid wall with respect to the one governed by thehole-wall interactions

    Air gasification of digestate and its co-gasification with residual biomass in a pilot scale rotary kiln

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    In this study energy recovery of digestate from a biogas plant was investigated via air gasification. Gasification tests were executed in a pilot scale rotary kiln plant having a nominal biomass feeding rate of about 20 kg/h. The equivalence ratio was varied from 0.22 to 0.39 with the goal to approach the autothermal condition. Tests were carried out for 5 h in steady state condition. Syngas composition, char and gas yields were measured. To improve the cold gas efficiency of the process, a mixture of digestate and almond shells (60:40 wt%) was gasified. Autothermal condition was reached with the mixture using equivalence ratio of 0.30 where the corresponding cold gas efficiency achieved the maximum value of 55%. The raw gas had a lower heating value of 4–5 MJ/Nm3. To evaluate possible improvements in the produced gas properties, in this work the effect of steam injection was also investigated

    Production of Gaseous Carriers Via Biomass Gasification for Energy Purposes

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    AbstractIt is under development a biomass gasification plant based on a 1 MWth bubbling fluidized bed (BFB) reactor with internal recirculation. Compared to conventional BFB design, the mechanism of internal circulation of solids can give beneficial effect to the process in terms of biomass conversion efficiency into gaseous product and gas quality. A model describing the process of biomass gasification in the two reaction chambers was developed. Expected results were preliminarily validated by experimental results obtained at a bench scale facility working on the same gasification concept

    Pathology of sea turtles <i>Caretta caretta</i> found on the coast of Apulia (south Italy)

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    On the basis of the most recent scientific literature, little is known on sea turtle renal pathology, as most published data mainly regard tortoises. The authors examined 49 carcasses of sea turtles belonging to the species Caretta caretta, stranded on the coasts of Apulia (South Italy). The subjects were classified by species and gender, weighed, morphometrical assessed, and submitted to pathological and bacteriological examinations

    Dispersive stabilization of the inverse cascade for the Kolmogorov flow

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    It is shown by perturbation techniques and numerical simulations that the inverse cascade of kink-antikink annihilations, characteristic of the Kolmogorov flow in the slightly supercritical Reynolds number regime, is halted by the dispersive action of Rossby waves in the beta-plane approximation. For beta tending to zero, the largest excited scale is proportional to the logarithm of one over beta and differs strongly from what is predicted by standard dimensional phenomenology which ignores depletion of nonlinearity.Comment: 4 pages, LATEX, 3 figures. v3: revised version with minor correction

    Optimal transport by omni-potential flow and cosmological reconstruction

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    One of the simplest models used in studying the dynamics of large-scale structure in cosmology, known as the Zeldovich approximation, is equivalent to the three-dimensional inviscid Burgers equation for potential flow. For smooth initial data and sufficiently short times it has the property that the mapping of the positions of fluid particles at any time t1t_1 to their positions at any time t2≥t1t_2\ge t_1 is the gradient of a convex potential, a property we call omni-potentiality. Are there other flows with this property, that are not straightforward generalizations of Zeldovich flows? This is answered in the affirmative in both two and three dimensions. How general are such flows? Using a WKB technique we show that in two dimensions, for sufficiently short times, there are omni-potential flows with arbitrary smooth initial velocity. Mappings with a convex potential are known to be associated with the quadratic-cost optimal transport problem. This has important implications for the problem of reconstructing the dynamical history of the Universe from the knowledge of the present mass distribution.Comment: Dedicated to the memory of Roman Juszkiewicz. 17 pages, 2 figures, 27 references. Accepted in Journal of Mathematical Physics. Bibliography correcte

    Divertor of the European DEMO: Engineering and technologies for power exhaust

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    In a power plant scale fusion reactor, a huge amount of thermal power produced by the fusion reaction and external heating must be exhausted through the narrow area of the divertor targets. The targets must withstand the intense bombardment of the diverted particles where high heat fluxes are generated and erosion takes place on the surface. A considerable amount of volumetric nuclear heating power must also be exhausted. To cope with such an unprecedented power exhaust challenge, a highly efficient cooling capacity is required. Furthermore, the divertor must fulfill other critical functions such as nuclear shielding and channeling (and compression) of exhaust gas for pumping. Assuring the structural integrity of the neutron-irradiated (thus embrittled) components is a crucial prerequisite for a reliable operation over the lifetime. Safety, maintainability, availability, waste and costs are another points of consideration. In late 2020, the Pre-Conceptual Design activities to develop the divertor of the European demonstration fusion reactor were officially concluded. On this occasion, the baseline design and the key technology options were identified and verified by the project team (EUROfusion Work Package Divertor) based on seven years of R&D efforts and endorsed by Gate Review Panel. In this paper, an overview of the load specifications, brief descriptions of the design and the highlights of the technology R&D work are presented together with the further work still needed

    Inertio-elastic focusing of bioparticles in microchannels at high throughput

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    Controlled manipulation of particles from very large volumes of fluid at high throughput is critical for many biomedical, environmental and industrial applications. One promising approach is to use microfluidic technologies that rely on fluid inertia or elasticity to drive lateral migration of particles to stable equilibrium positions in a microchannel. Here, we report on a hydrodynamic approach that enables deterministic focusing of beads, mammalian cells and anisotropic hydrogel particles in a microchannel at extremely high flow rates. We show that on addition of micromolar concentrations of hyaluronic acid, the resulting fluid viscoelasticity can be used to control the focal position of particles at Reynolds numbers up to Re≈10,000 with corresponding flow rates and particle velocities up to 50 ml min[superscript −1] and 130 m s[superscript −1]. This study explores a previously unattained regime of inertio-elastic fluid flow and demonstrates bioparticle focusing at flow rates that are the highest yet achieved.National Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (U.S.) (P41 BioMicroElectroMechanical Systems Resource Center)National Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (U.S.) (P41 EB002503)National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research FellowshipUnited States. Army Research Office (Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies Grant W911NF-09-0001
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