718 research outputs found
Simulação numérica da evaporação de líquidos em meios porosos expostos à atmosfera através de modelo de escala de poros
A investigação experimental e a modelagem matemática da evaporação de líquido a partir de superfícies porosas é extremamente importante em um grande número de aplicações práticas, variando desde aplicações industriais, como processos de tratamento superficial, às aplicações em problemas ambientais, como a utilização de agrotóxicos e estudos de impacto ambiental do lançamento de líquidos nocivos na atmosfera. Os modelos de escala de poros surgem com importante ferramenta para o cálculo das taxas de evaporação de líquidos. Este trabalho visa implementar um modelo de escala de poros que seja capaz de prever as taxas de evaporação dos líquidos e as distribuições de fase dentro da matriz porosa. Além de analisar a influência dos parâmetros governantes no processo de evaporação. O modelo de escala de poros obteve boa acuracia quando comparado com os resultados de Yiotis et al. (2001). Os resultados mostram que sob escoamento mais intenso a influência do meio poroso fica mais evidente, limitando o processo de evaporação, do que quando expostos a escoamento menos intenso
Recommended from our members
Dispersion of a passive scalar within and above an urban street network
The transport of a passive scalar from a continuous point-source release in an urban street network is studied using direct numerical simulation (DNS). Dispersion through the network is characterized by evaluating horizontal fluxes of scalar within and above the urban canopy and vertical exchange fluxes through the canopy top. The relative magnitude and balance of these fluxes are used to distinguish three different regions relative to the source location: a near-field region, a transition region and a far-field region. The partitioning of each of these fluxes into mean and turbulent parts is computed. It is shown that within the canopy the horizontal turbulent flux in the street network is small, whereas above the canopy it comprises a significant fraction of the total flux. Vertical fluxes through the canopy top are predominantly turbulent. The mean and turbulent fluxes are respectively parametrized in terms of an advection velocity and a detrainment velocity and the parametrization incorporated into a simple box-network model. The model treats the coupled dispersion problem within and above the street network in a unified way and predictions of mean concentrations compare well with the DNS data. This demonstrates the usefulness of the box-network approach for process studies and interpretation of results from more detailed numerical simulations
Recommended from our members
Processes controlling atmospheric dispersion through city centres
We develop a process-based model for the dispersion of a passive scalar in the turbulent flow around the buildings of a city centre. The street network model is based on dividing the airspace of the streets and intersections into boxes, within which the turbulence renders the air well mixed. Mean flow advection through the network of street and intersection boxes then mediates further lateral dispersion. At the same time turbulent mixing in the vertical detrains scalar from the streets and intersections into the turbulent boundary layer above the buildings. When the geometry is regular, the street network model has an analytical solution that describes the variation in concentration in a near-field downwind of a single source, where the majority of scalar lies below roof level. The power of the analytical solution is that it demonstrates how the concentration is determined by only three parameters. The plume direction parameter describes the branching of scalar at the street intersections and hence determines the direction of the plume centreline, which may be very different from the above-roof wind direction. The transmission parameter determines the distance travelled before the majority of scalar is detrained into the atmospheric boundary layer above roof level and conventional atmospheric turbulence takes over as the dominant mixing process. Finally, a normalised source strength multiplies this pattern of concentration. This analytical solution converges to a Gaussian plume after a large number of intersections have been traversed, providing theoretical justification for previous studies that have developed empirical fits to Gaussian plume models. The analytical solution is shown to compare well with very high-resolution simulations and with wind tunnel experiments, although re-entrainment of scalar previously
detrained into the boundary layer above roofs, which is not accounted for in the analytical solution, is shown to become an important process further downwind from the source
Recommended from our members
Flow structure and near-field dispersion in arrays of building-like obstacles
Dispersion in the near-field region of localised releases in urban areas is difficult to predict because of the strong influence of individual buildings. Effects include upstream dispersion, trapping of material into building wakes and enhanced concentration fluctuations. As a result, concentration patterns are highly variable in time and mean profiles in the near field are strongly non-Gaussian. These aspects of near-field dispersion are documented by analysing data from direct numerical simulations in arrays of building-like obstacles and are related to the underlying flow structure. The mean flow structure around the buildings is found to exert a strong influence over the dispersion of material in the near field. Diverging streamlines around buildings enhance lateral dispersion. Entrainment of material into building wakes in the very near field gives rise to secondary sources, which then affect the subsequent dispersion pattern. High levels of concentration fluctuations are also found in this very near field; the fluctuation intensity is of order 2 to 5
Scalar Quantum Field Theory in Disordered Media
A free massive scalar field in inhomogeneous random media is investigated.
The coefficients of the Klein-Gordon equation are taken to be random functions
of the spatial coordinates. The case of an annealed-like disordered medium,
modeled by centered stationary and Gaussian processes, is analyzed. After
performing the averages over the random functions, we obtain the two-point
causal Green's function of the model up to one-loop. The disordered scalar
quantum field theory becomes qualitatively similar to a
self-interacting theory with a frequency-dependent coupling
Formal analogies between gravitation and electrodynamics
We develop a theoretical framework that allows us to compare electromagnetism
and gravitation in a fully covariant way. This new scenario does not rely on
any kind of approximation nor associate objects with different operational
meaning as it's sometime done in the literature. We construct the
electromagnetic analogue to the Riemann and Weyl tensors and develop the
equations of motion for these objects. In particular, we are able to identify
precisely how and in what conditions gravity can be mapped to electrodynamics.
As a consequence, many of the gemometrical tools of General Relativity can be
applied to Electromagnetism and vice-versa. We hope our results would shed new
light in the nature of electromagnetic and gravitational theories.Comment: 9pages, submitted to General Relativity and Gravitatio
- …