380 research outputs found
Heat transfer results and operational characteristics of the NASA Lewis Research Center Hot Section Cascade Test Facility
The NASA Lewis Research Center gas turbine hot section test facility has been developed to provide a real-engine environment with well known boundary conditions for the aerothermal performance evaluation/verification of computer design codes. The initial aerothermal research data obtained are presented and the operational characteristics of the facility are discussed. This facility is capable of testing at temperatures and pressures up to 1600 K and 18 atm which corresponds to a vane exit Reynolds number range of 0.5x10(6) to 2.5x10(6) based on vane chord. The component cooling air temperature can be independently modulated between 330 and 700 K providing gas-to-coolant temperature ratios similar to current engine application. Research instrumentation of the test components provide conventional pressure and temperature measurements as well as metal temperatures measured by IR-photography. The primary data acquisition mode is steady state through a 704 channel multiplexer/digitizer. The test facility was configured as an annular cascade of full coverage filmcooled vanes for the initial series of research tests
Effects of surface modifications on molecular diffusion in mesoporous catalytic materials
In this work, we use pulsed-field gradient (PFG) NMR to probe molecular diffusion of liquids inside
mesoporous structures and assess the influence of surface modifications, namely, deposition of
palladium (Pd) nanoparticles over alumina (Al2O3) surfaces and passivation of titania (TiO2) surfaces
with alkyl chains, on the diffusion pattern
MAGNETIC RESONANCE (MR) MEASUREMENTS OF THE MASS FLUX IN GAS-SOLID FLUIDIZED BEDS
Magnetic Resonance (MR) Imaging was used to measure the time-averaged voidage and particle velocity in a 3D gas-solid fluidized bed. Two different distributors were used. The mass-flux through a horizontal plane was calculated by combining the local voidage and particle velocity measurements. Based on the conservation of mass it was possible to give an error in the combined voidage and particle velocity measurements. It was found that the error in the mass flux was usually small (\u3c 5%), albeit increasing with increasing fluidization velocities
Assessing the surface modifications following the mechanochemical preparation of a Ag/Al2O3 selective catalytic reduction catalyst
The surface modification of a mechanochemically prepared Ag/Al2O3 catalyst compared with catalysts prepared by standard wet impregnated methods has been probed using two-dimensional T1âT2 NMR correlations, H2O temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and DRIFTS. The catalysts were examined for the selective catalytic reduction of NOx using n-octane in the presence and absence of H2. Higher activities were observed for the ball milled catalysts irrespective of whether H2 was added. This higher activity is thought to be related to the increased affinity of the catalyst surface towards the hydrocarbon relative to water, following mechanochemical preparation, resulting in higher concentrations of the hydrocarbon and lower concentrations of water at the surface. DRIFTS experiments demonstrated that surface isocyanate was formed significantly quicker and had a higher surface concentration in the case of the ball milled catalyst which has been correlated with the stronger interaction of the n-octane with the surface. This increased interaction may also be the cause of the reduced activation barrier measured for this catalyst compared with the wet impregnated system. The decreased interaction of water with the surface on ball milling is thought to reduce the effect of site blocking whilst still providing a sufficiently high surface concentration of water to enable effective hydrolysis of the isocyanate to form ammonia and, thereafter, N2
In Situ Measurement of Dynamic Mixing in Gas-Solid Fluidized Beds Using Magnetic Resonance
Three magnetic resonance techniques were implemented to study solids mixing in a fluidized bed. Ultra-fast FLASH imaging was utilised to measure the dispersion of a tracer particle in real time. A novel MR sequence for measurement of the time-averaged mixing of solids in a fluidized bed was developed. Finally images of the velocity of solids were obtained to measure directly the pattern of solids flow
Structural changes in FeOx/Îł-Al2O3 catalysts during ethylbenzene dehydrogenation
The structural changes that occur in a FeOx/Îł-Al2O3 catalyst during the dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene in a fluidized CREC Riser Simulator have been investigated. Chemical and morphological changes are observed to take place as a result of reaction. Electron microscopy reveals the formation of needle-like alumina structures apparently enclosing iron oxide particles. The formation of such structures at relatively low temperatures is unexpected and has not previously been reported. Additionally, X-ray diffraction and Mössbauer spectroscopy confirmed the reduction of the oxidation state of iron, from Fe2O3 (haematite) to Fe3O4 (magnetite). Iron carbides, Fe3C and É-Fe2C, were detected by electron microscopy through electron diffraction and lattice fringes analysis. Carbon deposition (coking) on the catalyst surface also occurs. The observed structural changes are likely to be closely correlated with the catalytic properties of the materials, in particular with catalyst deactivation, and thereby provide important avenues for future study of this industrially important reaction. Fe2O3/Al2O3 catalyst undergoes chemical and morphological changes during ethylbenzene dehydrogenation forming Al2O3 needles which appear to contain reduced Fe3O4 particles. Fe3C also forms during reaction
Spin-orbit coupling in interacting quasi-one-dimensional electron systems
We present a new model for the study of spin-orbit coupling in interacting
quasi-one-dimensional systems and solve it exactly to find the spectral
properties of such systems. We show that the combination of spin-orbit coupling
and electron-electron interactions results in: the replacement of separate spin
and charge excitations with two new kinds of bosonic mixed-spin-charge
excitation, and a characteristic modification of the spectral function and
single-particle density of states. Our results show how manipulation of the
spin-orbit coupling, with external electric fields, can be used for the
experimental determination of microscopic interaction parameters in quantum
wires.Comment: 5 pages including 4 figures; RevTeX; to appear in Phys.Rev.Let
Chemical resolution in T 2 - T 1 correlations
Oil and water fractions have been identified in fluid saturated carbonate rock cores using a novel T2-T1-d pulse sequence. The inclusion of the chemical shift dimension d allows T2-T1 plots to be generated independently for the oil and water. The T2-T1-d pulse sequence utilises a âdouble-shotâ T1 measurement that provides free induction decays (FIDs) as a function of both relaxation times for suitably broad line samples. The T2-T1-d data set is acquired in the same experimental time as a conventional T1-T2 measurement (without chemical resolution) of equivalent data density. Here we demonstrate that different behaviour can be observed between the oil and water fractions in water wet and preferentially oil wet cores, and that saturation states can be determined. This technique could provide a quantitative NMR measure of wettability
Measurements and Modeling of Wetting Efficiency in Trickle-Bed Reactors:Liquid Viscosity and Bed Packing Effects
An experimental parametric study on wetting efficiency is reported which evaluates the influence of liquid viscosity, as well as the effect of particle size(/shape) and bed porosity (ΔB), separately. A 10-fold increase of liquid viscosity improves slightly catalyst wetting (by about 10%), while an increase of either bed porosity or particle size has the opposite effect. Wetting efficiency is reduced by about 0.1 for an increase of ΔB from 0.38 and 0.40 due to a change of particle size from 1.8 to 7 Ă 10â3 m while the decrease is only 0.05 for a similar variation of ΔB (0.38â0.41) with the same particles. The effect of particle shape (cylindrical/trilobe extrudates or spheres) appears very small in the investigated conditions. A new correlation for wetting efficiency is proposed, using a bounded function and only three dimensionless groups (liquid Froude and Morton numbers and bed porosity). This correlation is able to predict wetting efficiency with a very good precision on a large database, provided wetting liquids are used. Adding fines in the fixed bed is also examined, and its positive effect can be correlated with the size ratio between catalyst particles and fines
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