135 research outputs found
Développement de capteurs logiciels pour les bioprocédés face aux incertitudes de modélisation et de modèle
The exponential development of biotechnology has lead to a quasi unlimited number of potential products going from biopolymers to vaccines. Cell culture has therefore evolved from the simple cell growth outside its natural environment to its use to produce molecules that they do not naturally produce. This rapid development could not be continued without new control and supervising tools as well as a good process understanding. This requirement involves however a large diversity and a better accessibility of process measurements. In this framework, software sensors show numerous potentialities. The objective of a software sensor is indeed to provide an estimation of the system state variables and particularly those which are not obtained through in situ hardware sensors or laborious and expensive analysis. In this context, This work attempts to join the knowledge of increasing bioprocess complexity and diversity and the time scale of process developments and favours systematic modelling methodology, its flexibility and the speed of development. In the field of state observation, an important modelling constraint is the one induced by the selection of the state to estimate and the available measurements. Another important constraint is the model quality. The central axe of this work is to provide solutions in order to reduce the weight of these constraints to software sensors development. On this purpose, we propose four solutions to four main questions that may arise. The first two ones concern modelling uncertainties.1."How to develop a software sensor using measurements easily available on pilot scale bioreactor?" The proposed solution is a static software sensor using an artificial neural network. Following this modelling methodology we developed static software sensors for the biomass and ethanol concentrations in a pilot scale S. cerevisae cell culture using the measurement of titrating base quantity, agitation rate and CO&Doctorat en sciences agronomiques et ingénierie biologiqueinfo:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublishe
Contribution à la pharmacologie expérimentale et clinique des anthracyclines
Thèse d'agrégation de l'enseignement supérieur (Faculté de médecine) -- UCL, 198
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Aerothermal Sentencing for Manufacturing Variations on Turbine Blade Shrouds
The tolerances used to sentence HPT blades need to be well-matched to the corresponding influence on aerothermal performance caused by the geometric deviation. If this condition is not fulfilled, this can lead to well-performing parts costing around 2M. The current tolerances used on shroud platform radial displacements, which are required to limit shroud platform steps, are at risk of being unmatched to the corresponding influence on aerothermal performance and introduce uncertainty in the sentencing. Therefore, aerothermal tolerances for shroud platform variations are developed in this research project.
Steady RANS simulations are run on a three passage HPT rotor model with engine-representative shroud
platform manufacturing variations applied to the middle blade passage. Engine representative shroud
platform manufacturing variations, consisting of platform steps and inter-platform gap width variations, are obtained based on a statistical analysis of step heights and gap widths occurring in a sample of 100 casting scans and 26 finished part scans. Both a 4σ backward-facing step and the equivalent height forward-facing step, as perceived by the flow in the aftchord region, are studied. The gap widths is varied from the nominal value by both an increase and reduction with 1σ.
This study shows that the shroud endwall flow is aligned with the wedge face until midchord and crosses the step in the aftchord region, where the flow field resembles the corresponding canonical 2D step flow. Since both the heat transfer enhancement and the step-normal component of velocity is largest in this quasi 2D (Q2D) aftchord region, a step heat transfer and loss correlation is developed using a parametric study on a Q2D model of the shroud endwall. The heat transfer correlation calculates the Nusselt number at the reattachment point as a function of the included parameters. The change in total pressure loss caused by a step is derived using a control volume analysis.
Both correlations are tested on 3D platform steps. The heat transfer correlation predicts the reattachment Nusselt number within 20% for all but one test case, where the prediction error is increased to 30% due to a 3D effect not included in the model. Both the predicted loss and the value obtained from CFD are below the numerical uncertainty for platform steps on a shroud endwall. More notably, the total blade passage
loss scales linearly with inter-platform gap width, which is the main shroud platform manufacturing
variations altering the aerodynamic loss. When the loss correlation is tested on steps in the Harrison
cascade, prediction errors below 20% are obtained.EPSRC and Rolls-Royce plc
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