46,449 research outputs found
Infrared imaging investigation of temperature fluctuation and spatial distribution for a large laminated lithium ion power battery
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.The present study investigates the thermal behaviors of a naturally cooled NCM-type LIB (LiNi1−x−yCoxMnyO2 as cathode) from an experimental and systematic approach. The temperature distribution was acquired for different discharge rates and Depth of Discharge (DOD) by the infrared imaging (IR) technology. Two new factors, the temperature variance ( ) and local overheating index (LOH index), were proposed to assess the temperature fluctuation and distribution. Results showed that the heat generation rate was higher on the cathode side than that on the anode side due to the different resistivity of current collectors. For a low-power discharge, the eventual stable high-temperature zone occurred in the center of the battery, while with a high-power discharge, the upper part of the battery was the high temperature region from the very beginning of discharge. It was found that the temperature variance ( ) and local overheating index (LOH index) were capable of holistically exhibiting the temperature non-uniformity both on numerical fluctuation and spatial distribution with varying discharge rates and DOD. With increasing the discharge rate and DOD, temperature distribution showed an increasingly non-uniform trend, especially at the initial and final stage of high-power discharge, the heat accumulation and concentration area increased rapidly
Improved thermal performance of a large laminated lithium-ion power battery by reciprocating air flow
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.Thermal safety issues are increasingly critical for large-size laminated Lithium-Ion Batteries (LIBs). Despite a number of investigations conducted on the Battery Thermal Management System (BTMS) with reciprocating air-flow cooling, large laminated power LIBs are still not sufficiently investigated, particularly in the view of battery thermal characteristics. The present study investigates the thermal behaviors of an air-cooled NCM-type LIB (LiNi1−x−yCoxMnyO2 as cathode) from an experimental and systematic approach. The temperature distribution was acquired from different Depth of Discharge (DOD) by the infrared imaging (IR) technology. A reciprocating air-flow cooling method was proposed to restrict the temperature fluctuation and homogenize temperature distribution. Results showed that there was a remarkable temperature distribution phenomenon during the discharge process, the temperature distribution was affected by direction of air-flow. Forward air-flow (from current collector side to lower part of battery) was always recommended at the beginning of the discharge due to the thermal characteristics of the battery. After comprehensive consideration on battery temperature limit and cooling effect, the desired initial reversing timing was about 50% DOD at 3 C discharge rate. Different reversing strategies were investigated including isochronous cycles and aperiodic cycles. It was found that the temperature non-uniformity caused by heat accumulation and concentration was mitigated by reciprocating air-flow with optimized reversing strategy
Electromagnetic fields in a 3D cavity and in a waveguide with oscillating walls
We consider classical and quantum electromagnetic fields in a
three-dimensional (3D) cavity and in a waveguide with oscillating boundaries of
the frequency . The photons created by the parametric resonance are
distributed in the wave number space around along the axis of the
oscillation. When classical waves propagate along the waveguide in the one
direction, we observe the amplification of the original waves and another wave
generation in the opposite direction by the oscillation of side walls. This can
be understood as the classical counterpart of the photon production. In the
case of two opposite walls oscillating with the same frequency but with a phase
difference, the interferences are shown to occur due to the phase difference in
the photon numbers and in the intensity of the generated waves.Comment: 8 pages revTeX including 1 eps fi
Assessing low energy school buildings using the new Building Bulletin 101
This paper reports an assessment of a school building design using the newly published Building Bulletin 101 2018. The requirements on thermal comfort and CO2 based indoor air quality from this new guidance document are very different from its earlier version published in 2006. Existing research reported that the new requirements are much tougher to meet compared with the previous version. The aim of this research is to examine whether design alternatives on an existing school building with 10 learning and teaching spaces can help in passing the new requirements using dynamic thermal simulation tool - IESVE.
It is found that promoting ventilation, shading and night purging can all help mitigating overheating in the ten learning and teaching spaces evaluated. With the ‘as built’ condition, these learning and teaching spaces failed all three overheating criteria from the new BB101. Promoting ventilation can help some of the spaces pass the overheating occurrence criterion but not the overheating severity criteria. With added shading to block excessive solar gains, half of the evaluated spaces were able to pass the thermal comfort requirement. Boosting the night purging also helps to some extent in bridging the gap against the target requirements on overheating severity, however, there are still spaces which will not pass the comfort requirement. This may indicate that natural ventilation itself may not be able to provide thermal comfort for the given design. CO2 based indoor air quality requirements are less of an issue as higher CO2 concentrations always happen when the outdoor air temperature is low, boosting ventilation using automatic or manual control can easily resolve this. The research also highlights that one of the overheating criteria is much more difficult to meet, the appropriateness of this criterion is therefore in question. As the new BB101 was only launched very recently, it will be subject to further tests and evaluations in order to examine whether it fits for purpose
The spt-Crank for Ordinary Partitions
The spt-function was introduced by Andrews as the weighted counting
of partitions of with respect to the number of occurrences of the smallest
part. Andrews, Garvan and Liang defined the spt-crank of an -partition which
leads to combinatorial interpretations of the congruences of mod 5 and
7. Let denote the net number of -partitions of with spt-crank
. Andrews, Garvan and Liang showed that is nonnegative for all
integers and positive integers , and they asked the question of finding
a combinatorial interpretation of . In this paper, we introduce the
structure of doubly marked partitions and define the spt-crank of a doubly
marked partition. We show that can be interpreted as the number of
doubly marked partitions of with spt-crank . Moreover, we establish a
bijection between marked partitions of and doubly marked partitions of .
A marked partition is defined by Andrews, Dyson and Rhoades as a partition with
exactly one of the smallest parts marked. They consider it a challenge to find
a definition of the spt-crank of a marked partition so that the set of marked
partitions of and can be divided into five and seven equinumerous
classes. The definition of spt-crank for doubly marked partitions and the
bijection between the marked partitions and doubly marked partitions leads to a
solution to the problem of Andrews, Dyson and Rhoades.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
- …