837 research outputs found
HITRAN® WIRE MATRIX INSERTS IN FOULING APPLICATIONS
Fouling characteristics are dictated largely by the properties of the thermal and hydrodynamic boundary layers. As a result, fouling mitigation strategies must take into account the conditions in this region. hiTRAN® wire matrix tube inserts are a useful tool in altering the conditions near the tube wall, especially in the laminar and transition flow regions. This review paper considers Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) and Laser Doppler Velocimetry (LDV) measurements, which were employed in order to show the hydrodynamic differences between plain tubes and those containing inserts. Measurements indicate that the wall shear rate in tubes containing hiTRAN® inserts operating in the laminar flow regime is similar to that for plain bore tubes operating in the turbulent flow regime. Moreover, the increased tube side heat transfer coefficient which results from the reduction of the thermal boundary layer allows operation with smaller EMTDs. This enables the designer to reduce the tube wall temperature to a level below the fouling threshold temperature, e.g. to combat crude oil fouling. The results from the laser analyses into the hydrodynamic boundary layer are backed up by recent research data investigating the effect of hiTRAN® inserts on sedimentation and particulate fouling. The thickness of the fouling layer was measured by applying a combination of photographic and laser measurement techniques. The results are compared to plain tube data and are reported as a function of both flow rate and hiTRAN® insert packing density. The impact of altering the hydrodynamic and thermal conditions near to the wall is subsequently demonstrated for different fouling mechanisms. Studies of the impact of hiTRAN® inserts on biological and chemical reaction fouling in crude oil processing are also reviewed. A better understanding of the threshold shear rates and wall temperatures for different fouling mechanisms is required for any study into the impact of fouling. Combining this knowledge with the principles outlined in this paper clearly emphasises the benefit of using hiTRAN® wire matrix inserts as a powerful tool to mitigate fouling
Automated design analysis, assembly planning and motion study analysis using immersive virtual reality
Previous research work at Heriot-Watt University using immersive virtual reality (VR) for cable harness design showed that VR provided substantial productivity gains over traditional computer-aided design (CAD) systems. This follow-on work was aimed at understanding the degree to which aspects of this technology were contributed to these benefits and to determine if engineering design and planning processes could be analysed in detail by nonintrusively monitoring and logging engineering tasks. This involved using a CAD-equivalent VR system for cable harness routing design, harness assembly and installation planning that can be functionally evaluated using a set of creative design-tasks to measure the system and users' performance. A novel design task categorisation scheme was created and formalised which broke down the cable harness design process and associated activities. The system was also used to demonstrate the automatic generation of usable bulkhead connector, cable harness assembly and cable harness installation plans from non-intrusive user logging. Finally, the data generated from the user-logging allowed the automated activity categorisation of the user actions, automated generation of process flow diagrams and chronocyclegraphs
Inter-layer Hall effect in double quantum wells subject to in-plane magnetic fields
We report on a theoretical study of the transport properties of two coupled
two-dimensional electron systems subject to in-plane magnetic fields. The
charge redistribution in double wells induced by the Lorenz force in crossed
electric and magnetic fields has been studied. We have found that the
redistribution of the charge and the related inter-layer Hall effect originate
in the chirality of diamagnetic currents and give a substantial contribution to
the conductivity.Comment: 7 RevTex pages, 4 figures, appendix added and misprint in Eq. (11)
correcte
Design of Three-Dimensional Hypersonic Inlets with Rectangular to Elliptical Shape Transition
A methodology has been devised for the design of three-dimensional hypersonic inlets which include a rectangular to elliptical shape transition. This methodology makes extensive use of inviscid streamtracing techniques to generate a smooth shape transition from a rectangular-like capture to an elliptical throat. Highly swept leading edges and a significantly notched cowl enable use of these inlets in fixed geometry configurations. The design procedure includes a three dimensional displacement thickness calculation and uses established correlations to check for boundary layer separation due to shock wave interactions. Complete details of the design procedure are presented and the characteristics of a modular inlet with rectangular to elliptical shape transition and a design point of Mach 7.1 are examined. Comparison with a classical two-dimensional inlet optimized for maximum total pressure recovery indicates that this three-dimensional inlet demonstrates good performance even well below its design point
Magnetoresistance and electronic structure of asymmetric GaAs/AlGaAs double quantum wells in the in-plane/tilted magnetic field
Bilayer two-dimensional electron systems formed by a thin barrier in the GaAs
buffer of a standard heterostructure were investigated by magnetotransport
measurements. In magnetic fields oriented parallel to the electron layers, the
magnetoresistance exhibits an oscillation associated with the depopulation of
the higher occupied subband and the field-induced transition into a decoupled
bilayer. Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in slightly tilted magnetic fields
allow to reconstruct the evolution of the electron concentration in the
individual subbands as a function of the in-plane magnetic field. The
characteristics of the system derived experimentally are in quantitative
agreement with numerical self-consistent-field calculations of the electronic
structure.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Improving signal-to-noise resolution in single molecule experiments using molecular constructs with short handles
We investigate unfolding/folding force kinetics in DNA hairpins exhibiting
two and three states with newly designed short dsDNA handles (29 bp) using
optical tweezers. We show how the higher stiffness of the molecular setup
moderately enhances the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in hopping experiments as
compared to conventional long handles constructs (approximately 700 bp). The
shorter construct results in a signal of higher SNR and slower
folding/unfolding kinetics, thereby facilitating the detection of otherwise
fast structural transitions. A novel analysis of the elastic properties of the
molecular setup, based on high-bandwidth measurements of force fluctuations
along the folded branch, reveals that the highest SNR that can be achieved with
short handles is potentially limited by the marked reduction of the effective
persistence length and stretch modulus of the short linker complex.Comment: Main paper: 20 pages and 6 figures. Supplementary Material: 25 page
Lift, Drag and Thrust Measurement in a Hypersonic Impulse Facility
This paper reports the extension of the stress wave force balance to the measurement of forces on models which are non-axisymmetric or which have non-axisymmetric load distributions. Recent results are presented which demonstrate the performance of the stress wave force balance for drag measurement, for three-component force measurement and preliminary results for thrust measurement on a two-dimensional scramjet nozzle. In all cases, the balances respond within a few hundred microseconds
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