114 research outputs found
INVESTIGATION OF DISCRETE POPULATION BALANCE MODELS AND ITS PARAMETERS FOR TURBULENT EMULSIFICATION PRO- CESSES
Abstract. Different challenges and limitations occur with the simulation of liquid/liquid dispersion using population balance equations (PBE). A limitation is that the breakage and coalescence kernels tend to be specific to the equipment and scale used to acquire the evaluation data. It is reported in literature that PBE simulations are highly scale dependent. Once information is obtained using PBE, it cannot be used, with confidence, for scale-u
REMOVED: Process Intensification Through Micellar Enhanced Ultrafiltration
This article has been removed: please see Elsevier Policy on Article Withdrawal (http://www.elsevier.com/locate/withdrawalpolicy).This article has been removed at the request of the Executive Publisher.This article has been removed because it was published without the permission of the author(s)
Combined current and temperature mapping in an air-cooled, open-cathode polymer electrolyte fuel cell under steady-state and dynamic conditions
In situ diagnostic techniques provide a means of understanding the internal workings of fuel cells so that improved designs and operating regimes can be identified. Here, for the first time, a combined current density and temperature distributed measurement system is used to generate an electro-thermal performance map of an air-cooled, air-breathing polymer electrolyte fuel cell stack operating in an air/hydrogen cross-flow configuration. Analysis is performed in low- and high-current regimes and a complex relationship between localised current density, temperature and reactant supply is identified that describes the way in which the system enters limiting performance conditions. Spatiotemporal analysis was carried out to characterise transient operations in dead-ended anode/purge mode which revealed extensive current density and temperature gradients
Linear and nonlinear instability in vertical counter-current laminar gas-liquid flows
We consider the genesis and dynamics of interfacial instability in gas-liquid
flows, using as a model the two-dimensional channel flow of a thin falling film
sheared by counter-current gas. The methodology is linear stability theory
(Orr-Sommerfeld analysis) together with direct numerical simulation of the
two-phase flow in the case of nonlinear disturbances. We investigate the
influence of three main flow parameters (density contrast between liquid and
gas, film thickness, pressure drop applied to drive the gas stream) on the
interfacial dynamics. Energy budget analyses based on the Orr-Sommerfeld theory
reveal various coexisting unstable modes (interfacial, shear, internal) in the
case of high density contrasts, which results in mode coalescence and mode
competition, but only one dynamically relevant unstable internal mode for low
density contrast. The same linear stability approach provides a quantitative
prediction for the onset of (partial) liquid flow reversal in terms of the gas
and liquid flow rates. A study of absolute and convective instability for low
density contrast shows that the system is absolutely unstable for all but two
narrow regions of the investigated parameter space. Direct numerical
simulations of the same system (low density contrast) show that linear theory
holds up remarkably well upon the onset of large-amplitude waves as well as the
existence of weakly nonlinear waves. In comparison, for high density contrasts
corresponding more closely to an air-water-type system, although the linear
stability theory is successful at determining the most-dominant features in the
interfacial wave dynamics at early-to-intermediate times, the short waves
selected by the linear theory undergo secondary instability and the wave train
is no longer regular but rather exhibits chaotic dynamics and eventually, wave
overturning.Comment: 30 pages, 14 figure
Seven Paradoxes of Business Process Management in a Hyper-Connected World
Abstract
Business Process Management is a boundary-spanning discipline that aligns operational capabilities and technology to design and manage business processes. The Digital Transformation has enabled human actors, information systems, and smart products to interact with each other via multiple digital channels. The emergence of this hyper-connected world greatly leverages the prospects of business processes – but also boosts their complexity to a new level. We need to discuss how the BPM discipline can find new ways for identifying, analyzing, designing, implementing, executing, and monitoring business processes. In this research note, selected transformative trends are explored and their impact on current theories and IT artifacts in the BPM discipline is discussed to stimulate transformative thinking and prospective research in this field
Optimal permeate flux for an enzymatic oxidation of technical lignins in a membrane reactor
Enzyme membrane reactor systems (EMRS) offer a promising configuration for an enzymatic lignin modification/valorization by newly versatile peroxidases. This work continues in the same direction as our previous investigations using a 5-kDa tubular ceramic membrane for the fractionation of protein-ligninsulfonate model mixtures. Based on these preliminary studies, an in silico investigation is carried out for approximating the maximum product yield of an EMRS per operation cycle and membrane area. As a result, a permeate flux of 4 L mâ2 hâ1 was optimal for the 5-kDa membrane. In this context, a first assessment is given regarding fluid flow-related losses in versatile peroxidase activity
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