1,187 research outputs found
A way to visualise heat transfer in 3D unsteady flows
This paper was presented at the 2nd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2009), which was held at Brunel University, West London, UK. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, IPEM, the Italian Union of Thermofluid dynamics, the Process Intensification Network, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group and the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications.Heat transfer in fluid flows traditionally is
examined in terms of temperature field and heat-transfer coefficients. However, heat transfer may alternatively be considered as the transport of thermal energy by the total
convective-conductive heat flux in a way analogous to the transport of fluid by the flow field. The paths followed by the total heat flux are the thermal counterpart to fluid trajectories and facilitate heat-transfer visualisation in a similar manner as flow visualisation. This has great potential for applications in which insight into the heat fluxes throughout the entire configuration is essential (e.g. cooling systems, heat exchangers). To date this
concept has been restricted to 2D steady flows. The present study proposes its generalisation to 3D unsteady flows by representing heat transfer as the 3D unsteady
motion of a virtual fluid subject to continuity. The heat transfer visualisation is provided with a physical framework and demonstrated by way of representative
examples. Furthermore, a fundamental analogy between fluid motion and heat transfer is addressed that may pave the way to future heat-transfer studies by well-established
geometrical methods from laminar-mixing studies
Lagrangian flow structures in 3D AC electro-osmotic microflows
This paper was presented at the 3rd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2011), which was held at the Makedonia Palace Hotel, Thessaloniki in Greece. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, University of Thessaly, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute.Flow forcing by AC electro-osmosis (ACEO) is a promising technique for actuation and
manipulation of microflows. Utilisation to date mainly concerns pumping and mixing. However, emerging micro-fluidics applications demand further functionalities. The present study explores first ways by which to systematically realise this in three-dimensional (3D) microflows using ACEO. This exploits the fact that continuity “organises” Lagrangian fluid trajectories into coherent structures that geometrically determine the transport properties. 3D Lagrangian flow structures typically comprise families of concentric (closed) streamtubes, acting both as transport barriers and transport conduits, embedded in chaotic regions. Representative case studies demonstrate that ACEO, possibly in combination with other forcing mechanisms, has the potential to tailor these features into multi-functional Lagrangian flow structures for various transport purposes. This may pave the way to “labs-within-a-channel” that offer the wide functionality of labs-on-a-chip yet within one microflow instead of within an integrated system
Antenna with artificial magnetic conductor for wireless application
— This paper discussed the recent works on Artificial
Magnetic Conductor (AMC) with the antenna. Two different
application for antenna with AMC have been discussed. The
first application is the antenna with AMC that has been used for
RFID system to detect the metal object. Without incorporating
AMC with antenna the system cannot be detected. When the
AMC is attached with the RFID Tag antenna the system is back
to normal where longer distance is achieved. The second
application is used for flexible AMC using textile material for
signal transmission enhancement. Using two antennas for on
body application the system has been tested using AMC and
without AMC. It shows that the transmission is better when
there is an AMC attach to the body compared without AMC.
Index Terms — Artificial Magnetic Conductor, high
impedance surface, metamaterial, reflection phase
Numerical study of slip effects on unsteady aysmmetric bioconvective nanofluid flow in a porous microchannel with an expanding/ contracting upper wall using Buongiorno’s model
In this paper, the unsteady fully developed forced convective flow of viscous incompressible biofluid that contains both nanoparticles and gyrotactic microorganisms in a horizontal micro-channel is studied. Buongiorno’s model is employed. The upper channel wall is either expanding or contracting and permeable and the lower wall is static and impermeable. The plate separation is therefore a function of time. Velocity, temperature, nano-particle species (mass) and motile micro-organism slip effects are taken into account at the upper wall. By using the appropriate similarity transformation for the velocity, temperature, nanoparticle volume fraction and motile microorganism density, the governing partial differential conservation equations are reduced to a set of similarity ordinary differential equations. These equations under prescribed boundary conditions are solved numerically using the Runge-Kutta-Fehlberg fourth-fifth order numerical quadrature in the MAPLE symbolic software. Excellent agreement between the present computations and solutions available in the literature (for special cases) is achieved. The key thermofluid parameters emerging are identified as Reynolds number, wall expansion ratio, Prandtl number, Brownian motion parameter, thermophoresis parameter, Lewis number, bioconvection Lewis number and bioconvection Péclet number. The influence of all these parameters on flow velocity, temperature, nano-particle volume fraction (concentration) and motile micro-organism density function is elaborated. Furthermore graphical solutions are included for skin friction, wall heat transfer rate, nano-particle mass transfer rate and micro-organism transfer rate. Increasing expansion ratio is observed to enhance temperatures and motile micro-organism density. Both nanoparticle volume fraction and microorganism increases with an increase in momentum slip. The dimensionless temperature and microorganism increases as wall expansion increases. Applications of the study arise in advanced nanomechanical bioconvection energy conversion devices, bio-nano-coolant deployment systems etc
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The dynamic interaction effects of railway tunnels: Crossrail and the Grand Central Recording Studios
In cities around the world, underground railways offer an environmentally friendly solution to society’s increasing demand for mass transport. However, they are often constructed close to sensitive buildings, where the resulting ground-borne noise and vibration can cause disturbance to both the occupants and the equipment. Such a scenario occurred in central London, where the new twin tunnels of Crossrail were bored beneath the Grand Central Recording Studios, causing an immediate concern. As a result, vibration in the studios’ building was monitored throughout the Crossrail construction period. Since Crossrail is yet to operate, the resulting data provide a unique opportunity to investigate the effect of new tunnels, acting as passive buried structures, on the existing vibration environment. This paper presents the results of such an investigation, together with complementary results from a theoretical four-tunnel boundary-element model. The data analysis, presented in the first half of the paper, indicates that the construction of the second Crossrail tunnel has led to an overall reduction in the noise and vibration levels beneath the studios, due to the operation of the nearby Central line trains of London Underground. This is predominantly due to a reduction of approximately 6 dB in the 63 Hz band-limited levels but accompanied by a slight increase, of approximately 2 dB, in the 125 Hz band. Further analysis indicates that any seasonal variations in vibration levels over the measurement period are negligible, adding weight to the conclusion that the observed changes are a causal effect of the tunnel. The second half of the paper presents results from the model, which aims to simulate the dynamic interaction between the Central line tunnels and those of Crossrail. With nominal parameter values, the results demonstrate qualitative similarities with the measurement findings, thereby adding to the growing body of evidence that dynamic interaction between neighbouring tunnels can be significant. </jats:p
The anion study: effect of different crystalloid solutions on acid base balance, physiology, and survival in a rodent model of acute isovolaemic haemodilution
Background: Commercially available crystalloid solutions used for volume replacement do not exactly match the balance of electrolytes found in plasma. Large volume administration may lead to electrolyte imbalance and potential harm. We hypothesised that haemodilution using solutions containing different anions would result in diverse biochemical effects, particularly on acid-base status, and different outcomes.
Methods: Anaesthetised, fluid-resuscitated, male Wistar rats underwent isovolaemic haemodilution by removal of 10% blood volume every 15 min, followed by replacement with one of three crystalloid solutions based on acetate, lactate, or chloride. Fluids were administered in a protocolised manner to achieve euvolaemia based on echocardiography-derived left ventrical volumetric measures. Removed blood was sampled for plasma ions, acid-base status, haemoglobin, and glucose. This cycle was repeated at 15-min intervals until death. The primary endpoint was change in plasma bicarbonate within each fluid group. Secondary endpoints included time to death and cardiac function.
Results: During haemodilution, chloride-treated rats showed significantly greater decreases in plasma bicarbonate and strong ion difference levels compared with acetate- and lactate-treated rats. Time to death, total volume of fluid administered: chloride group 56 (3) ml, lactate group 62 (3) ml, and acetate group 65 (3) ml; haemodynamic and tissue oxygenation changes were, however, similar between groups.
Conclusions: With progressive haemodilution, resuscitation with a chloride-based solution induced more acidosis compared with lactate- and acetate-based solutions, but outcomes were similar. No short-term impact was seen from hyperchloraemia in this model
Folding mechanisms steer the amyloid fibril formation propensity of highly homologous proteins
Significant advances in the understanding of the molecular determinants of fibrillogenesis can be expected from comparative studies of the aggregation propensities of proteins with highly homologous structures but different folding pathways. Here, we fully characterize, by means of stopped-flow, T-jump, CD and DSC experiments, the unfolding mechanisms of three highly homologous proteins, zinc binding Ros87 and Ml153-149 and zinc-lacking Ml452-151. The results indicate that the three proteins significantly differ in terms of stability and (un)folding mechanisms. Particularly, Ros87 and Ml153-149 appear to be much more stable to guanidine denaturation and are characterized by folding mechanisms including the presence of an intermediate. On the other hand, metal lacking Ml452-151 folds according to a classic two-state model. Successively, we have monitored the capabilities of Ros87, Ml452-151 and Ml153-149 to form amyloid fibrils under native conditions. Particularly, we show, by CD, fluorescence, DLS, TEM and SEM experiments, that after 168 hours, amyloid formation of Ros87 has started, while Ml153-149 has formed only amorphous aggregates and Ml452-151 is still monomeric in solution. This study shows how metal binding can influence protein folding pathways and thereby control conformational accessibility to aggregation-prone states, which in turn changes aggregation kinetics, shedding light on the role of metal ions in the development of protein deposition diseases
Computation of melting dissipative magnetohydrodynamic nanofluid bioconvection with second order slip and variable thermophysical properties
This paper studies the combined effects of viscous dissipation, first and second order slip
and variable transport properties on phase-change hydromagnetic bio-nanofluid convection flow from a
stretching sheet. Nanoscale materials possess a much larger surface to volume ratio than bulk
materials which significantly modifies their thermodynamic and thermal properties and lowers
substantially the melting point. Gyrotactic non-magnetic micro-organisms are present in the
nanofluid. The transport properties are assumed to be dependent on the concentration and
temperature. Via appropriate similarity variables, the governing equation with boundary
conditions are converted to nonlinear ordinary differential equations and are solved using the
BVP4C subroutine in the symbolic software Matlab. The non-dimensional boundary value features
a melting (phase change) parameter, temperature-dependent thermal conductive parameter, first as
well as second order slip parameters, mass diffusivity parameter, Schmidt number, microorganism
diffusivity parameter, bioconvection Schmidt number, magnetic body force parameter, Brownian
motion and thermophoresis parameter. Extensive computations are visualized for the influence of
these parameters. The present simulation is of relevance in the fabrication of bio-nanomaterials for
bio-inspired fuel cells
Kaons production at finite temperature and baryon density in an effective relativistic mean field model
We investigate the kaons production at finite temperature and baryon density
by means of an effective relativistic mean-field model with the inclusion of
the full octet of baryons. Kaons are considered taking into account of an
effective chemical potential depending on the self-consistent interaction
between baryons. The obtained results are compared with a minimal coupling
scheme, calculated for different values of the anti-kaon optical potential.Comment: 3 pages, contribution presented to the International Conference on
Exotic Atoms and Related Topic
How safe are regional techniques? Evidence from large studies with big data
No Abstract. Keywords: regional techniques, safety, drug toxicity, sharp trauma, blunt trauma, stretch injury, nerve ischaemi
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