55,364 research outputs found
Reynold stress closure in jet flows using wave models
Research program efforts have continued to concentrate on the development of the numerical methods that will form the computational part of the turbulence closure scheme. Studies have continued on the wave model for the two dimensional shear layer. This configuration is being used as a test case for the closure schemes. Several numerical schemes for the solution of the non-separable Rayleigh equation were developed. This solution is required for the closure scheme in more complex geometries. The most efficient method found is a Hybrid scheme that combines both pseudospectral and finite difference techniques. In addition, conformal transformation techniques were developed to transform the arbitrary geometry of the jet to a simple computational domain. The study of the shock structure in arbitrary geometry jets and multiple jets. These developments are described briefly
Reynolds stress closure in jet flows using wave models
Ways of implementing the turbulence closure scheme based on modeling the large scale coherent structures as instability waves were sought. The computational tools necessary to apply this scheme to jets of arbitrary geometry were developed. The model, developed earlier, was extended to the shock structure of supersonic jets of arbitrary geometry and multiple jets. It was found that though the qualititate features of the unsteady flow field could be predicted there were always difficulties with some of the quantitative features. This led to the new formation of the closure scheme. The schemes for computations tools which were developed are efficient and represent the application of the very powerful mathematical tools to the problems of practical significance
Swashplate feedback control for tilt-rotor aircraft
Changes in angle of attack in system were sensed indirectly by gages which responded to strains induced in wing structure. Output signals were amplified, filtered, and used to activate swashplate actuators. System provided significant reduction in blade loads and desirable changes in hub forces and moments
Thermodynamically stable lithium silicides and germanides from density-functional theory calculations
Density-functional-theory (DFT) calculations have been performed on the Li-Si
and Li-Ge systems. Lithiated Si and Ge, including their metastable phases, play
an important technological r\^ole as Li-ion battery (LIB) anodes. The
calculations comprise structural optimisations on crystal structures obtained
by swapping atomic species to Li-Si and Li-Ge from the X-Y structures in the
International Crystal Structure Database, where X={Li,Na,K,Rb,Cs} and
Y={Si,Ge,Sn,Pb}. To complement this at various Li-Si and Li-Ge stoichiometries,
ab initio random structure searching (AIRSS) was also performed. Between the
ground-state stoichiometries, including the recently found LiSi
phase, the average voltages were calculated, indicating that germanium may be a
safer alternative to silicon anodes in LIB, due to its higher lithium insertion
voltage. Calculations predict high-density LiSi and LiGe
layered phases which become the ground state above 2.5 and 5 GPa
respectively and reveal silicon and germanium's propensity to form dumbbells in
the LiSi, stoichiometry range. DFT predicts the stability of
the LiGe , LiGe and LiGe
phases and several new Li-Ge compounds, with stoichiometries LiGe,
LiGe, LiGe and LiGe.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Ultracold atoms at unitarity within quantum Monte Carlo
Variational and diffusion quantum Monte Carlo (VMC and DMC) calculations of
the properties of the zero-temperature fermionic gas at unitarity are reported.
The ratio of the energy of the interacting to the non-interacting gas for a
system of 128 particles is calculated to be 0.4517(3) in VMC and 0.4339(1) in
the more accurate DMC method. The spherically-averaged pair-correlation
functions, momentum densities, and one-body density matrices are very similar
in VMC and DMC, but the two-body density matrices and condensate fractions show
some differences. Our best estimate of the condensate fraction of 0.51 is a
little smaller than values from other quantum Monte Carlo calculations
Wave models for turbulent free shear flows
New predictive closure models for turbulent free shear flows are presented. They are based on an instability wave description of the dominant large scale structures in these flows using a quasi-linear theory. Three model were developed to study the structural dynamics of turbulent motions of different scales in free shear flows. The local characteristics of the large scale motions are described using linear theory. Their amplitude is determined from an energy integral analysis. The models were applied to the study of an incompressible free mixing layer. In all cases, predictions are made for the development of the mean flow field. In the last model, predictions of the time dependent motion of the large scale structure of the mixing region are made. The predictions show good agreement with experimental observations
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