2,679 research outputs found
Accelerated convergence for incompressible flow calculations
Two improved algorithms which solve the steady-state Navier-Stokes equations, PISO and SIMPLER, are studied. Computations were carried out on progressively finer grids for the driven cavity and flow over a backward-facing step. The effects of relaxation factor, number of grid nodes and number of sweeps through the pressure equations are studied to evaluate the performance of the PISO and SIMPLER schemes. Results show that these improved schemes accelerate the convergence rate of the solution generally by a factor of two as compared to the SIMPLE method
Flame radiation and liner heat transfer in a tubular-can combustor
Heat transfer within a combuster were examined. Total and spectral flame radiation in a tubular can combustor at a series of parametric operating conditions was measured. Radiation measurements were taken for a range of inlet air pressures from 0.34 to 2.0 MPa, inlet air temperatures from 533 to 700 K, with two different fuels, Jet-A and ERBS. Measurements of liner temperatures combined with the parametric radiation results allowed a calculation of the combustor liner heat loads. Flame emissivity was determined from the spectral measurements
Reducing numerical diffusion for incompressible flow calculations
A number of approaches for improving the accuracy of incompressible, steady-state flow calculations are examined. Two improved differencing schemes, Quadratic Upstream Interpolation for Convective Kinematics (QUICK) and Skew-Upwind Differencing (SUD), are applied to the convective terms in the Navier-Stokes equations and compared with results obtained using hybrid differencing. In a number of test calculations, it is illustrated that no single scheme exhibits superior performance for all flow situations. However, both SUD and QUICK are shown to be generally more accurate than hybrid differencing
Direct imaging of a digital-micromirror device for configurable microscopic optical potentials
Programable spatial light modulators (SLMs) have significantly advanced the
configurable optical trapping of particles. Typically, these devices are
utilized in the Fourier plane of an optical system, but direct imaging of an
amplitude pattern can potentially result in increased simplicity and
computational speed. Here we demonstrate high-resolution direct imaging of a
digital micromirror device (DMD) at high numerical apertures (NA), which we
apply to the optical trapping of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). We utilise a
(1200 x 1920) pixel DMD and commercially available 0.45 NA microscope
objectives, finding that atoms confined in a hybrid optical/magnetic or
all-optical potential can be patterned using repulsive blue-detuned (532 nm)
light with 630(10) nm full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) resolution, within 5%
of the diffraction limit. The result is near arbitrary control of the density
the BEC without the need for expensive custom optics. We also introduce the
technique of time-averaged DMD potentials, demonstrating the ability to produce
multiple grayscale levels with minimal heating of the atomic cloud, by
utilising the high switching speed (20 kHz maximum) of the DMD. These
techniques will enable the realization and control of diverse optical
potentials for superfluid dynamics and atomtronics applications with quantum
gases. The performance of this system in a direct imaging configuration has
wider application for optical trapping at non-trivial NAs.Comment: 9 page
Flame Radiation Measurements
Spectral and total flame radiation measurements exhibited: (1) that radiant heat flux increases with vision combustor inlet air pressure; (2) the effect of fuel atomization characteristics on radiant heat flux; and (3) that a reduction in fuel hydrogen content produces a significant increase in radiant heat flux primarily at low combustor pressures
Synthesis and Elastic Characterization of Zinc Oxide Nanowires
Zinc oxide nanowires, nanobelts, and nanoneedles were synthesized using the vapor-liquid-solid technique. Young's modulus of the nanowires was measured by performing cantilever bending experiments on individual nanowires in situ inside a scanning electron microscope. The nanowires tested had diameters in the range of 200–750 nm. The average Young's modulus, measured to be 40 GPa, is about 30% of that reported at the bulk scale. The experimental results are discussed in light of the pronounced electromechanical coupling due to the piezoelectric nature of the material
Optimization of double pulse pumping for Ni-like Sm x-ray lasers
We report a systematic study of double pulse pumping of the Ni-like Sm x-ray laser at 73 Angstrom, currently the shortest wavelength saturated x-ray laser. It is found that the Sm x-ray laser output can change by orders of magnitude when the intensity ratio of the pumping pulses and their relative delay are varied. Optimum pumping conditions are found and interpreted in terms of a simple model. (C) 1999 American Institute of Physics. [S0021-8979(99)07102-9]
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