719 research outputs found
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Numerical investigation of high-speed droplet impact using a multiscale two-fluid approach
A single droplet impact onto solid surfaces remains a fundamental and challenging topic in both experimental and numerical studies with significant importance in a plethora of industrial applications, ranging from printing technologies to fuel injection in internal combustion engines. Under high-speed impact conditions, additional complexities arise as a result of the prompt droplet splashing and the subsequent violent fragmentation; thus, different flow regimes and a vast spectrum of sizes for the produced secondary flow structures coexist in the flow field. The present work introduces a numerical methodology to capture the multiscale processes involved with respect to local topological characteristics. The proposed methodology concerns a compressible Σ-Υ two-fluid model with dynamic interface sharpening based on an advanced flow topology detection algorithm. The model has been developed in OpenFOAM® and provides the flexibility of dealing with the multiscale character of droplet splashing, by switching between a sharp and a diffuse interface within the Eulerian-Eulerian framework in segregated and dispersed flow regions, respectively. An additional transport equation for the interface surface area density (Σ) introduces important information for the sub-grid scale phenomena, which is exploited in the dispersed flow regions to provide an insight into the extended cloud of secondary droplets after impact on the target. A high-speed water droplet impact case has been examined and evaluated against new experimental data; these refer to a millimetre size droplet impacting a solid dry smooth surface at velocity as high as 150m/s, which corresponds to a Weber number of ~7.6×10^5. At the investigated impact conditions compressibility effects dominate the early stages of droplet splashing. A strong shock wave forms and propagates inside the droplet, where transonic Mach numbers occur; local Mach numbers up to 2.5 are observed for the expelled surrounding gas outside the droplet. The proposed numerical approach is found to capture relatively accurately the phenomena and provide significant information regarding the produced flow structure dimensions, which is not available from the experiment
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Mechanisms of fault mirror formation and fault healing in carbonate rocks
The development of smooth, mirror-like surfaces provides insight into the mechanical behaviour of crustal faults during the seismic cycle. To determine the thermo-chemical mechanisms of fault mirror formation, we investigated carbonate fault systems in seismically active areas of central Greece. Using multi-scale electron microscopy combined with Raman and electron energy loss spectroscopy, we show that fault mirror surfaces do not always develop from nanogranular volumes. The microstructural observations indicate that decarbonation is the transformation process that leads to the formation of smooth surface coatings in the faults studied here. Piercement structures on top of the fault surfaces indicate calcite decarbonation, producing CO2 and lime (CaO). Lime subsequently reacts to portlandite (Ca(OH)2) under hydrous conditions. Nanoscale imaging and electron diffraction reveal a thin coating of a non-crystalline material sporadically mixed with nano-clay, forming a complex-composite material that smooths the slip surface. Spectroscopic analyses reveal that the thin coating is non-crystalline carbon. We suggest that ordering (hybridisation) of amorphous carbon led to the formation of partly-hybridised amorphous carbon but did not reach full graphitisation. Calcite nanograins, 100 nm) and new nanograins formed by back-reaction (secondary nanograins, <50 nm). Hence, we suggest that the new, secondary nanograins are not the result of comminution during slip but originate from pseudomorphic replacement of calcite after portlandite. The continuous coverage of partly-hybridised amorphous carbon on all samples suggests that calcite decarbonation products may develop across the entire fault surface, controlling the formation of carbonate fault mirrors, and may facilitate slip on a decarbonation-product glide film.This study was funded by the Dutch research organisation
(NWO) with the project number ALWOP.2015.082
Muscle recovery after ACL reconstruction with 4-strand semitendinosus graft harvested through either a posterior or anterior incision: A preliminary study
AbstractIntroductionHarvesting of a 4-strand semitendinosis (ST4) graft during anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction can be performed through either a posterior or anterior approach. The objective of this study was to evaluate the recovery of the quadriceps and hamstring muscles as a function of the graft harvesting method. We hypothesized that posterior harvesting (PH) would lead to better recovery in hamstring strength than anterior harvesting (AH).MethodsIn this prospective study, the semitendinosus was harvested through an anterior incision in the first group of patients and through a posterior one in the second group of patients. The patients were enrolled consecutively, without randomization. Isokinetic muscle testing was performed three and six months postoperative to determine the strength deficit in the quadriceps and hamstring muscles of the operated leg relative to the uninjured contralateral leg.ResultsThirty-nine patients were included: 20 in the AH group and 19 in the PH group. The mean quadriceps strength deficit after three and six months was 42% and 26% for AH and 29% and 19% for the PH, respectively (P=0.01 after three months and P=0.16 after six months). The mean hamstring strength deficit after three and six months was 31% and 17% for AH and 23% and 15% for the PH, respectively (P=0.09 after three months and P=0.45 after six months). After three months, the PH group had recovered 12% more quadriceps muscle strength than the AH group (P=0.03).ConclusionOur hypothesis was not confirmed. Harvesting of a ST4 graft for ACL reconstruction using a posterior approach led to better muscle strength recovery in the quadriceps only after three months.Case control studyLevel 3
A call for standardized outcomes in microTESE
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136713/1/andr12356.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136713/2/andr12356_am.pd
Cavitation induced by explosion in a model of ideal fluid
We discuss the problem of an explosion in the cubic-quintic superfluid model,
in relation to some experimental observations. We show numerically that an
explosion in such a model might induce a cavitation bubble for large enough
energy. This gives a consistent view for rebound bubbles in superfluid and we
indentify the loss of energy between the successive rebounds as radiated waves.
We compute self-similar solution of the explosion for the early stage, when no
bubbles have been nucleated. The solution also gives the wave number of the
excitations emitted through the shock wave.Comment: 21 pages,13 figures, other comment
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Wall shear stress from jetting cavitation bubbles
The collapse of a cavitation bubble near a rigid boundary induces a high-speed transient jet accelerating liquid onto the boundary. The shear flow produced by this event has many applications, examples of which are surface cleaning, cell membrane poration and enhanced cooling. Yet the magnitude and spatio-temporal distribution of the wall shear stress are not well understood, neither experimentally nor by simulations. Here we solve the flow in the boundary layer using an axisymmetric compressible volume-of-fluid solver from the OpenFOAM framework and discuss the resulting wall shear stress generated for a non-dimensional distance,γ = 1.0 (γ = h/Rmax, where h is the distance of the initial bubble centre to the boundary, and Rmax is the maximum spherical equivalent radius of the bubble). The calculation of the wall shear stress is found to be reliable once the flow region with constant shear rate in the boundary layer is determined. Very high wall shear stresses of 100 kPa are found during the early spreading of the jet, followed by complex flows composed of annular stagnation rings and secondary vortices. Although the simulated bubble dynamics agrees very well with experiments, we obtain only qualitative agreement with experiments due to inherent experimental challenges
Multiple needle‐pass percutaneous testicular sperm aspiration as first‐line treatment in azoospermic men
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144689/1/andr12143_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144689/2/andr12143.pd
A NOVEL APPROACH TO DRUM VENTING AND DRUM MONITORING
ABSTRACT This paper describes the details and specifications associated with drum venting and drum monitoring technologies, and discusses the maturity of in-place systems and current applications. Each year, unventilated drums pressurize and develop bulges and/or breaches that can result in potentially hazardous explosions, posing undesirable hazards to workers and the environment. Drum venting is accomplished by the safe and simple installation of ventilated lids at the time of packaging, or by the inherently risky in-situ ventilation (depressurization) of "bulged" drums
Air entrainment through free-surface cusps
In many industrial processes, such as pouring a liquid or coating a rotating
cylinder, air bubbles are entrapped inside the liquid. We propose a novel
mechanism for this phenomenon, based on the instability of cusp singularities
that generically form on free surfaces. The air being drawn into the narrow
space inside the cusp destroys its stationary shape when the walls of the cusp
come too close. Instead, a sheet emanates from the cusp's tip, through which
air is entrained. Our analytical theory of this instability is confirmed by
experimental observation and quantitative comparison with numerical simulations
of the flow equations
WW Cross-sections and Distributions
We present the results obtained by the "WW Cross-sections and Distributions"
working group during the CERN Workshop "Physics at LEP2" (1994/1995)Comment: 61 pages, tar'ed gzip'ed uuencoded files, LaTeX, 4 Postscript
figures. To appear in "Physics at LEP2", G.Altarelli and F.Zwirner eds., CERN
Report 199
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