572 research outputs found
A numerical investigation on the vortex formation and flow separation of the oscillatory flow in jet pumps
A two-dimensional computational fluid dynamics model is used to predict the
oscillatory flow through a tapered cylindrical tube section (jet pump) placed
in a larger outer tube. Due to the shape of the jet pump, there will exist an
asymmetry in the hydrodynamic end effects which will cause a time-averaged
pressure drop to occur that can be used to cancel Gedeon streaming in a
closed-loop thermoacoustic device. The performance of two jet pump geometries
with different taper angles is investigated. A specific time-domain impedance
boundary condition is implemented in order to simulate traveling acoustic wave
conditions. It is shown that by scaling the acoustic displacement amplitude to
the jet pump dimensions, similar minor losses are observed independent of the
jet pump geometry. Four different flow regimes are distinguished and the
observed flow phenomena are related to the jet pump performance. The simulated
jet pump performance is compared to an existing quasi-steady approximation
which is shown to only be valid for small displacement amplitudes compared to
the jet pump length.Comment: The following article has been accepted by the Journal of the
Acoustical Society of America. After it is published, it will be found at:
http://scitation.aip.org/JAS
Jet pumps for thermoacoustic applications: design guidelines based on a numerical parameter study
The oscillatory flow through tapered cylindrical tube sections (jet pumps) is
characterized by a numerical parameter study. The shape of a jet pump results
in asymmetric hydrodynamic end effects which cause a time-averaged pressure
drop to occur under oscillatory flow conditions. Hence, jet pumps are used as
streaming suppressors in closed-loop thermoacoustic devices. A two-dimensional
axisymmetric computational fluid dynamics model is used to calculate the
performance of a large number of conical jet pump geometries in terms of
time-averaged pressure drop and acoustic power dissipation. The investigated
geometrical parameters include the jet pump length, taper angle, waist diameter
and waist curvature. In correspondence with previous work, four flow regimes
are observed which characterize the jet pump performance and dimensionless
parameters are introduced to scale the performance of the various jet pump
geometries. The simulation results are compared to an existing quasi-steady
theory and it is shown that this theory is only applicable in a small operation
region. Based on the scaling parameters, an optimum operation region is defined
and design guidelines are proposed which can be directly used for future jet
pump design.Comment: The following article has been accepted by the Journal of the
Acoustical Society of America. After it is published, it will be found at
http://scitation.aip.org/JAS
The treatment of primary tumors of the femur with chemotherapy (if indicated), resection and reconstruction with an endoprosthesis
The treatment protocol of 15 patients with a primary tumor of the femur, including osteosarcoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma and chondrosar-coma is presented. All patients had been selected for resection and reconstruction with an endoprosthesis. An endoprothesis was implanted in 12 patients. \ud
The results of this type of treatment appear to be satisfactory. In eight osteosarcoma cases resection and reconstruction with an endoprosthesis combined with preoperative and postoperative chemotherapy, according to Rosen, were performed. Follow-up in all 15 patients, varying from 1.4 to 6.0 years, showed no evidence of disease in 12 patients. Three patients had died. Function of the involved leg was satisfactory in most cases. \ud
The advantage and disadvantages of the use of an endoprosthesis are discussed as well as complications in this series of patients
Allelic losses in carcinoma in situ and testicular germ cell tumours of adolescents and adults: evidence suggestive of the linear progression model
Testicular germ cell tumours (TGCTs) may arise through a process of multi-step carcinogenesis, and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at specific loci is likely to be an important early event, although this has not been studied in detail. In order to explore the pathogenetic relationships among TGCTs, we investigated the genetic changes in testicular tumours that exhibit a disease continuum through the precursor carcinoma in situ (CIS) to either seminoma (SE) and/or non-seminomatous germ cell tumour (NSGCT). Universal amplification has been performed on 87 TGCT specimens and 36 samples of CIS cells microdissected from single paraffin-embedded tumour sections from 40 patients, including multiple specimens of CIS and TGCT cells of varied histology microdissected from 24 individual patients. Seventy-seven microsatellite markers were used to assay these samples for LOH at candidate regions selected from the literature, mapping to 3q, 5q, 9p, 11p, 11q, 12q, 17p and 18q. Construction of deletion maps for each of these regions identified common sites of deletion at 3q27–q28, 5q31, 5q34–q35, 9p22–p21 and 12q22, which correlate with allelic losses we have also observed in the precursor CIS cells. Evidence for allelic loss at 3q27–q28 was observed in all of the embryonal carcinoma samples analysed. We conclude that inactivation of gene(s) within these regions are likely to be early events in the development and progression of TGCTs. These results also provide molecular evidence in support of the hypothesis that SE is an intermediate stage of development within a single neoplastic pathway of progression from CIS precursor cells to NSGCT. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig
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