6,519 research outputs found
Theory of deposition of condensible impurities on surfaces immersed in combustion gases
The components resulting from the deposition of inorganic salts (e.g., Na2S04) and oxides present in the combustion products from gas turbine engines were investigated. Emphasis was placed on the effects of multicomponent vapor transport, thermophoretic transport of vapor and small particles to actively cooled surfaces, variable fluid properties within mass transfer boundary layers, and free stream turbulence
Experimental studies of the formation/deposition of sodium sulfate in/from combustion gases
Interference in a reflected beam of monochromatic light from a linearly polarized helium-neon laser was used to determine the dew point and deposition rate of B2O3 on a heated platinum target. Preliminary results at different BCl3 seed levels, except for one flow velocity and equivalence ratio (.813) are presented and discussed. Alkali chloride reactions with atomic oxygen were also investigated. Readily detectable Na*(g) and K*(g) - atoms were observed in emission at 589 nm, 766nm, 796nm, respectively
Experimental Studies of the Formation/Deposition of Sodium Sulfate in/from Combustion Gases
Processes related to the hot corrosion of gas turbine components were examined in two separate investigations. Monochromatic laser light was used to probe condensation onset and condensate film growth (via interference of reflected light) on electrically heated ribbons immersed in seeded, flat flame combustion product gases. Boron trichloride is used as the seed gas in these preliminary experiments conducted to obtain precise measurements of the dew point/deposition rates. Because of the importance of gaseous Na(g) as a precursor to NaSO4 formation, the kinetics and mechanisms of the heterogeneous reaction H(g) + NaCl(s) yields Na(g) + HCl(g) was studied using atomic absorption spectroscopy combined with microwave discharge-vacuum flow reactor techniques at moderate temperatures. Preliminary results indicate the H-atom attack of solid NaCl vaporization is negligible; hence the corresponding gas phase (homogeneous) reaction no role in the observed Na(g) production
Turbine Airfoil Deposition Models
Gas turbine failures associated with sea-salt ingestion and sulfur-containing fuel impurities have directed attention to alkali sulfate deposition and the associated hot corrosion of gas turbine (GT) blades under some GT operating conditions. These salt deposits form thin, molten films which undermine the protective metal oxide coating normally found on GT blades. The prediction of molten salt deposition, flow and oxide dissolution, and their effects on the lifetime of turbine blades are examined. Goals include rationalizing and helping to predict corrosion patterns on operational GT rotor blades and stators, and ultimately providing some of the tools required to design laboratory simulators and future corrosion-resistant high-performance engines. Necessary background developments are reviewed first, and then recent results and tentative conclusions are presented along with a brief account of the present research plans
Theoretical studies in support of the 3M-vapor transport (PVTOS-) experiments
Results are reported for a preliminary theoretical study of the coupled mass-, momentum-, and heat-transfer conditions expected within small ampoules used to grow oriented organic solid (OS-) films, by physical vapor transport (PVT) in microgravity environments. It is show that previous studies made restrictive assumptions (e.g., smallness of delta T/T, equality of molecular diffusivities) not valid under PVTOS conditions, whereas the important phenomena of sidewall gas creep, Soret transport of the organic vapor, and large vapor phase supersaturations associated with the large prevailing temperature gradients were not previously considered. Rational estimates are made of the molecular transport properties relevant to copper-phthalocyanine monomeric vapor in a gas mixture containing H2(g) and Xe(g). Efficient numerical methods have been developed and are outlined/illustrated here to making steady axisymmetric gas flow calculations within such ampoules, allowing for realistic realistic delta T/T(sub)w-values, and even corrections to Navier-Stokes-Fourier 'closure' for the governing continuum differential equations. High priority follow-on studies are outlined based on these new results
Relative phases in Dalitz plot amplitudes for and
Relative phases of amplitudes for meson decays to a light pseudoscalar
meson and a light vector meson decaying to two pseudoscalar mesons will
lead to characteristic interferences on the three-body Dalitz plot. These
phases may be compared with predictions of a flavor-symmetric treatment which
extracts contributing amplitudes and their relative phases from a fit to decay rates. Good agreement was found previously for the cases of and . The present work is devoted
to the decays and , for which
agreement is not found. Several suggestions are offered for this discrepancy.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. D. Additonal
figure, text, and references; minor correction
Comparisons of rational engineering correlations of thermophoretically-augmented particle mass transfer with STAN5-predictions for developing boundary layers
Modification of the code STAN5 to properly include thermophoretic mass transport, and examination of selected test cases developing boundary layers which include variable properties, viscous dissipation, transition to turbulence and transpiration cooling. Under conditions representative of current and projected GT operation, local application of St(M)/St(M),o correlations evidently provides accurate and economical engineering design predictions, especially for suspended particles characterized by Schmidt numbers outside of the heavy vapor range
Engineering correlations of variable-property effects on laminar forced convection mass transfer for dilute vapor species and small particles in air
A simple engineering correlation scheme is developed to predict the variable property effects on dilute species laminar forced convection mass transfer applicable to all vapor molecules or Brownian diffusing small particle, covering the surface to mainstream temperature ratio of 0.25 T sub W/T sub e 4. The accuracy of the correlation is checked against rigorous numerical forced convection laminar boundary layer calculations of flat plate and stagnation point flows of air containing trace species of Na, NaCl, NaOH, Na2SO4, K, KCl, KOH, or K2SO4 vapor species or their clusters. For the cases reported here the correlation had an average absolute error of only 1 percent (maximum 13 percent) as compared to an average absolute error of 18 percent (maximum 54 percent) one would have made by using the constant-property results
Properties of the Charmed P-wave Mesons
Two broad charmed mesons, the D_0^* and D_1', have recently been observed. We
examine the quark model predictions for the D_0^* and D_1' properties and
discuss experimental measurements that can shed light on them. We find that
these states are well described as the broad, j=1/2 non-strange charmed P-wave
mesons. Understanding the D_0^* and D_1' states can provide important insights
into the D_{sJ}^*(2317), D_{sJ}(2460) states whose unexpected properties have
led to renewed interest in hadron spectroscopy.Comment: 7 pages. Some additional discussion and reference
Generation of flux tube waves in stellar convection zones. 1: Longitudinal tube waves
The source functions and the energy fluxes are derived for wave generation in magnetic flux tubes embedded in an otherwise magnetic- field free, turbulent, and compressible fluid. Specific results for the generation of longitudinal tube waves are presented
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