136 research outputs found

    Small diameter fibres as new wick material for capillary-driven heat pipes

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    Papers presented to the 11th International Conference on Heat Transfer, Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics, South Africa, 20-23 July 2015.Heat pipes with a wick material consisting of small diameter metal fibres of 12 Όm are investigated. The container material is copper and the working fluid is water. The fibre mesh heat pipe is compared with two other wick structures: a screen mesh (145 meshes per inch) and a sintered powder wick. All three heat pipes have an outer diameter of 6 mm, a length of 200 mm. The heat pipes are tested in a vertical orientation, both gravity-opposed and gravity-assisted. In the gravity-opposed orientation the heat pipes are tested for a heat input up to 50 W and an operating temperature of 70°C. In the gravity-assisted orientation the heat pipes are tested up to 160 W and 120°C. The thermal resistance and the temperature difference between evaporator and condenser are used as performance indicators. For the gravity-assisted orientation, the screen mesh wick clearly outperforms the fibre and sintered powder wick, due to its higher permeability and better ability to distribute the working fluid over the circumference of the wick. For the gravity-opposed orientation, the fibre and screen mesh heat pipe perform equally well. Both have a lower thermal resistance than the sintered powder heat pipe, as the small diameter fibres and fine mesh create more and very small capillary channels in comparison with the sintered powder wick.am201

    Two-phase flow behaviour in a smooth hairpin tube: analysis of the disturbance using capacitive measurements

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    Paper presented to the 10th International Conference on Heat Transfer, Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics, Florida, 14-16 July 2014.Two-phase refrigerant flow up-and downstream of a sharp return bend is studied. The capacitance of the flow is logged at several locations up-and downstream of the return bend. Analysis of the capacitance time traces is performed to evaluate the presence of a flow disturbance due to the bend. A vertically oriented bend is studied with an inner diameter of 8 mm and a radius of 11 mm. Smooth straight tubes with an internal diameter of 8 mm are connected to the in- and outlet of the return bend. Upward as well as downward directed flows are studied. The refrigerant R134a is used and the mass flux G and vapour quality x are varied between 200 and 400 kg/mÂČs and 0-1, respectively. A downstream disturbance up to 21.5D is observed for both up-and downward flow.cf201

    Thermal influence of non-uniform inlet flow conditions for a commercial plate fin heat exchanger

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    Paper presented to the 10th International Conference on Heat Transfer, Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics, Florida, 14-16 July 2014.In this study, a commercially available plate heat exchanger with wavy fins is experimentally characterized under uniform and three non-uniform flow conditions. The heat exchanger is 275 mm wide and 295 mm high and has a distance in-between the plates of 3 mm and the wavy fins are 11 mm high. Internally, the heat exchanger is finned with offset strip fins. Hot water at 55°C is sent through the plates and the waterside mass flow rate is kept high in order to minimize the internal thermal resistance. For the internal convection coefficient, a correlation from literature is used. The airside mass flow rate is varied by adjusting the fan speed. In case of uniform flow conditions, the frontal air velocity varies between 1.7 and 7.6 m/s. The airside velocity is measured over a nozzle and the uniformity of the wind tunnel is verified by hot wire measurements. Three non-uniformities are placed 10 cm upstream of the heat exchanger: the first one covers the right-hand side of the heat exchanger, the second one covers the top half of the heat exchanger and the last (and most severe) non-uniformity consists of a circular hole of 150 mm diameter in the middle of a plate. Only the third non-uniformity has a significant influence on the heat transfer rate: up to 25% higher for the external convective resistance in comparison with the uniform case.dc201

    Characterization of Color Production in XallaÂŽs Palace Complex, Teotihuacan

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    A multi-analytical approach was used to characterize color remains from Xalla, a Teotihuacan palace complex (project Teotihuacan, Elite and Government. Excavations in Xalla led by Linda R. Manzanilla). Color samples were obtained from polished lithic instruments and pigment ores. Those samples were analyzed combining microscopic and spectroscopic techniques. Our results coincide with previous studies in Teotihuacan, with the chromatic palette displaying a predominance of iron oxides such as hematite, yellow ochre and natural earths, as well as malachite, celadonite and glauconite. We have enlarged the corpus of raw materials with the characterization of jarosite and bone white and mica as aggregate. The identification of raw materials crossed with functional analysis of polished lithic artefacts suggests a production and application process for the pigmenting materials that were divided in four phases, from the crushing of the raw material to the application and finishing of the painted surfaces

    Retention of Memory through Metamorphosis: Can a Moth Remember What It Learned As a Caterpillar?

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    Insects that undergo complete metamorphosis experience enormous changes in both morphology and lifestyle. The current study examines whether larval experience can persist through pupation into adulthood in Lepidoptera, and assesses two possible mechanisms that could underlie such behavior: exposure of emerging adults to chemicals from the larval environment, or associative learning transferred to adulthood via maintenance of intact synaptic connections. Fifth instar Manduca sexta caterpillars received an electrical shock associatively paired with a specific odor in order to create a conditioned odor aversion, and were assayed for learning in a Y choice apparatus as larvae and again as adult moths. We show that larvae learned to avoid the training odor, and that this aversion was still present in the adults. The adult aversion did not result from carryover of chemicals from the larval environment, as neither applying odorants to naĂŻve pupae nor washing the pupae of trained caterpillars resulted in a change in behavior. In addition, we report that larvae trained at third instar still showed odor aversion after two molts, as fifth instars, but did not avoid the odor as adults, consistent with the idea that post-metamorphic recall involves regions of the brain that are not produced until later in larval development. The present study, the first to demonstrate conclusively that associative memory survives metamorphosis in Lepidoptera, provokes intriguing new questions about the organization and persistence of the central nervous system during metamorphosis. Our results have both ecological and evolutionary implications, as retention of memory through metamorphosis could influence host choice by polyphagous insects, shape habitat selection, and lead to eventual sympatric speciation

    Reorganization Energy for Internal Electron Transfer in Multicopper Oxidases.

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    We have calculated the reorganization energy for the intramolecular electron transfer between the reduced type 1 copper site and the peroxy intermediate of the trinuclear cluster in the multicopper oxidase CueO. The calculations are performed at the combined quantum mechanics and molecular mechanics (QM/MM) level, based on molecular dynamics simulations with tailored potentials for the two copper sites. We obtain a reorganization energy of 91-133 kJ/mol, depending on the theoretical treatment. The two Cu sites contribute by 12 and 22 kJ/mol to this energy, whereas the solvent contribution is 34 kJ/mol. The rest comes from the protein, involving small contributions from many residues. We have also estimated the energy difference between the two electron-transfer states and show that the reduction of the peroxy intermediate is exergonic by 43-87 kJ/mol, depending on the theoretical method. Both the solvent and the protein contribute to this energy difference, especially charged residues close to the two Cu sites. We compare these estimates with energies obtained from QM/MM optimizations and QM calculations in a vacuum and discuss differences between the results obtained at various levels of theory
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