5,016 research outputs found
Viscosity and density of methanol/water mixtures at low temperatures
Viscosity and density are measured at low temperatures for three methanol/water mixtures. Viscosity is determined by a modified falling cylinder method or a calibrated viscometer. Density is determined by the volume of each mixture contained in a calibrated glass cell placed in a constant-temperature bath
Posner molecules: From atomic structure to nuclear spins
We investigate "Posner molecules", calcium phosphate clusters with chemical
formula Ca(PO). Originally identified in hydroxyapatite, Posner
molecules have also been observed as free-floating molecules . The
formation and aggregation of Posner molecules have important implications for
bone growth, and may also play a role in other biological processes such as the
modulation of calcium and phosphate ion concentrations within the mitochondrial
matrix. In this work, we use a first-principles computational methodology to
study the structure of Posner molecules, their vibrational spectra, their
interactions with other cations, and the process of pairwise bonding.
Additionally, we show that the Posner molecule provides an ideal environment
for the six constituent nuclear spins to obtain very long spin
coherence times. , the spins could provide a platform for
liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance quantum computation. , the
spins may have medical imaging applications. The spins have also been suggested
as "neural qubits" in a proposed mechanism for quantum processing in the brain.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Airborne laser topographic mapping results from initial joint NASA/US Army Corps of Engineers experiment
Initial results from a series of joint NASA/US Army Corps of Engineers experiments are presented. The NASA Airborne Oceanographic Lidar (AOL) was exercised over various terrain conditions, collecting both profile and scan data from which river basin cross sections are extracted. Comparisons of the laser data with both photogrammetry and ground surveys are made, with 12 to 27 cm agreement observed over open ground. Foliage penetration tests, utilizing the unique time-waveform sampling capability of the AOL, indicate 50 cm agreement with photogrammetry (known to have difficulty in foliage covered terrain)
An Analytical Study for Subsonic Oblique Wing Transport Concept
The oblique wing concept has been investigated for subsonic transport application for a cruise Mach number of 0.95. Three different mission applications were considered and the concept analyzed against the selected mission requirements. Configuration studies determined the best area of applicability to be a commercial passenger transport mission. The critical parameter for the oblique wing concept was found to be aspect ratio which was limited to a value of 6.0 due to aeroelastic divergence. Comparison of the concept final configuration was made with fixed winged configurations designed to cruise at Mach 0.85 and 0.95. The crossover Mach number for the oblique wing concept was found to be Mach 0.91 for takeoff gross weight and direct operating cost. Benefits include reduced takeoff distance, installed thrust and mission block fuel and improved community noise characteristics. The variable geometry feature enables the final configuration to increase range by 10% at Mach 0.712 and to increase endurance by as much as 44%
High-fidelity simulation of an ultrasonic standing-wave thermoacoustic engine with bulk viscosity effects
We have carried out boundary-layer-resolved, unstructured fully-compressible
Navier--Stokes simulations of an ultrasonic standing-wave thermoacoustic engine
(TAE) model. The model is constructed as a quarter-wavelength engine,
approximately 4 mm by 4 mm in size and operating at 25 kHz, and comprises a
thermoacoustic stack and a coin-shaped cavity, a design inspired by Flitcroft
and Symko (2013). Thermal and viscous boundary layers (order of 10
m) are resolved. Vibrational and rotational molecular relaxation
are modeled with an effective bulk viscosity coefficient modifying the viscous
stress tensor. The effective bulk viscosity coefficient is estimated from the
difference between theoretical and semi-empirical attenuation curves.
Contributions to the effective bulk viscosity coefficient can be identified as
from vibrational and rotational molecular relaxation. The inclusion of the
coefficient captures acoustic absorption from infrasonic (10 Hz) to
ultrasonic (100 kHz) frequencies. The value of bulk viscosity depends on
pressure, temperature, and frequency, as well as the relative humidity of the
working fluid. Simulations of the TAE are carried out to the limit cycle, with
growth rates and limit-cycle amplitudes varying non-monotonically with the
magnitude of bulk viscosity, reaching a maximum for a relative humidity level
of 5%. A corresponding linear model with minor losses was developed; the linear
model overpredicts transient growth rate but gives an accurate estimate of
limit cycle behavior. An improved understanding of thermoacoustic energy
conversion in the ultrasonic regime based on a high-fidelity computational
framework will help to further improve the power density advantages of
small-scale thermoacoustic engines.Comment: 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, AIAA SciTech, 201
Routine use of a standardised assessment instrument for measuring the outcome of social care
This study had as its primary aim determining the extent to which standardised assessment can contribute to monitoring the outcomes of social care. It also addressed the comparison of resource use between individual clients, groups of clients with similar characteristics and between Social Service Departments (SSD's). An important part of the study was exploring the views of Social Workers and Care Managers on assessment in general and standardised assessment and the MDS-HC in particular. It has succeeded in achieving the majority of its goals and its findings have been incorporated into a revised MDS-HC assessment system including the development of a simplified screening assessment. It has also identified how attitudes to assessment, the manner in which assessment is done, and the organisation of assessment and on going management of services provided was significantly different between the two social service departments that took part in the study. Some of the issues identified are important for the development of policy on assessment in community care. It is likely that the findings are widely generalisable
Propfan Test Assessment (PTA): Flight test report
The Propfan Test Assessment (PTA) aircraft was flown to obtain glade stress and noise data for a 2.74m (9 ft.) diameter single rotation propfan. Tests were performed at Mach numbers to 0.85 and altitudes to 12,192m (40,000 ft.). The propfan was well-behaved structurally over the entire flight envelope, demonstrating that the blade design technology was completely adequate. Noise data were characterized by strong signals at blade passage frequency and up to 10 harmonics. Cabin noise was not so high as to preclude attainment of comfortable levels with suitable wall treatment. Community noise was not excessive
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
- …
