301 research outputs found
Interaction of an Eulerian flue gas plume with wind turbines
The reduced availability of sites with the requisite wind resource, planning permission and public acceptance for the placement of wind turbines poses a significant challenge to future expansion of the wind energy industry. Developers increasingly wish to site large turbines in close proximity to industrial plants, but there is uncertainty amongst environmental protection agencies on how best to measure and regulate the impact that wind turbines may have on the dispersion of the gases that are often emitted into the atmosphere from such plants. Several simplified wind turbine-flue stack configurations have been simulated using the Vorticity Transport Model. This model provides a high-fidelity representation of the vortical flow structure within both the wind turbine wake and the plume, and is able to capture the re-direction and dispersion of the plume that occurs due to interaction with the wind turbine. The impingement of the plume on the wind turbine is shown to disrupt the wake structure downwind of the wind turbine, and may induce additional unsteady loading on the turbine rotor. The velocity deficit downwind of the wind turbine influences the rate at which the plume propagates downwind, and results in an increase in the concentration of plume material (which may include pollutant gas and particulates) around the wind turbine. This localized increase in plume concentration is shown to be sensitive to the thrust coefficient at which the wind turbine is operated. The results presented in this paper show that environmental protection agencies are justified in their concerns regarding the placement of wind turbines near to industrial plants, and suggests strongly that the interaction between wind turbines and gas plumes should be investigated further
the WAF method for non-homogeneous SWE with pollutant
This paper deals with the extension of the WAF method to discretize Shallow Water Equations with pollutants. We consider two different versions of the WAF method, by approximating the intermediate waves using the flux of HLL or the direct approach of HLLC solver. It is seen that both versions can be written under the same form with different definitions for the approximation of the velocity waves. We also propose an extension of the method to non-homogeneous systems. In the case of homogeneous systems it is seen that we can rewrite the third component of the numerical flux in terms of an intermediate wave speed approximation. We conclude that – in order to have the same relation for non-homogeneous systems – the approximation of the intermediate wave speed must be modified. The proposed extension of the WAF method preserves all stationary solutions, up to second order accuracy, and water at rest in an exact way, even with arbitrary pollutant concentration. Finally, we perform several numerical tests, by comparing it with HLLC solver, reference solutions and analytical solutions
On the haplotype diversity along the genome in Spanish beef cattle populations
This study analyzed the haplotype diversity along the genome of seven Spanish Beef Cattle populations within regions of 500 kb using the information provided by the BovineHD Beadchip. The results of the analysis pointed out a strong variability of the haplotype diversity across the genome, which is greatly conserved across populations. This strong concordance between populations suggests that the reasons behind it are intrinsic to the structure of the bovine genome and caused probably by the mutation or recombination rate. Nevertheless, some of the genomic regions with very large haplotype diversity are also due of genome assembly errors
Three-points interfacial quadrature for geometrical source terms on nonuniform grids
International audienceThis paper deals with numerical (finite volume) approximations, on nonuniform meshes, for ordinary differential equations with parameter-dependent fields. Appropriate discretizations are constructed over the space of parameters, in order to guarantee the consistency in presence of variable cells' size, for which -error estimates, , are proven. Besides, a suitable notion of (weak) regularity for nonuniform meshes is introduced in the most general case, to compensate possibly reduced consistency conditions, and the optimality of the convergence rates with respect to the regularity assumptions on the problem's data is precisely discussed. This analysis attempts to provide a basic theoretical framework for the numerical simulation on unstructured grids (also generated by adaptive algorithms) of a wide class of mathematical models for real systems (geophysical flows, biological and chemical processes, population dynamics)
Relative entropy and the stability of shocks and contact discontinuities for systems of conservation laws with non BV perturbations
We develop a theory based on relative entropy to show the uniqueness and L^2
stability (up to a translation) of extremal entropic Rankine-Hugoniot
discontinuities for systems of conservation laws (typically 1-shocks, n-shocks,
1-contact discontinuities and n-contact discontinuities of large amplitude)
among bounded entropic weak solutions having an additional trace property. The
existence of a convex entropy is needed. No BV estimate is needed on the weak
solutions considered. The theory holds without smallness condition. The
assumptions are quite general. For instance, strict hyperbolicity is not needed
globally. For fluid mechanics, the theory handles solutions with vacuum.Comment: 29 page
Effect of Initial Disturbance on The Detonation Front Structure of a Narrow Duct
The effect of an initial disturbance on the detonation front structure in a
narrow duct is studied by three-dimensional numerical simulation. The numerical
method used includes a high resolution fifth-order weighted essentially
non-oscillatory scheme for spatial discretization, coupled with a third order
total variation diminishing Runge-Kutta time stepping method. Two types of
disturbances are used for the initial perturbation. One is a random disturbance
which is imposed on the whole area of the detonation front, and the other is a
symmetrical disturbance imposed within a band along the diagonal direction on
the front. The results show that the two types of disturbances lead to
different processes. For the random disturbance, the detonation front evolves
into a stable spinning detonation. For the symmetrical diagonal disturbance,
the detonation front displays a diagonal pattern at an early stage, but this
pattern is unstable. It breaks down after a short while and it finally evolves
into a spinning detonation. The spinning detonation structure ultimately formed
due to the two types of disturbances is the same. This means that spinning
detonation is the most stable mode for the simulated narrow duct. Therefore, in
a narrow duct, triggering a spinning detonation can be an effective way to
produce a stable detonation as well as to speed up the deflagration to
detonation transition process.Comment: 30 pages and 11 figure
A New Computational Fluid Dynamics Code I: Fyris Alpha
A new hydrodynamics code aimed at astrophysical applications has been
developed. The new code and algorithms are presented along with a comprehensive
suite of test problems in one, two, and three dimensions.
The new code is shown to be robust and accurate, equalling or improving upon
a set of comparison codes. Fyris Alpha will be made freely available to the
scientific community.Comment: 59 pages, 27 figures For associated code see
http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/fyri
Early- Onset Stroke and Vasculopathy Associated with Mutations in ADA2
Adenosine deaminase 2 (ADA2) is an enzyme involved in purine metabolism and a growth factor that influences the development of endothelial cells and leukocytes. This study shows that defects in ADA2 cause recurrent fevers, vascular pathologic features, and mild immunodeficiency. Patients with autoinflammatory disease sometimes present with clinical findings that encompass multiple organ systems.(1) Three unrelated children presented to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center with intermittent fevers, recurrent lacunar strokes, elevated levels of acute-phase reactants, livedoid rash, hepatosplenomegaly, and hypogammaglobulinemia. Collectively, these findings do not easily fit with any of the known inherited autoinflammatory diseases. Hereditary or acquired vascular disorders can have protean manifestations yet be caused by mutations in a single gene. Diseases such as the Aicardi-Goutieres syndrome,(2),(3) polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy,(4) sickle cell anemia,(5) livedoid vasculopathy,(6) and the small-vessel vasculitides(7),(8) are examples of systemic ...</p
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