6 research outputs found
Mathematical modeling of non-steady heat exchange process in cryogenic coil-wound heat exchangers
The paper discusses a dynamic model of coil-wound heat exchanger and its implementation in the MathWorks SimulinkTM computer simulation system. As a simulation object was chosen a coil-wound heat exchanger with wire-finned tubes of a commercial low-capacity air separation unit. The methods for obtaining experimental data has been described, the non-steady heat exchange process has been simulated, and the obtained results have been analyzed
Mathematical modeling of non-steady heat exchange process in cryogenic coil-wound heat exchangers
The paper discusses a dynamic model of coil-wound heat exchanger and its implementation in the MathWorks SimulinkTM computer simulation system. As a simulation object was chosen a coil-wound heat exchanger with wire-finned tubes of a commercial low-capacity air separation unit. The methods for obtaining experimental data has been described, the non-steady heat exchange process has been simulated, and the obtained results have been analyzed
Stretchable transparent light-emitting diodes based on ingan/gan quantum well microwires and carbon nanotube films
Funding Information: The authors J.E., C.D. and A.K. would like to thank Jean Dussaud for his work on the MOVPE setup. V.N. would like to thank Maria Baeva for her assistance with the stretchable LED transparency measurements.J.E., C.D. and A.K. thank French National Labex GaNeX (ANR-11-LABX-0014) for MW synthesis and CL measurements. V.N. thanks the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (RFBR project no. 19-32-60040) for PDMS/MW membrane fabrication and optical measurements. I.S.M., V.N., F.M.K. thank the support from the Russian Science Foundation (grant 20-19-00256) for PDMS synthesis and electrical measurements. D.K. and A.G.N. thank Russian Foundation of Basic Research project no. 20-03-00804 for the synthesis of carbon nanotubes. F.E.K. thanks the support from the Russian Science Foundation (grant 19-79-00313) for the LED array encapsulation and membrane transfer. I.S.M., F.M.K., V.N., V.A.M., S.M., A.A.V., A.V.U., and D.A.M. thank the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (FSRM-2020-0005) for the general support. N.A. and M.T. acknowledge the financial support from the ITN Marie Curie project INDEED (grant no. 722176), by the Indo-French Centre for the Promotion of Advanced Research (IFCPAR/CEFIPRA project no. 6008-1) for MW/PDMS membrane processing and characterization. Funding Information: Funding: J.E., C.D. and A.K. thank French National Labex GaNeX (ANR-11-LABX-0014) for MW synthesis and CL measurements. V.N. thanks the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (RFBR project no. 19-32-60040) for PDMS/MW membrane fabrication and optical measurements. I.S.M., V.N., F.M.K. thank the support from the Russian Science Foundation (grant 20-19-00256) for PDMS synthesis and electrical measurements. D.K. and A.G.N. thank Russian Foundation of Basic Research project no. 20-03-00804 for the synthesis of carbon nanotubes. F.E.K. thanks the support from the Russian Science Foundation (grant 19-79-00313) for the LED array encapsulation and membrane transfer. I.S.M., F.M.K., V.N., V.A.M., S.M., A.A.V., A.V.U., and D.A.M. thank the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (FSRM-2020-0005) for the general support. N.A. and M.T. acknowledge the financial support from the ITN Marie Curie project INDEED (grant no. 722176), by the Indo-French Centre for the Promotion of Advanced Research (IFCPAR/CEFIPRA project no. 6008-1) for MW/PDMS membrane processing and characterization. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.We propose and demonstrate both flexible and stretchable blue light-emitting diodes based on core/shell InGaN/GaN quantum well microwires embedded in polydimethylsiloxane membranes with strain-insensitive transparent electrodes involving single-walled carbon nanotubes. InGaN/GaN core-shell microwires were grown by metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy, encapsulated into a polydimethylsiloxane film, and then released from the growth substrate. The fabricated free-standing membrane of light-emitting diodes with contacts of single-walled carbon nanotube films can stand up to 20% stretching while maintaining efficient operation. Membrane-based LEDs show less than 15% degradation of electroluminescence intensity after 20 cycles of stretching thus opening an avenue for highly deformable inorganic devices.Peer reviewe