1,539 research outputs found

    Transient radiative heat transfer within a suspension of coal particles undergoing steam gasification

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    Transient radiative heat transfer in chemical reacting media is examined for a non-isothermal, non-gray, absorbing, emitting, and Mie-scattering suspension of coal particles, whose radiative properties vary with time as the particles undergo shrinking by endothermic gasification. A numerical model that incorporates parallel filtered collision-based Monte Carlo ray tracing, finite volume method, and explicit Euler time integration scheme is formulated for solving the unsteady energy equation that couples the radiative heat flux with the chemical kinetics. Variation of radiative properties, attenuation characteristics, temperature profiles, and extent of the chemical reaction are reported as a function of time. It is found that radiation in the visible and near IR spectrum incident on a cloud of coal particles greater than 2.5ÎĽm is more likely to be forward scattered than absorbed, but the opposite is true as the particles shrink below 1.3ÎĽm. The medium becomes optically thinner as the particles shrink and this effect is more pronounced for smaller initial coal particles because these offer higher volume fraction to particle diameter ratio and, consequently, attain higher temperatures, reaction rates, and shrinking rate

    Dynamic treatment of vibrational energy relaxation in a heterogeneous and fluctuating environment

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    A computational approach to describe the energy relaxation of a high-frequency vibrational mode in a fluctuating heterogeneous environment is outlined. Extending previous work [H. Fujisaki, Y. Zhang, and J.E. Straub, J. Chem. Phys. {\bf 124}, 144910 (2006)], second-order time-dependent perturbation theory is employed which includes the fluctuations of the parameters in the Hamiltonian within the vibrational adiabatic approximation. This means that the time-dependent vibrational frequencies along an MD trajectory are obtained via a partial geometry optimization of the solute with fixed solvent and a subsequent normal mode calculation. Adopting the amide I mode of N-methylacetamide in heavy water as a test problem, it is shown that the inclusion of dynamic fluctuations may significantly change the vibrational energy relaxation. In particular, it is found that relaxation occurs in two phases, because for short times (≲\lesssim 200 fs) the spectral density appears continuous due to the frequency-time uncertainty relation, while at longer times the discrete nature of the bath becomes apparent. Considering the excellent agreement between theory and experiment, it is speculated if this behavior can explain the experimentally obtained biphasic relaxation the amide I mode of N-methylacetamide.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures, submitted to J. Chem. Phy

    A quenching apparatus for the gaseous products of the solar thermal dissociation of ZnO

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    Rapid cooling for avoiding the recombination of Zn vapor and O2 derived from the solar thermal dissociation of ZnO is investigated using a thermogravimeter coupled to a quenching apparatus. The ZnO sample, which is placed in a cavity receiver and directly exposed to concentrated solar irradiation, underwent dissociation in the temperature range 1,820-2,050K at a rate monitored by on-line thermogravimetry. The product gases were quenched by water-cooled surfaces and by injection of cold Ar at cooling rates from 20,000 to 120,000K/s, suppressing the formation of ZnO in the gas phase and at the walls. Zinc content of the collected particles downstream varied in the range 40-94% for Ar/Zn(g) dilutions of 170 to 1,50

    Solar Aluminum Production by Vacuum Carbothermal Reduction of Alumina—Thermodynamic and Experimental Analyses

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    Thermochemical equilibrium calculations indicate the possibility of significantly lowering the onset temperature of aluminum vapor formation via carbothermal reduction of Al2O3 by decreasing the total pressure, enabling its vacuum distillation while bypassing the formation of undesired by-products Al2O, Al4C3, and Al-oxycarbides. Furthermore, the use of concentrated solar energy as the source of high-temperature process heat offers considerable energy savings and reduced concomitant CO2 emissions. When the reducing agent is derived from a biomass source, the solar-driven carbothermal reduction is CO2 neutral. Exploratory experimental runs using a solar reactor were carried out at temperatures in the range 1300K to 2000K (1027°C to 1727°C) and with total pressures in the range 3.5 to 12 millibar, with reactants Al2O3 and biocharcoal directly exposed to simulated high-flux solar irradiation, yielding up to 19pct Al by the condensation of product gases, accompanied by the formation of Al4C3 and Al4O4C within the crucible. Based on the measured CO generation, integrated over the duration of the experimental run, the reaction extent reached 55pct at 2000K (1727°C

    Destination entry and retrieval with the Ali-Scout navigation system

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    Full Text: http://www.its.dot.gov/welcome.htmOakland County Road Commission, Beverly Hills, Mich.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/1172/2/90435.0001.001.pd

    A co-located solar receiver and thermal storage concept using silicate glass at 1000°C and above: Experiments and modeling in the optically-thick regime

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    This work presents the exploratory experimental results of a co-located solar receiver and thermal energy storage (TES) concept based on a pool of molten glass contained in a cavity, serving as solar receiver and TES medium simultaneously. Distinctive features of the system are the direct and volumetric absorption of solar radiation by the semi-transparent glass and a stationary TES medium. Only the charge cycle was studied, without a heat-removal system. Recycled soda-lime-silica (SLS) container glass of various colors was adopted as working medium in a setup tested at the ETH's High Flux Solar Simulator (HFSS). A steady 3D heat transfer model of the experimental apparatus, which couples Monte-Carlo ray-tracing and CFD techniques, was developed and validated against the experimental results. The tests used the HFSS as the only energy source, with maximum radiative fluxes of 1.2 MWm-2 and power input of 1.5 kW directly absorbed by the glass, which reached measured temperatures of 1300 °C, while the maximum temperatures –as predicted by the model– exceeded 1500 °C. Such conditions were maintained for 5 to 10 h and no technical problems were encountered with the containment of the hot glass melt. These preliminary results demonstrate that silicate glasses are effective volumetric absorbers of solar radiation up to temperatures exceeding 1300 °C

    A Computational Account of Borderline Personality Disorder: Impaired Predictive Learning about Self and Others Through Bodily Simulation

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    Social dysfunction is a prominent and disabling aspect of borderline personality disorder. We reconsider traditional explanations for this problem, especially early disruption in the way an infant feels physical care from its mother, in terms of recent developments in computational psychiatry. In particular, social learning may depend on reinforcement learning though embodied simulations. Such modeling involves calculations based on structures outside the brain such as face and hands, calculations on one\u27s own body that are used to make inferences about others. We discuss ways to test the role of embodied simulation in BPD and potential implications for treatment

    A Survey of Ramp and Stair Use among Older Adults

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    Forty-three community-dwelling adults aged 57 to 95 participated in survey exploring characteristics of ramp use by older ambulant people. Twenty-three respondents said they ascended ramps instead of stairs most of the time, and 14 said they ascended ramps some of the time. Similar numbers were reported for descent. Overall, respondents felt less fatigued, less likely to trip, and more comfortable when using ramps rather than stairs for ascending one level. When descending one level, balance, tripping, and comfort were the strongest determinants of ramp use. Respondents indicated that descent was more problematic, particularly in regard to balance and tripping. The presence of handrails often determined the choice of route. Results from this survey provided the basis for an experiment evaluating the abilities of older people to traverse ramps of various slopes. The ADA Accessibility Guidelines implicitly assume that a ramp accommodates everyone. This study indicates that entrances should have both ramps and stairs.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline

    Anti-microbial Use in Animals: How to Assess the Trade-offs

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    Antimicrobials are widely used in preventive and curative medicine in animals. Benefits from curative use are clear – it allows sick animals to be healthy with a gain in human welfare. The case for preventive use of antimicrobials is less clear cut with debates on the value of antimicrobials as growth promoters in the intensive livestock industries. The possible benefits from the use of antimicrobials need to be balanced against their cost and the increased risk of emergence of resistance due to their use in animals. The study examines the importance of animals in society and how the role and management of animals is changing including the use of antimicrobials. It proposes an economic framework to assess the trade-offs of anti-microbial use and examines the current level of data collection and analysis of these trade-offs. An exploratory review identifies a number of weaknesses. Rarely are we consistent in the frameworks applied to the economic assessment anti-microbial use in animals, which may well be due to gaps in data or the prejudices of the analysts. There is a need for more careful data collection that would allow information on (i) which species and production systems antimicrobials are used in, (ii) what active substance of antimicrobials and the application method and (iii) what dosage rates. The species need to include companion animals as well as the farmed animals as it is still not known how important direct versus indirect spread of resistance to humans is. In addition, research is needed on pricing antimicrobials used in animals to ensure that prices reflect production and marketing costs, the fixed costs of anti-microbial development and the externalities of resistance emergence. Overall, much work is needed to provide greater guidance to policy, and such work should be informed by rigorous data collection and analysis systems

    Cloud microphysical effects of turbulent mixing and entrainment

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    Turbulent mixing and entrainment at the boundary of a cloud is studied by means of direct numerical simulations that couple the Eulerian description of the turbulent velocity and water vapor fields with a Lagrangian ensemble of cloud water droplets that can grow and shrink by condensation and evaporation, respectively. The focus is on detailed analysis of the relaxation process of the droplet ensemble during the entrainment of subsaturated air, in particular the dependence on turbulence time scales, droplet number density, initial droplet radius and particle inertia. We find that the droplet evolution during the entrainment process is captured best by a phase relaxation time that is based on the droplet number density with respect to the entire simulation domain and the initial droplet radius. Even under conditions favoring homogeneous mixing, the probability density function of supersaturation at droplet locations exhibits initially strong negative skewness, consistent with droplets near the cloud boundary being suddenly mixed into clear air, but rapidly approaches a narrower, symmetric shape. The droplet size distribution, which is initialized as perfectly monodisperse, broadens and also becomes somewhat negatively skewed. Particle inertia and gravitational settling lead to a more rapid initial evaporation, but ultimately only to slight depletion of both tails of the droplet size distribution. The Reynolds number dependence of the mixing process remained weak over the parameter range studied, most probably due to the fact that the inhomogeneous mixing regime could not be fully accessed when phase relaxation times based on global number density are considered.Comment: 17 pages, 10 Postscript figures (figures 3,4,6,7,8 and 10 are in reduced quality), to appear in Theoretical Computational Fluid Dynamic
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