576 research outputs found

    The role of thermophoretic effect in the formation of soot from liquid fuels

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    In order to rationalize soot formation in two-phase combustion, the related dynamics can be conveniently studied in simpler systems. In the latest twenty years, experimental activity in drop towers and in the outer space have allowed to investigate the combustion of isolated droplets in microgravity conditions, i.e. spherically symmetric systems where buoyancy effects and slip velocity are absent, yet still containing the major phenomena affecting real combustion (unsteady evolution, convection, gas and soot radiation, heterogeneous properties and so on). In such conditions, it had been speculated [1] that a key role in soot formation is played by thermophoretic effect, because of which solid particles are transported towards the droplet surface, thus increasing their residence times in the fuel-rich area, where soot growth is kinetically favoured. The spherical symmetry also allows to numerically study these systems with a relatively low computational weight. The importance of thermophoresis in the dynamics of soot formation can thus be investigated in a variety of operating conditions (droplet size, pressure, composition, etc.), which is the subject of this work. Starting from a description of the constitutive parts of the isolated-droplet model, the transient dynamics of soot formation in n-heptane droplets is analysed. The impact of the submodel describing thermophoresis is considered in detail, and indications about its possible refinements are provided

    H2 from biofuels and carriers: A concerted homo-heterogeneous kinetic model of ethanol partial oxidation and steam reforming on Rh/Al2O3

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    Investigating bioethanol as a renewable energy source is crucial in the context of H2-based economy. Ethanol partial oxidation and steam reforming on Rh/Al2O3 represent promising processes that have already proved to be highly tangled reacting systems. In this work, a significant step forward has been done towards the development of an engineering tool that can capture all the relevant features of the process; a combined homo-heterogeneous kinetic scheme was developed and validated against experimental data, informative of the catalytic and thermal activation of the C2-alcohol. In particular, a 36-species reduced homogeneous scheme was developed, able to cap -ture observed trends with a limited computational load. On the other side, a macro-kinetic heterogeneous scheme with six molecular reactions (ethanol oxidative dehydrogenation, total oxidation, decomposition, dehydrogenation, steam reforming and acetaldehyde post -reforming) was tuned to accurately describe ethanol/O2 and ethanol/H2O reacting systems.& COPY; 2023 Hydrogen Energy Publications LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Road Tunnels Operation: Effectiveness of Emergency Teams as a Risk Mitigation Measure

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    Managing a major event in a road tunnel requires more resources than an open-air event. In the case of fire, the confined environment of road tunnels can represent a critical situation for both users and rescuers. The safety level of a tunnel can be estimated by using dedicated risk models that consider, on the one hand, the traffic (type, quantity and distribution) of a tunnel and, on the other hand, the structural and plant safety measures. According to the European Directive, road tunnel managers can adopt additional safety measures aimed at increasing the level of safety for users exposed to the consequences of an accidental event. One of these measures is the rapid intervention of emergency teams located in the proximity of the tunnel. These teams use pick-up and scooter vehicles properly equipped to cope with a fire event and have detailed knowledge of the specific tunnel system. A further advantage of the emergency teams is the possibility of supporting the evacuation of tunnel users by providing indications on emergency exits, bypasses and safe places considering the evolution of the specific event. In this perspective, the present research contributes to the evaluation of the emergency teams’ effectiveness. Thus, the emergency team was included as a safety measure within a risk analysis model for road tunnels developed by the authors in previous works. After an analysis of the technical and scientific literature, we focused on 15 interventions carried out on some highway tunnels in Italy between the year 2019 and the year 2021. The intervention times of the teams were analyzed using data provided by Strada dei Parchi S.p.A., a company that manages 14 highway tunnels in Italy. These 14 tunnels range in length from 589 m to 10,121 m and are subject to the European Directive. The observed intervention times of the emergency teams range between 2 min and 10 min with an average value of 5.9 min. Such a short intervention time is possible because emergency teams are in the proximity of the different tunnels. Because of the short intervention time and the training of the personnel, all the fires were properly managed by the teams. Furthermore, considering the results of the scientific literature and the data presented in this work, it was possible to estimate and validate an effectiveness value (higher than 90%) of the emergency teams to be used within the risk analysis model developed by the authors and which can also be used in other risk analysis models

    Quality of life of therapies for hormone receptor positive advanced/metastatic breast cancer: Regulatory aspects and clinical impact in Europe

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    In recent years, the number of trials incorporating health-related quality of life (HRQoL) data has increased. The impact of HRQoL on regulatory decision making in the European context and on clinical practice is not well established. We conducted an analysis of the role of QoL data extracted from the clinical trials of the drugs approved for hormone receptor positive/HER2-negative advanced/metastatic breast cancer (mBC). The results from the HRQoL were collected and a meta-analysis was performed to evaluate the impact of experimental drugs compared to standard treatments. The results showed a non-detrimental effect in HRQoL from the new treatments. As regards the approval process, from an examination of the European Medicine Agency (EMA) documents, HRQoL was reported nonextensively and contained and discussed in the European assessment reports (EPARs) for eleven trials in the approval process and cited in three cases in the EPARs and summary of medicinal product characteristics (SmPC). An effort should be made by all the stakeholders to increase the visibility of the HRQoL results in order to allow increased consideration in the approval process to make QoL data more easily and visibly available for the clinician and the patients. The evaluation should be reflected in the SmPC in order to increase the amount of information provided to the physician

    A CFD model for biomass flame-combustion analysis

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    The present work addresses the study of the combustion of individual biomass particle surrounded by a gas stream of N2/O2 under the operating conditions encountered in a drop tube reactor. The aim of this analysis is to give a better insight into the chemical and physical processes that occur both at particle and reactor scale where the volatiles, generated by the biomass pyrolysis, burn in a fuel particle enveloped flame. A comprehensive CFD model was developed within the open-source OpenFOAM® framework in order to properly handle the computational mesh and the discretization of the characteristic governing equations. At the reactor scale, the reactive flow was described by the equations for continuous, multicomponent, compressible and thermally-perfect mixtures of gases. At the particle scale, instead, the solid particle was considered as a porous media with isotropic and uniform morphological properties

    Towards a better understanding of the combustion of oxygenated aromatic hydrocarbons. Comparing benzene, toluene, phenol and anisole with ignition delay times in a rapid compression machine

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    Ignition delay times (IDTs) of the oxygenated aromatic hydrocarbons (OAHCs) anisole (C6H5OCH3) and phenol (C6H5OH) and the analogues non-oxygenated aromatic hydrocarbons (AHCs) toluene (C6H5CH3) and benzene (C6H6) have been measured in the PCFC rapid compression machine (RCM) at stoichiometric, fuel-in-air conditions. With the two targeted compression pressures () of 1 and 2 MPa a temperature range of 870 to 1100 K was covered. The IDTs of all four molecules revealed an Arrhenius behavior. The different reactivity can be ranked as the following, starting with the lowest reactivity: benzene < toluene < phenol < anisole. Literature available models containing anisole and phenol have been used to simulate the IDTs of this study highlighting discrepancies in both, model to experiment and model to model accordance. Finally, the CRECK mechanism was used to conduct rate-of-production (ROP) and sensitivity analysis to gain insight into the combustion of OAHCs and highlight interconnections and shortcomings of OAHCs

    DropletSMOKE++: A comprehensive multiphase CFD framework for the evaporation of multidimensional fuel droplets

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    This paper aims at presenting the DropletSMOKE++ solver, a comprehensive multidimensional computational framework for the evaporation of fuel droplets, under the influence of a gravity field and an external fluid flow. The Volume Of Fluid (VOF) methodology is adopted to dynamically track the interface, coupled with the solution of energy and species equations. The evaporation rate is directly evaluated based on the vapor concentration gradient at the phase boundary, with no need of semi-empirical evaporation sub-models. The strong surface tension forces often prevent to model small droplets evaporation, because of the presence of parasitic currents. In this work we by-pass the problem, eliminating surface tension and introducing a centripetal force toward the center of the droplet. This expedient represents a major novelty of this work, which allows to numerically hang a droplet on a fiber in normal gravity conditions without modeling surface tension. Parasitic currents are completely suppressed, allowing to accurately model the evaporation process whatever the droplet size. DropletSMOKE++ shows an excellent agreement with the experimental data in a wide range of operating conditions, for various fuels and initial droplet diameters, both in natural and forced convection. The comparison with the same cases modeled in microgravity conditions highlights the impact of an external fluid flow on the evaporation mechanism, especially at high pressures. Non-ideal thermodynamics for phase-equilibrium is included to correctly capture evaporation rates at high pressures, otherwise not well predicted by an ideal gas assumption. Finally, the presence of flow circulation in the liquid phase is discussed, as well as its influence on the internal temperature field. DropletSMOKE++ will be released as an open-source code, open to contributions from the scientific community

    TRAM: a New Quantitative Methodology for Tunnel Risk Analysis

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    The paper illustrates and describes the structure of a new quantitative model of risk analysis for road tunnels named TRAM (Tunnel Risk Analysis Model). The result of the model, in accordance with the European Directive and the Italian Legislative Decree, returns the F-N curves of societal risk, in other words functions that relate the frequency of occurrence of an accidental scenario (F) with the expected consequences in terms of potential victims (N). Starting from two types of initial events, a fire and a Dangerous Goods (DG) release, a total of 18 accidental scenarios was defined. The frequencies of occurrence of each accidental scenario is obtained using the Event Tree Analysis (ETA) technique. For each scenario, the number of fatalities, expressed in terms of deaths, is obtained by simulating the formation dynamics of the queue of vehicles, using a model able to calculate the queue length, depending on traffic, the vehicle type, as well as the closure time of the tunnel. Then, a distribution model of the potentially exposed users has been defined and coupled with an egress model. The users’ tenability is estimated on the basis of the egress model and the evolution of each accidental scenario, which is evaluated using a zone model. The proposed model can simulate each of the 18 accidental scenarios in several different positions along the tunnel, considering the impact that different tunnel infrastructure measures, equipment and management procedures can have on the users egress and on the propagation of the effects of the accidental scenarios. The model is able to consider the interdependence between these measures and their reliability in terms of their availability in an emergency situation. Finally, to validate the model, comparisons are made with the QRAM software developed by PIARC for some representative case studies. Through this model, it is possible to perform the risk analysis of a tunnel in an actual configuration and compare the expected value of damage with the corresponding one of the tunnel in a virtual configuration, as prescribed by the Italian decree compliant with the European Directive 2004/54/EC

    Fully-resolved simulations of coal particle combustion using a detailed multi-step approach for heterogeneous kinetics

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    Fully-resolved simulations of the heating, ignition, volatile flame combustion and char conversion of single coal particles in convective gas environments are conducted and compared to experimental data (Molina and Shaddix, 2007). This work extends a previous computational study (Tufano et al., 2016) by adding a significant level of model fidelity and generality, in particular with regard to the particle interior description and hetero- geneous kinetics. The model considers the elemental analysis of the given coal and interpolates its properties by linear superposition of a set of reference coals. The improved model description alleviates previously made assumptions of single-step pyrolysis, fixed volatile composition and simplified particle interior properties, and it allows for the consideration of char conversion. The results show that the burning behavior is affected by the oxygen concentration, i.e. for enhanced oxygen levels ignition occurs in a single step, whereas decreasing the oxygen content leads to a two-stage ignition process. Char conversion becomes dominant once the volatiles have been depleted, but also causes noticeable deviations of temperature, released mass, and overall particle con- version during devolatilization already, indicating an overlap of the two stages of coal conversion which are usually considered to be consecutive. The complex pyrolysis model leads to non-monotonous profiles of the combustion quantities which introduce a minor dependency of the ignition delay time τignτ_{ign} on its definition. Regardless of the chosen extraction method, the simulations capture the measured values of τignτ_{ign} very well
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