549,038 research outputs found
Simulation of inviscid compressible multi-phase flow with condensation
Condensation of vapours in rapid expansions of compressible gases is investigated. In the case of high temperature gradients the condensation will start at conditions well away from thermodynamic equilibrium of the fluid. In those cases homogeneous condensation is dominant over heterogeneous condensation. The present work is concerned with development of a simulation tool for computation of high speed compressible flows with homogeneous condensation. The resulting flow solver should preferably be accurate and robust to be used for simulation of industrial flows in general geometries
Modeling of convection phenomena in Bridgman-Stockbarger crystal growth
Thermal convection phenomena in a vertically oriented Bridgman-Stockbarger apparatus were modeled by computer simulations for different gravity conditions, ranging from earth conditions to extremely low gravity, approximate space conditions. The modeling results were obtained by the application of a state-of-the art, transient, multi-dimensional, completely densimetrically coupled, discrete-element computational model which was specifically developed for the simulation of flow, temperature, and species concentration conditions in two-phase (solid-liquid) systems. The computational model was applied to the simulation of the flow and the thermal conditions associated with the convection phenomena in a modified Germanium-Silicon charge enclosed in a stationary fused-silica ampoule. The results clearly indicated that the gravitational field strength influences the characteristics of the coherent vortical flow patterns, interface shape and position, maximum melt velocity, and interfacial normal temperature gradient
Cooperation of Sperm in Two Dimensions: Synchronization, Attraction and Aggregation through Hydrodynamic Interactions
Sperm swimming at low Reynolds number have strong hydrodynamic interactions
when their concentration is high in vivo or near substrates in vitro. The
beating tails not only propel the sperm through a fluid, but also create flow
fields through which sperm interact with each other. We study the hydrodynamic
interaction and cooperation of sperm embedded in a two-dimensional fluid by
using a particle-based mesoscopic simulation method, multi-particle collision
dynamics (MPC). We analyze the sperm behavior by investigating the relationship
between the beating-phase difference and the relative sperm position, as well
as the energy consumption. Two effects of hydrodynamic interaction are found,
synchronization and attraction. With these hydrodynamic effects, a multi-sperm
system shows swarm behavior with a power-law dependence of the average cluster
size on the width of the distribution of beating frequencies
Swarm Intelligence Based Multi-phase OPF For Peak Power Loss Reduction In A Smart Grid
Recently there has been increasing interest in improving smart grids
efficiency using computational intelligence. A key challenge in future smart
grid is designing Optimal Power Flow tool to solve important planning problems
including optimal DG capacities. Although, a number of OPF tools exists for
balanced networks there is a lack of research for unbalanced multi-phase
distribution networks. In this paper, a new OPF technique has been proposed for
the DG capacity planning of a smart grid. During the formulation of the
proposed algorithm, multi-phase power distribution system is considered which
has unbalanced loadings, voltage control and reactive power compensation
devices. The proposed algorithm is built upon a co-simulation framework that
optimizes the objective by adapting a constriction factor Particle Swarm
optimization. The proposed multi-phase OPF technique is validated using IEEE
8500-node benchmark distribution system.Comment: IEEE PES GM 2014, Washington DC, US
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