3,012,010 research outputs found

    Interaction between coherent structures and surface temperature and its effect on ground heat flux in an unstably stratified boundary layer

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    Surface layer plumes, thermals, downdrafts and roll vortices are the most prominent coherent structures in an unstably stratified boundary layer. They contribute most of the temperature and vertical velocity variance, and their time scales increase with height. The effects of these multi-scale structures (surface layer plumes scale with surface layer depth, thermals scale with boundary layer height and the resulting roll vortices scale with convective time scale) on the surface temperature and ground heat flux were studied using turbulence measurements throughout the atmospheric boundary layer and the surface temperature measurements from an infrared camera. Plumes and thermals imprint on the surface temperature as warm structures and downdrafts imprint as cold structures. The air temperature trace shows a ramp-like pattern, with small ramps overlaid on a large ramp very close to the surface; on the other hand, surface temperature gradually increases and decreases. Turbulent heat flux and ground heat flux show similar patterns, with the former lagging the latter. The maximum values of turbulent heat flux and ground heat flux are 4 and 1.2 times the respective mean values during the ejection event. Surface temperature fluctuations follow a similar power-law exponent relationship with stability as suggested by surface layer similarity theory. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC

    High-temperature, reusable surface insulation system

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    System is capable of withstanding extreme temperature environments ranging from -250 to 2300 F (116 K to 1543 K). System includes impervious, high-density, high-thermal-emittance outer coating which has low coefficient of thermal expansion matching that of insulation

    High temperature surface protection

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    Alloys of the MCrAlX type are the basis for high temperature surface protection systems in gas turbines. M can be one or more of Ni, Co, or Fe and X denotes a reactive metal added to enhance oxide scale adherence. The selection and formation as well as the oxidation, hot corrosion and thermal fatigue performance of MCrAlX coatings are discussed. Coatings covered range from simple aluminides formed by pack cementation to the more advanced physical vapor deposition overlay coatings and developmental plasma spray deposited thermal barrier coatings

    Simulation of adsorbate-induced faceting on curved surfaces

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    A simple solid-on-solid model, proposed earlier to describe overlayer-induced faceting of bcc(111) surface, is applied to faceting of spherical surfaces covered by adsorbate monolayer. Monte Carlo simulation results show that morphology of faceted surface depends on annealing temperature. At initial stage surface around the [111] pole consists of 3-sided pyramids and step-like facets, then step-like facets dominate and their number decreases with temperature, finally a single big pyramid is formed. It is shown that there is reversible phase transition at which faceted surface transforms to almost spherical one. It is found that temperature of this phase transition is an increasing function of surface curvature. Simulation results show that measurements of high temperature properties performed directly and after fast cooling to low temperature lead to different results.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure

    Temperature dependent surface relaxations of Ag(111)

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    The temperature dependent surface relaxation of Ag(111) is calculated by density-functional theory. At a given temperature, the equilibrium geometry is determined by minimizing the Helmholtz free energy within the quasiharmonic approximation. To this end, phonon dispersions all over the Brillouin zone are determined from density-functional perturbation theory. We find that the top-layer relaxation of Ag(111) changes from an inward contraction (-0.8 %) to an outward expansion (+6.3%) as the temperature increases from T=0 K to 1150 K, in agreement with experimental findings. Also the calculated surface phonon dispersion curves at room temperature are in good agreement with helium scattering measurements. The mechanism driving this surface expansion is analyzed.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B (May 1998). Other related publications can be found at http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm

    Surface temperature mapping with infrared photographic pyrometry

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    Infrared photographic pyrometry method measures and maps the temperature distribution on a heated surface with accuracy and precision. This method involves the collection, detection and measurement of a narrow bandwidth of emitted infrared radiation. Standard commercially-available equipment is used, together with systematic procedures

    Fermi surface instabilities at finite Temperature

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    We present a new method to detect Fermi surface instabilities for interacting systems at finite temperature. We first apply it to a list of cases studied previously, recovering already known results in a very economic way, and obtaining most of the information on the phase diagram analytically. As an example, in the continuum limit we obtain the critical temperature as an implicit function of the magnetic field and the chemical potential Tc(μ,h)T_c(\mu,h). By applying the method to a model proposed to describe reentrant behavior in Sr3Ru2O7Sr_3Ru_2O_7, we reproduce the phase diagram obtained experimentally and show the presence of a non-Fermi Liquid region at temperatures above the nematic phase.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure

    Noncontact measurement of high-temperature surface tension and viscosity of bulk metallic glass-forming alloys using the drop oscillation technique

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    High-temperature surface tension and viscosities for five bulk metallic glass-forming alloys with widely different glass-forming abilities are measured. The measurements are carried out in a high-vacuum electrostatic levitator using the drop oscillation technique. The surface tension follows proportional mathematical addition of pure components' surface tension except when some of the constituent elements have much lower surface tension. In such cases, there is surface segregation of the low surface tension elements. These alloys are found to have orders of magnitude higher viscosity at their melting points compared to the constituent metals. Among the bulk glass-forming alloys, the better glass former has a higher melting-temperature viscosity, which demonstrates that high-temperature viscosity has a pronounced influence on glass-forming ability. Correlations between surface tension and viscosity are also investigated
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