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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Experimental investigation of the Bunsen and the diffusion coefficients in hydraulic fluids

Kratschun, Filipp, Schmitz, Katharina, Murrenhoff, Hubertus 28 April 2016 (has links) (PDF)
The dynamic of cavitation in hydraulic components cannot be computed accurately yet and therefore cavitation is hard to predict. The cavitation phenomenon can be divided in three sub-phenomenona: Pseudo-cavitation, Gas-cavitation and Vapour-cavitation. Pseudo-cavitation discribes the enlargement of an air bubble due to a pressure drop. Gas-cavitation refers to bubble growth which is driven by diffusion of dissolved air from the surrounding fluid into the bubble, when the solubility of air in the fluid is lowered by a pressure drop. Vapor-cavitation is the evaporation of the liquid phase on the bubble surface. Usually all three sub-phenomenona occur simultaneously when the pressure decreases and are summarised as cavitation in general. To implement the physics of gas-cavitation in a dynamic mathematical model it is necessary to know the diffusion coefficient of air in the hydraulic liquid and the maximum amount of air which can be dissolved in the liquid. The calculation can be accomplished by using the Bunsen coefficient. In this paper both coefficients for three different hydraulic oils are calculated based on experimental results.
2

Experimental investigation of the Bunsen and the diffusion coefficients in hydraulic fluids

Kratschun, Filipp, Schmitz, Katharina, Murrenhoff, Hubertus January 2016 (has links)
The dynamic of cavitation in hydraulic components cannot be computed accurately yet and therefore cavitation is hard to predict. The cavitation phenomenon can be divided in three sub-phenomenona: Pseudo-cavitation, Gas-cavitation and Vapour-cavitation. Pseudo-cavitation discribes the enlargement of an air bubble due to a pressure drop. Gas-cavitation refers to bubble growth which is driven by diffusion of dissolved air from the surrounding fluid into the bubble, when the solubility of air in the fluid is lowered by a pressure drop. Vapor-cavitation is the evaporation of the liquid phase on the bubble surface. Usually all three sub-phenomenona occur simultaneously when the pressure decreases and are summarised as cavitation in general. To implement the physics of gas-cavitation in a dynamic mathematical model it is necessary to know the diffusion coefficient of air in the hydraulic liquid and the maximum amount of air which can be dissolved in the liquid. The calculation can be accomplished by using the Bunsen coefficient. In this paper both coefficients for three different hydraulic oils are calculated based on experimental results.

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