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Numerical simulation of a film cooled turbine blade leading edge including heat transfer effectsDobrowolski, Laurene D. 2009 August 1900 (has links)
Computations and experiments were run to study heat transfer and overall effectiveness for a simulated turbine blade leading edge. Computational predictions were run for a film cooled leading edge model using a conjugate numerical method to predict the normalized “metal” temperatures for the model. This computational study was done in conjunction with a parallel effort to experimentally determine normalized metal temperatures, i.e. overall effectiveness, using a specially designed high conductivity model. Predictions of overall effectiveness were higher than experimentally measured values in the stagnation region, but lower along the downstream section of the leading edge. Reasons for the differences between computational predictions and experimental measurements were examined. Also of interest was the validity of Taw as the driving temperature for heat transfer into the blade, and this was examined via computations. Overall, this assumption gave reasonable results except near the stagnation line. Experiments were also conducted on a leading edge with no film cooling to gain a better understanding of the additional cooling provided by film cooling. Heat flux was also measured and external and internal heat transfer coefficients were determined. The results showed roughly constant overall effectiveness on the external surface. / text
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Personal-portable Cooling Garment Based on Adsorption Vacuum Membrane Evaporative CoolingYang, Yifan 15 March 2011 (has links)
A cutting edge man-portable AVMEC cooling garment was demonstrated to be able to provide sufficient cooling for personnel working at mediate activity loads. Studies were first carried out in a well controlled vacuum desiccator at room temperature to elucidate the effects of several key parameters on the performance of an AVEC device, which was similar to AVMEC except that membrane was not involved. Under the best condition, an average cooling capacity of 179 W/M2 was achieved in a period of four hours and cooling continued at a slowly declining rate for another four hours afterward. The temperature of water was maintained at approximately 12.5 oC after the pseudo steady state was established. Then, it was shown that the AVMEC cooling pads were able to provide a cooling capacity of 277.4 W/m2 in a 37 oC ambient environment (incubator). The temperature of the cooling core surface was maintained in a range of 20 – 21.8 oC in the one-hour test period. No power supply was required except for the initialization stage, which took 5 minutes. Furthermore, human subject tests with or without wearing NWBC (Nuclear Warfare Biological and Chemical) suit demonstrated that, a AVMEC garment composed of 12 cooling pads were able to maintain the core body temperature of the subjects below 38.5 oC for up to 90 minutes while the subject was walking on a treadmill at a speed of 2 miles per hour in an environment of 40 oC and 50% RH (relative humidity). These results indicate that the AVMEC garment is a promising man-portable personal cooling technology.
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Personal-portable Cooling Garment Based on Adsorption Vacuum Membrane Evaporative CoolingYang, Yifan 15 March 2011 (has links)
A cutting edge man-portable AVMEC cooling garment was demonstrated to be able to provide sufficient cooling for personnel working at mediate activity loads. Studies were first carried out in a well controlled vacuum desiccator at room temperature to elucidate the effects of several key parameters on the performance of an AVEC device, which was similar to AVMEC except that membrane was not involved. Under the best condition, an average cooling capacity of 179 W/M2 was achieved in a period of four hours and cooling continued at a slowly declining rate for another four hours afterward. The temperature of water was maintained at approximately 12.5 oC after the pseudo steady state was established. Then, it was shown that the AVMEC cooling pads were able to provide a cooling capacity of 277.4 W/m2 in a 37 oC ambient environment (incubator). The temperature of the cooling core surface was maintained in a range of 20 – 21.8 oC in the one-hour test period. No power supply was required except for the initialization stage, which took 5 minutes. Furthermore, human subject tests with or without wearing NWBC (Nuclear Warfare Biological and Chemical) suit demonstrated that, a AVMEC garment composed of 12 cooling pads were able to maintain the core body temperature of the subjects below 38.5 oC for up to 90 minutes while the subject was walking on a treadmill at a speed of 2 miles per hour in an environment of 40 oC and 50% RH (relative humidity). These results indicate that the AVMEC garment is a promising man-portable personal cooling technology.
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Study of the Physics of Droplet Impingement CoolingSoriano, Guillermo Enrique 2011 May 1900 (has links)
Spray cooling is one of the most promising technologies in applications which
require large heat removal capacity in very small areas. Previous experimental studies
have suggested that one of the main mechanisms of heat removal in spray cooling is
forced convection with strong mixing due to droplet impingement. These mechanisms
have not been completely understood mainly due to the large number of physical variables,
and the inability to modulate and control variables such as droplet frequency
and droplet size. Our approach consists of minimizing the number of experimental
variables by controlling variables such as droplet direction, velocity and diameter.
A study of heat transfer for single and multiple droplet impingements using HFE-
7100 as the cooling fluid under constant heat flux conditions is presented. Monosized
single and multiple droplet trains were produced using a piezoelectric droplet generator
with the ability to adjust droplet frequency, diameter, velocity, and spacing
between adjacent droplets. In this study, heaters consisting of a layer of Indium Tin
Oxide (ITO) as heating element, and ZnSe substrates were used. Surface temperature
at the liquid-solid interface was measured using Infrared Thermography. Heat
transfer behavior was characterized and critical heat flux was measured. Film thickness
was measured using a non-invasive optical technique inside the crown formation produced by the impinging droplets. Hydrodynamic phenomena at the droplet impact
zone was studied using high speed imaging. Impact regimes of the impinging
droplets were identified, and their effect on heat transfer performance were discussed.
The results and effects of droplet frequency, droplet diameter, droplet velocity, and
fluid flow rate on heat flux behavior, critical heat flux, and film morphology were
elucidated.
The study showed that forced heat convection is the main heat transfer mechanism
inside the crown formation formed by droplet impingement and impact regimes
play an important role on heat transfer behavior. In addition, this study found that
spacing among adjacent droplets is the most important factor for multiple droplet
stream heat transfer behavior. The knowledge generated through the study provides
tools and know-how necessary for the design and development of enhanced spray
cooling systems.
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An Experimental Study of Jet Impingement and Spray CoolingTsai, Huand-Hsiu 20 July 2006 (has links)
An experimental investigation was carried out to examine the jet impingement and spray cooling. There are three parts in this study. The first part was investigated the effects of jet impinging positions on heat transfer from rib-roughened (square and semi-circular) channels with rotational speeds of up to 600 rpm. Results were presented for rotating number (Ro), jet impinging position, surface roughness and jet Reynolds number effects on local Nusselt numbers. The second part was studied instantaneous velocity fields for a single slot liquid microjet using MPIV. The streamwise mean velocity fields and flow evolutions with six nozzle-to-target spacing ratios of 0.86, 1, 1.2, 1.5, 2 and 3 and for eight jet Reynolds numbers Re of 50, 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350 and 400 were measured and calculated. The third part was investigated the flow field and heat transfer mechanism for water spray and cryogen (R-134a) spray cooling. An optical image system was used to quantify the droplet size and distribution and Laser Doppler Velocimetry (LDV) measurements to obtain the local velocity distributions. The effects of mass flow rate and average droplet velocity, and spray exit-to-target distance on the surface heat flux including the corresponding critical heat flux (CHF) were explored for R-134a which may enhance the current cryogen spray cooling (CSC) technique that assists laser therapy of dermatoses.
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Computer Simulation and Full-scale Experiment of Optiomal Ventilation Strategies on Building Energy Conservation Designs in Kaohsiung AreaWu, Yu-Hsun 09 July 2009 (has links)
In recent years, HVAC systems of commercial buildings imposed heavy load on power demand, especially during summertime on-peak periods. The HVAC power consumption of commercial buildings usually accounts for 40% of total which indicated huge potential for energy-savings if proper operation strategies can be implemented.
In this research, three different operational strategies were studied in an attempt to conserve energy, namely: the Night Purge, Free Cooling,and Pre-cooling. They were simulated , under the local weather conditions, and then validated with full-scale experiments.The experimental results indicated that significant load-shifting effect can be experienced, which also warranted good engineering
application potentials when coupled with other HVAC energy-savings operation strategies.
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Theory of Semiconductor Laser CoolingRupper, Greg January 2010 (has links)
Recently laser cooling of semiconductors has received renewed attention, with the hope that a semiconductor cooler might be able to achieve cryogenic temperatures. In order to study semiconductor laser cooling at cryogenic temperatures, it is crucial that the theory include both the effects of excitons and the electron-hole plasma. In this dissertation, I present a theoreticalanalysis of laser cooling of bulk GaAs based on a microscopic many-particle theory of absorptionand luminescence of a partially ionized electron-hole plasma.This theory has been analyzed from a temperature 10K to 500K. It is shown that at high temperatures (above 300K), cooling can be modeled using older models with a few parameter changes. Below 200K, band filling effects dominate over Auger recombination. Below 30K excitonic effects are essential for laser cooling. In all cases, excitonic effects make cooling easier then predicted by a free carrier model.The initial cooling model is based on the assumption of a homogeneous undoped semiconductor. This model has been systematically modified to include effects that are present in real laser cooling experiments. The following modifications have been performed. 1) Propagation and polariton effects have been included. 2) The effect of p-doping has been included. (n-doping can be modeled in a similar fashion.) 3) In experiments, a passivation layer is required to minimize non-radiative recombination. The passivation results in a npn heterostructure. The effect of the npn heterostructure on cooling has been analyzed. 4) The effect of a Gaussian pump beam was analyzed and 5) Some of the parameters in the cooling model have a large uncertainty. The effect of modifying these parameters has been analyzed.Most of the extensions to the original theory have only had a modest effect on the overall results. However we find that the current passivation technique may not be sufficient to allow cooling. The passivation technique currently used appears to be very good at low densities, but loses some of it's effectiveness at the moderately high densities required for laser cooling. We suggest one possible solution that might enable laser cooling. If the sample can be properly passivated, then we expect laser cooling to be possible.
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Personal-portable Cooling Garment Based on Adsorption Vacuum Membrane Evaporative CoolingYang, Yifan 15 March 2011 (has links)
A cutting edge man-portable AVMEC cooling garment was demonstrated to be able to provide sufficient cooling for personnel working at mediate activity loads. Studies were first carried out in a well controlled vacuum desiccator at room temperature to elucidate the effects of several key parameters on the performance of an AVEC device, which was similar to AVMEC except that membrane was not involved. Under the best condition, an average cooling capacity of 179 W/M2 was achieved in a period of four hours and cooling continued at a slowly declining rate for another four hours afterward. The temperature of water was maintained at approximately 12.5 oC after the pseudo steady state was established. Then, it was shown that the AVMEC cooling pads were able to provide a cooling capacity of 277.4 W/m2 in a 37 oC ambient environment (incubator). The temperature of the cooling core surface was maintained in a range of 20 – 21.8 oC in the one-hour test period. No power supply was required except for the initialization stage, which took 5 minutes. Furthermore, human subject tests with or without wearing NWBC (Nuclear Warfare Biological and Chemical) suit demonstrated that, a AVMEC garment composed of 12 cooling pads were able to maintain the core body temperature of the subjects below 38.5 oC for up to 90 minutes while the subject was walking on a treadmill at a speed of 2 miles per hour in an environment of 40 oC and 50% RH (relative humidity). These results indicate that the AVMEC garment is a promising man-portable personal cooling technology.
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Laser cooling and trapping of atomsTownsend, Christopher G. January 1995 (has links)
A detailed experimental and theoretical investigation of a magneto-optical trap for caesium atoms is presented. Particular emphasis has been placed on achieving high spatial number densities and low temperatures. Optimizing both of these together enables efficient evaporative cooling from a conservative trap, a procedure which has recently led to the first observations of Bose-Einstein condensation in a dilute atomic vapour. The behaviour of a magneto-optical trap is nominally determined by four independent parameters: the detuning and intensity of the light field, the magnetic field gradient and the number of trapped atoms. A model is presented which incorporates previous treatments into a single description of the trap that encompasses a wide range of its behaviour. This model was tested quantitatively by measuring the temperature of the cloud and its spatial distribution as a function of the four parameters. The maximum density was found to be limited both by the reabsorption of photons scattered within the cloud and by a reduction of the confining force at small light shifts. The nonlinear variation with position of the restoring force was found to be significant in limiting the number of atoms confined to a high density. A maximum density in phase space (defined as the number of atoms in a box with sides of dimension one thermal de Broglie wavelength) of (1.5 ± 0.5) x 10<sup>-5</sup> was observed, with a spatial density of 1.5 x 10<sup>11</sup> atoms per cm<sup>3</sup>. Cold collision losses from a caesium magneto-optical trap have been studied with the purpose of assessing their influence on spatial densities. In contrast to previous measurements of similar quantities, these measurements did not require the use of an ultra-low (< 10<sup>-10</sup> Torr) background vapour pressure. The dependence of the cold collision loss coefficient β on the trapping intensity was measured to permit identification of the different cold collision processes. The largest loss rates observed were those due to hyperfine structure-changing collisions, with a coefficient β = (2±1) x 10<sup>-10</sup>cm<sup>3</sup>s<sup>-1</sup>. A study is presented of a modified magneto-optical trap in which a fraction of the population is shelved into a hyperfine level that does not interact with the trapping light. In this so-called "dark" magneto-optical trap, improved densities of nearly 10<sup>12</sup>cm<sup>-3</sup> have been previously reported for sodium. The application of the technique to caesium is not straightforward due to the larger excited state hyperfine splittings. A simple theory for caesium is presented and its main predictions verified by measurements of density, number and temperature. A density of nearly 10<sup>12</sup>cm,<sup>-3</sup> was indeed obtained but at a temperature substantially higher than in the conventional magneto-optical trap.
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Design, Analysis, and Development of a Tripod Film Cooling Hole Design for Reduced Coolant UsageLeblanc, Christopher N. 17 December 2012 (has links)
This research has a small portion focused on interior serpentine channels, with the primary focus on improving the effectiveness of the film cooling technique through the use of a new approach to film cooling. This new approach uses a set of three holes sharing the same inlet and diverging from the central hole to form a three-legged, or tripod, design. The tripod design is examined in depth, in terms of geometric variations, through the use of flat plate and cascade rigs, with both transient and steady-state experiments. The flat plate tests provide a simplified setting in which to test the design in comparison to other geometries, and establish a baseline performance in a simple flow field that does not have the complications of surface curvature or mainstream pressure gradients. Cascade tests allow for testing of the design in a more realistic setting with curved surfaces and mainstream pressure gradients, providing important information about the performance of the design on suction and pressure surfaces of airfoils. Additionally, the cascade tests allow for an investigation into the aerodynamic penalties associated with the injection hole designs at various flow rates. Through this procedure the current state of film cooling technology may be improved, with more effective surface coverage achieved with reduced coolant usage, and with reduced performance penalties for the engine as a whole. This research has developed a new film hole design that is manufacturable and durable, and provides a detailed analysis of its performance under a variety of flow conditions. This cooling hole design provides 40% higher cooling effectiveness while using 50% less coolant mass flow. The interior serpentine channel research provides comparisons between correlations and experiments for internal passages with realistic cross sections. / Ph. D.
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