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A Control-Oriented 0D Model of a Turbocharger Gas Stand Including Heat TransferBengtsson, Mikael January 2015 (has links)
A turbocharger’s performance is measured in a gas stand in order to provide information of the components characteristics. The measurement procedure is a very time consuming process and it is thus desired to make it more time-efficient. To allow for development of an enhanced control strategy used during the measurements, a 0D model of a gas stand is developed. The physical gas stand components are modeled and validated against measurements, all showing a reasonable result. Turbocharger heat transfers are investigated and modeled using a lumped capacitance approach. The heat transfer models shows approximative results when comparing with measurements which is explained by the lack of temperature measurement made on the bearing housing. When the complete gas stand model is validated against measurements, an improvement of the measurement procedure is examined. By adding an idealized heat source with the possibility to heat the compressor housing, it is possible to reduce the time it takes to reach an equilibrium when switching between two steady state operating points.
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The k-distribution method for radiation heat transfer in non-isothermal real air-gas plasmasTencer, John Thomas 20 February 2012 (has links)
The k-distribution method for treating the spectral properties of and absorbing-emitting medium represents an alternative to line-by-line calculations which reduces the number of evaluations of the radiative transport equation from the order of a million to the order of ten without any significant loss of accuracy. For problems where an appropriate reference temperature can be defined, the k-distribution method is formally exact and consists only of a change of variables in the spectral domain. However, when no appropriate reference temperature can be defined such as for strongly non-isothermal media, the method results in errors. These errors are difficult to quantify. There have been several attempts to implement corrections to the k-distribution method to extend its application to inhomogeneous media by modeling the effects of temperature, pressure, and concentration gradient. The Multi-Source Full Spectrum K-Distribution Method (MSFSK) introduced here extends the k-distribution method to non-isothermal media without variations in pressure or concentration. The MSFSK method manages to attain this goal by applying the superposition principle to the original RTE before applying the k-distribution transformation to decompose the problem into a set of sub-problems each of which is able to be solved effectively via the ordinary or modified full spectrum k-distribution method. The concept behind this new Multi-Source Full Spectrum K-Distribution Method is to break up the problem domain into isothermal or nearly isothermal emission zones. For each zone, the heat flux and flux divergence are calculated considering only emission from that zone. The RTE is solved using the full spectrum k-distribution method. The k-distribution for each gas volume is generated using the temperature of the current emission zone as the reference temperature. This process is repeated for each emission zone and the heat flux and flux divergence are summed. This method is applied to a variety of one dimensional slab geometry problems are results are presented. It is shown that the MSFSK method provides very accurate results for the radiative heat flux and flux divergence in these geometries. The effect of different quadrature schemes for performing the spectral integration on solution accuracy. / text
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Cylindrical thermal contact conductanceAyers, George Harold 30 September 2004 (has links)
Thermal contact conductance is highly important in a wide variety of applications, from the cooling of electronic chips to the thermal management of spacecraft. The demand for increased efficiency means that components need to withstand higher temperatures and heat transfer rates. Many situations call for contact heat transfer through nominally cylindrical interfaces, yet relatively few studies of contact conductance through cylindrical interfaces have been undertaken. This study presents a review of the experimental and theoretical investigations of the heat transfer characteristics of composite cylinders, presenting data available in open literature in comparison with relevant correlations.
The present investigation presents a study of the thermal contact conductance of cylindrical interfaces. The experimental investigation of sixteen different material combinations offers an opportunity to develop predictive correlations of the contact conductance, in conjunction with an analysis of the interface pressure as a function of the thermal state of the individual cylindrical shells. Experimental results of the present study are compared with previously published conductance data and conductance models.
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Heat Transfer Analysis of Flame-sprayed Metal-polymer Composite StructuresTherrien, David S Unknown Date
No description available.
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A computational fluid dynamics study of heat loss from an offshore oil wellMilburn, Catherine A. January 2001 (has links)
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is used in this study to assess the influence of temperature-dependent oil viscosity and density on the flow of oil up the well, and therefore the amount of insulation required. CFD is a difficult tool to apply to flows where the grid aspect ratio is as high as it needs to be to accommodate the full length of an oil well with a realistic number of grid points. Each model was therefore intensive in terms of computational effort and time. This study shows that by allowing oil viscosity and density to vary with temperature in a 2150 m vertical well with no insulation, the production output is significantly affected. The drop in production output is approximately 3% when oil viscosity varies with temperature, but when coupled with temperature-dependent density the loss in production increases to 22%. Ten CFD models, each with a different value of insulation heat transmission coefficient lying in the range 0.35 Wm<sup>-2</sup>K<sup>-1</sup> to 16900 Wm<sup>-2</sup>K<sup>-1</sup>, are used to establish the temperature drop between riser inlet and outlet. The results obtained allow an operator to select an appropriate insulation based on the allowable temperature drop up the well, assuming all other properties are equal. The completion fluid region is situated outside the oil flow, tubing and insulation. The fluid is stationary which suggests that natural convection currents are present. Seven CFD models with annulus heights ranging from 1 m to 64 m are used to detect these currents, and assess the effectiveness of water as an insulating completion fluid. This thesis establishes that the natural convection currents do not split into multiple cells, but remain mono-cellular when the Grashof number is approximately 1x10<sup>8</sup> and the Prandtl number is 2.3. This work also shows that heat loss due to natural convection from the completion fluid is an important contributory factor to the overall heat loss from a well, dependent on the well height.
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Film boiling destabilisationNaylor, P. January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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Experimental and numerical determination of thermohydraulic properties of regenerators subjected to oscillating flowSchopfer, Sandro 26 August 2011 (has links)
Regenerators are key components in many thermal devices such as Stirling cryocoolers,
magnetic refrigeration devices etc. They act as temporal thermal energy
storage and therewith separate two thermal reservoirs. Regenerators are typically
made up of porous structures referred to as the packing material that can lead to
complex flow pathways of the heat transfer fluid through the regenerator. The
nonisothermal and periodically reversing flow type allows for thermal energy exchange
with the packing material of the regenerator. The performance of such
devices depends greatly on the geometry of the porous structure, itsmaterial properties,
length scales involved as well as operating conditions.
This thesis is a study of thermohydraulic properties of thermal regenerators under
oscillating flow conditions. In the first part of this thesis, thermodynamic models
are developed for the extraction of the friction factor and Nusselt number from
an experiment based on a harmonic approximation technique. These models are
verified using a two dimensional pore scale model that allows to calculate friction
factor and Nusselt number on a theoretical basis independent from an experiment.
The second part of this thesis is devoted to the application of the models presented
in part one to an experiment. A test apparatus that allows to measure temperature and pressure drop for various types of regenerators is presented. The measurements
for a microchannel and packed bed of spheres regenerator are characterized
using spectral analysis. Friction factor and Nusselt numbers are evaluated and
parametrized using the models derived in the first part of this thesis.
Themethodology presented in this thesis reveals insights in the dynamic effects
of oscillating flow type heat transfer. The theoretical findings are applied to experimentally
obtained data for a correct interpretation of friction factor and Nusselt
number. / Graduate
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Developing laminar flow and heat transfer in ducts of arbitrary cross sectionStainsby, R. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Theoretical studies of mixed convection in vertical tubesCotton, M. A. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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The conjugated convection-conduction analysis of heat transfer in a vertical finCha'o-Kuang, C. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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