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レーザによる熱可塑性プラスチックのラップ接合 (第3報, 数値シミュレーションによる接合条件の検討)NAKAMURA, Takashi, 長谷川, 達也, HASEGAWA, Tatsuya, 高井, 雄一郎, TAKAI, Yuichiro, 土井, 晋太郎, DOI, Shintaro, 中村, 隆, 前田, 知宏, MAEDA, Tomohiro 09 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparative analysis of numerical simulation and analytical modeling of horizontal well cyclic steam injectionRavago Bastardo, Delmira Cristina 29 August 2005 (has links)
The main objective of this research is to compare the performance of cyclic steam injection using horizontal wells based on the analytical model developed by Gunadi against that based on numerical simulation. For comparison, a common reservoir model was used. The reservoir model measured 330 ft long by 330 ft wide by 120 ft thick, representing half of a 5-acre drainage area, and contained oil based on the properties of the Bachaquero-01 reservoir (Venezuela). Three steam injection cycles were assumed, consisting of a 20-day injection period at 1500 BPDCWE (half-well), followed by a 10-day soak period, and a 180-day production period. Comparisons were made for two cases of the position of the horizontal well located on one side of the reservoir model: at mid-reservoir height and at reservoir base.
The analytical model of Gunadi had to be modified before a reasonable agreement with simulation results could be obtained. Main modifications were as follows. First, the cold horizontal well productivity index was modified to that based on the Economides-Joshi model instead of that for a vertical well. Second, in calculating the growth of the steam zone, the end-point relative permeability??s of steam and oil were taken into consideration, instead of assuming them to be the same (as in the original model of Gunadi).
Main results of the comparative analysis for both cases of horizontal well positions are as follows. First, the water production rates are in very close agreement with results obtained from simulation. Second, the oil production rates based on the analytical model (averaging 46,000 STB), however, are lower than values obtained from simulation (64,000 STB). This discrepancy is most likely due to the fact that the analytical model assumes residual oil saturation in the steam zone, while there is moveable oil based on the simulation model. Nevertheless, the analytical model may be used to give a first-pass estimate of the performance of cyclic steam injection in horizontal wells, prior to conducting more detailed thermal reservoir simulation.
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Numerical simulation of topography and stratification effects to the internal tide in Gaoping Submarine CanyonLee, Ying-Tsao 10 September 2009 (has links)
It is generally understood that tidal currents ominated the flow field in many submarine canyons, and internal tide may be an order of magnitude more energetic than that of barotropic. The internal tide can be generated and amplified in a marine environment with the strong vertical density interface. The barotropic tides were known to play the dominant
role in driving the internal tides at the topographic relief or shelf break.This research tries to look at the mechanisms of internal tides generation and propagation in the Kaoping Submarine Canyon off southwestern Taiwan, using Princeton Ocean Model (POM) with different settings. The model was tested with bottom topography of flat, a slope and real water
depth, with and without vertical stratifications. The model settings are grid size 500m, simulate period days, radiation boundary condition at 4 sides. The model forcings are sea level variations at the west side, both semidiurnal tide (M2) and mixed tide (M2+K1) based on OSU tidal model TPXO 6.2. The results suggest that the offshore M2 tidal forcing
can generate large internal tidal currents within the canyon with vertical density stratification. The internal tidal currents at the upper-layer of the canyon lag that of lower-layer 3~5 hours. There is no time lag and no
amplification of current in the canyon if there is no stratification. There is a transition zone of minimum flow at depth of about 100-200m. Below the interface, the amplitude of semidiurnal internal tidal current increased with water depth in the canyon. The simulated density contours suggest a 120m amplitude vertical fluctuation center at 150m depth, with 5¢J temperature fluctuation. The computed baroclinic energy flux indicates that the energy in lower layer of the canyon is stronger than that of upper
layer. The high energy flux appears at the canyon foot and rim, and propagates along the canyon axis landward.
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Investigation of the effects of buoyancy and heterogeneity on the performance of surfactant floodsTavassoli, Shayan 16 February 2015 (has links)
The primary objectives of this research were to understand the potential for gravity-stable surfactant floods for enhanced oil recovery without the need for mobility control agents and to optimize the performance of such floods. Surfactants are added to injected water to mobilize the residual oil and increase the oil production. Surfactants reduce the interfacial tension (IFT) between oil and water. This reduction in IFT reduces the capillary pressure and thus the residual oil saturation, which then results in an increase in the water relative permeability. The mobility of the surfactant solution is then greater than the mobility of the oil bank it is displacing. This unfavorable mobility ratio can lead to hydrodynamic instabilities (fingering). The presence of these instabilities results in low reservoir sweep efficiency. Fingering can be prevented by increasing the viscosity of the surfactant solution or by using gravity to stabilize the displacement below a critical velocity. The former can be accomplished by using mobility control agents such as polymer or foam. The latter is called gravity-stable surfactant flooding, which is the subject of this study. Gravity-stable surfactant flooding is an attractive alternative to surfactant polymer flooding under certain favorable reservoir conditions. However, a gravity-stable flood requires a low velocity less than the critical velocity. Classical stability theory predicts the critical velocity needed to stabilize a miscible flood by gravity forces. This theory was tested for surfactant floods with ultralow interfacial tension and found to over-estimate the critical velocity compared to both laboratory displacement experiments and fine-grid simulations. Predictions using classical stability theory for miscible floods were not accurate because this theory did not take into account the specific physics of surfactant flooding. Stability criteria for gravity-stable surfactant flooding were developed and validated by comparison with both experiments and fine-grid numerical simulations. The effects of vertical permeability, oil viscosity and heterogeneity were investigated. Reasonable values of critical velocity require a high vertical permeability without any continuous barriers to vertical flow in the reservoir. This capability to predict when and under what reservoir conditions a gravity-stable surfactant flood can be performed at a reasonable velocity is highly significant. Numerical simulations were also used to show how gravity-stable surfactant flooding can be optimized to increase critical velocity, which shortens the project life and improves the economics of the process. The critical velocity for a stable surfactant flood is a function of the microemulsion viscosity and it turns out there is an optimum value that can be used to significantly increase the velocity and maintain stability. For example, the salinity gradient can be optimized to gradually decrease the microemulsion viscosity. Another alternative is to inject a polymer drive following the surfactant solution, but using polymer complicates the process and adds to its cost without significant benefit in most gravity-stable surfactant floods. A systematic approach was introduced to make decisions on using polymer in applications based on stability criteria and cost. Also, the effect of an aquifer on gravity-stable surfactant floods was investigated as part of a field-scale study and strategies were developed to minimize its effect on the process. This study has provided new insights into the design of an optimized gravity-stable surfactant flood. The results of the numerical simulations show the potential for high oil recovery from gravity-stable surfactant floods using horizontal wells. Application of gravity-stable surfactant floods reduces the cost and complexity of the process. The widespread use of horizontal wells has greatly increased the attractiveness and potential for conducting surfactant floods in a gravity-stable mode. This research has provided the necessary criteria and tools needed to determine when gravity-stable surfactant flooding is an attractive alternative to conventional surfactant-polymer flooding. / text
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The Growth and Enrichment of the Intragroup GasLiang, Lichen 31 August 2015 (has links)
The observable properties of galaxy groups, and especially the thermal and chemical properties of the intragroup medium (IGrM), provide important constraints on the different feedback processes associated with massive galaxy formation and evolution. In this {work}, we present a detailed analysis of the global properties of simulated galaxy groups with X-ray temperatures in the range $0.5 - 2$ keV over the redshift range $0 \leq z \leq 3$. The groups are drawn from a cosmological smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulation that includes a well-constrained prescription for momentum-driven, galactic outflows powered by stars and supernovae but no explicit treatment of AGN feedback. Our aims are (a) to establish a baseline against which we will compare future models; (b) to identify model successes that are genuinely due to stellar/supernovae-powered outflows; and (c) to pinpoint mismatches that not only signal the need for AGN feedback but also constrain the nature of this feedback.
We find that even without AGN feedback, our simulation successfully reproduces the observed present-day group properties such as the IGrM mass fraction, the various X-ray luminosity-temperature-entropy scaling relations, as well as both the mass-weighted and the emission-weighted IGrM iron and silicon abundance versus IGrM temperature relationships, for all but the most massive groups. We also show that these trends evolve self-similarly for $z < 1$, in agreement with the observations. In contrast to the usual expectations, we do not see any evidence of the IGrM undergoing catastrophic cooling. And yet, the $z=0$ group stellar mass is a factor of $\sim 2$ too high. Probing further, we find that the latter is due to the build-up of cold gas in the massive galaxies {\it before} they are incorporated inside groups. This not only indicates that another feedback mechanism must activate as soon as the galaxies achieve $M_*\approx$ a few $\times 10^{10}\;\rm{M_{\odot}}$ but that this feedback mechanism must be powerful enough to expel a significant fraction of the halo gas component from the galactic halos. ``Maintenance-mode" AGN feedback of the kind observed in galaxy clusters will not do. At the same time, we find that stellar/supernovae-powered winds are essential for understanding the metal abundances in the IGrM and these results are expected to be relatively insensitive to the addition of AGN feedback.
We further examine the detailed distribution of the metals within the groups and their origin. We find that our simulated abundance profiles fit the observational data pretty well except that in the innermost regions, there appears to have an excess of metals in the IGrM, which is attributed to the overproduction of stars in the central galaxies. The fractional contribution of the different types of galaxies varies with radial distances from the group center. While the enrichment in the core regions of the groups is dominated by the central and satellite galaxies, the external galaxies become more important contributors to the metals at $r\simgreat R_{500}$. The IGrM at the groups' outskirts is enriched at comparatively higher redshifts, and by relatively less massive galaxies. / Graduate
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Numerical simulation of two-phase flow in discrete fractures using Rayleigh-Ritz finite element methodKaul, Sandeep P. 30 September 2004 (has links)
Spontaneous imbibition plays a very important role in the displacement mechanism of non-wetting fluid in naturally fractured reservoirs. We developed a new 2D two-phase finite element numerical model, as available commercial simulators cannot be used to model small-scale experiments with different boundary conditions as well as complex boundary conditions such as fractures and vugs. Starting with the basic equation of fluid flow, we derived the non-linear diffusion saturation equation. This equation cannot be put in weighted-integral weak variational form and hence Rayleigh-Ritz finite element method (FEM) cannot be applied. Traditionally, the way around it is to use higher order interpolation functions and use Galerkin FEM or reduce the differentiability requirement and use Mixed FEM formulation. Other FEM methods can also be used, but iterative nature of those methods makes them unsuitable for solving large-scale field problems. But if we truncate the non-linear terms and decouple the dependent variables, from the spatial as well as the temporal domains of the primary variable to solve them analytically, the non-linear FEM problem reduces to a simple weighted integral form, which can be put into its corresponding weak form. The advantage of using Rayleigh-Ritz method is that it has immediate effect on the computation time required to solve a particular problem apart from incorporating complex boundary conditions. We compared our numerical models with the analytical solution of this diffusion equation. We validated the FDM numerical model using X-Ray Tomography (CT) experimental data from the single-phase spontaneous imbibition experiment, where two simultaneously varying parameters of weight gain and CT water saturation were used and then went ahead and compared the results of FEM model to that of FDM model. A two-phase field size example was taken and results from a commercial simulator were compared to the FEM model to bring out the limitations of this approach.
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HEAT AND MASS TRANSFER DURING NONEQUILIBRIUM DECOMPOSITION OF HYDRATE PELLET.Yoon, Yong Seok, Song, Myung Ho, Kang, Jung Ho, Englezos, Peter 07 1900 (has links)
Mathematical model, which depicts on macroscopic scale the physical phenomena occurring during the decomposition of gas hydrate, was set up and applied to the spherical methane hydrate pellet decomposing into ice. Initially, porous hydrate pellet is at uniform temperature and pressure within hydrate stable region. The pressure starts to decrease at t=0 with a fixed rate down to the final pressure and is kept constant afterwards. The bounding surface of pellet is heated by convection. Governing equations are based on the conservation principles, the phase equilibrium relation, equation of gas state and phase change kinetics. The single-domain approach and volume average formulation are employed to take into account transient change of local pressure, volumetric liberation of latent enthalpy, and convective heat and mass transfer accompanied by the decomposed gas flow through hydrate/ice solid matrix. The algorithm called “enthalpy method” is extended to deal with non-equilibrium phase change and utilized to determine local phase volume fractions. Predicted results suggest that the present numerical implementation is capable of predicting essential features of heat and mass transfer during non-equilibrium decomposition of hydrate pellet.
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Simulation and analysis of coupled surface and grain boundary motionPan, Zhenguo 05 1900 (has links)
At the microscopic level, many materials are made of smaller and randomly oriented grains. These grains are separated by grain boundaries which tend to decrease the electrical and thermal conductivity of the material. The motion of grain boundaries is an important phenomenon controlling the grain growth in materials processing and synthesis.
Mathematical modeling and simulation is a powerful tool for studying the motion of grain boundaries. The research reported in this thesis is focused on the numerical simulation and analysis of a coupled surface and grain boundary motion which models the evolution of grain boundary and the diffusion of the free surface during the process of grain growth.
The “quarter loop” geometry provides a convenient model for the study of this coupled motion. Two types of normal curve velocities are involved in this model: motion by mean curvature and motion by surface diffusion. They are coupled together at a triple junction. A front tracking method is used to simulate the migration. To describe the problem, different formulations are presented and discussed. A new formulation that comprises partial differential equations and algebraic equations is proposed. It preserves arc length parametrization up to scaling and exhibits good numerical performance. This formulation is shown to be well-posed in a reduced, linear setting. Numerical simulations are implemented and compared for all formulations. The new formulation is also applied to some other related problems.
We investigate numerically the linear stability of the travelling wave solutions for the quarter loop problem and a simple grain boundary motion problem for both curves in two dimensions and surfaces in three dimensions. The numerical results give evidence that they are convectively stable.
A class of high order three-phase boundary motion problems are also studied. We consider a region where three phase boundaries meet at a triple junction and evolve with specified normal velocities. A system of partial differential algebraic equations (PDAE) is proposed to describe this class of problems by extending the discussion for the coupled surface and grain boundary motion. The linear well-posedness of the system is analyzed and numerical simulations are performed.
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海洋環境下における長尺鋼部材の腐食挙動の評価・予測に関する基礎的研究ITOH, Yoshito, GOTO, Atsushi, HOSOMI, Naofumi, KAINUMA, Shigenobu, 伊藤, 義人, 後藤, 淳, 細見, 直史, 貝沼, 重信 20 May 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Flameless Combustion of Natural Gas in the SJ/WJ FurnaceHe, Yu 04 April 2008 (has links)
Flameless combustion in a 48 kW pilot scale furnace fired with natural gas is studied
experimentally and computationally. The burner geometry involved a tunnel furnace with two separate feed streams --- one for a high momentum air jet and the other for a low momentum fuel jet. This burner configuration, called a Strong-Jet/Weak-Jet (SJWJ) burner, together with the jetto-
jet interactions generate the flameless combustion mode with relatively uniform furnace gas temperature distributions and low NOX emissions. Experiments were carried out under laboratory conditions for turbulent reactive mixing in order to obtain local temperature and gas concentrations. The experimental findings were used to test the performance of CFD numerical models for turbulence, mixing and chemical reactions.
For the SJWJ furnace operated in flameless combustion mode, 32 different flow cases were
examined to assess the effects of the three main parameters (fuel/air momentum flux ratio, fuel/air nozzle separation distance and fuel injection angle) on the furnace wall temperature profile. Three specific flow configurations were selected for detailed near-field temperature
measurements. The gas temperature distribution inside the combustion chamber was found to be relatively uniform, a characteristic of flameless combustion. Four flow configurations were studied to examine the effect of the fuel jet injection angle (0 degrees or 10 degrees) and fuel/air
momentum flux ratio (0.0300 and 0.0426) on the mixing, combustion performance and NOX
emissions. Gas compositions were measured in the flue gas and within the furnace at selected locations to estimate the concentrations of CO2 CO, CH4, O2, NO and NOX. The NOX concentrations in the flue gas were quite low, ranging from 7 - 13 ppm, another characteristic of flameless combustion.
The combusting flow CFD calculations were carried out using the k-ε turbulence model and the eddy-dissipation model for methane-air-2-step reactions to predict the temperature and concentration field. The numerical results for gas temperature and compositions of CH4, O2 and CO2 generally showed good agreement with the experimental data. The predicted CO concentration profiles followed expected trends but the experimental data were generally underpredicted. The NOX concentrations were estimated through post-processing and these results were significantly underpredicted. / Thesis (Ph.D, Mechanical and Materials Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2008-04-04 11:25:25.455
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