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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

A ground coupled heat pump system with energy storage

Piechowski, Miroslaw Unknown Date (has links)
A Ground Coupled Heat Pump System (GCHP) is a heat pump with or without any thermal storage which uses soil as a heat source or sink. Soil, due to its large thermal capacity and inertia, can serve as a heat source or sink, thus offering relatively constant operation conditions for a heat pump. The soil temperature at a depth of about 2.0m fluctuates slightly around the yearly average air temperature at any given location. This offers a lower and stable sink temperature in the cooling mode operation and a higher and stable source temperature in the heating mode operation. The major consequence of this fact for a GCHP operation is a lower energy consumption as compared with a standard air-source heat pump.
2

A Computational Study of Compressor Inlet Boundary Conditions with Total Temperature Distortions

Eisemann, Kevin Michael 15 February 2007 (has links)
A three-dimensional CFD program was used to predict the flow field that would enter a downstream fan or compressor rotor under the influence of an upstream thermal distortion. Two distortion generation techniques were implemented in the model; (1) a thermal source and (2) a heated flow injection method. Results from the investigation indicate that both total pressure and velocity boundary conditions at the compressor face are made non-uniform by the upstream thermal distortion, while static pressure remains nearly constant. Total pressure at the compressor face was found to vary on the order of 10%, while velocity varies from 50-65%. Therefore, in modeling such flows, neither of these latter two boundary conditions can be assumed constant under these conditions. The computational model results for the two distortion generation techniques were compared to one another and evaluations of the physical practicality of the thermal distortion generation methods are presented. Both thermal distortion methods create total temperature distortion magnitudes at the compressor face that may affect rotor blade vibration. Both analyses show that holding static pressure constant is an appropriate boundary condition for flow modeling at the compressor inlet. The analyses indicate that in addition to the introduction of a thermal distortion, there is a potential to generate distortion in total pressure, Mach number, and velocity. Depending on the method of thermally distorting the inlet flow, the flow entering the compressor face may be significantly non-uniform. The compressor face boundary condition results are compared to the assumptions of a previous analysis (Kenyon et al., 2004) in which a 25 R total temperature distortion was applied to a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model of a fan geometry to obtain unsteady blade pressure loading. Results from the present CFD analyses predict similar total temperature distortion magnitudes corresponding to the total temperature variation used in the Kenyon analyses. However, the results indicate that the total pressure and circumferential velocity boundary conditions assumed uniform in the Kenyon analyses could vary by the order of 2% in total pressure and approximately 8% in velocity distortion. This supports the previously stated finding that assuming a uniform total pressure profile at the compressor inlet may be an appropriate approximation with the presence of a weak thermal distortion, while assuming a constant circumferential velocity boundary condition is likely not sufficiently accurate for any thermal distortion. In this work, the referenced Kenyon investigation and others related to the investigation of distortion-induced aeromechanical effects in this compressor rotor have assumed no aerodynamic coupling between the duct flow and the rotor. A full computational model incorporating the interaction between the duct flow and the fan rotor would serve to alleviate the need for assuming boundary conditions at the compressor inlet. / Master of Science
3

Conception et optimisation d'émetteurs sélectifs pour applications thermophotovoltaïques / Coherent thermal sources Design and optimization of thermophotovoltaic applications

Nefzaoui, Elyes 08 March 2013 (has links)
Le thermo-photovoltaïque (TPV), conversion du rayonnement thermique par des cellules photovoltaïques (PV), est un dispositif qui a suscité un intérêt croissant depuis deux décennies, notamment pour son efficacité supérieure à celle de la conversion photovoltaïque classique. Ceci est essentiellement dû à l'accord entre le spectre du rayonnement de la source thermique et le spectre de conversion de la cellule PV. Les rendements maximaux sont obtenus pour des sources thermiques cohérentes, émettant dans une gamme spectrale étroite, énergétiquement au-dessus de l'énergie de la bande interdite de la cellule PV. On propose dans ce travail d'appliquer une méthode d'optimisation stochastique, en l'occurrence l'optimisation par essaims de particules, pour concevoir et optimiser de telles sources. On aboutit alors à des structures unidimensionnelles simples, à base de films minces de diélectriques, métaux et de semi-conducteurs. Les propriétés radiatives de ces sources, stables pour des températures allant jusqu'à 1000 K, sont aisément contrôlables à l'aide de paramètres simples comme les épaisseurs des films ou la concentration de dopage. Finalement, on propose une étude d'optimisation paramétrique des propriétés optiques des matériaux susceptibles de maximiser l'échange radiatif en champ proche entre deux milieux plans semi-infinis. Cette étude aboutit à un outil pratique, sous forme d'abaques, permettant de guider le choix des matériaux pertinents afin de maximiser les puissances au même temps que l'efficacité des systèmes TPV nanométriques. / Thermo-photovoltaic conversion of thermal radiation is a concept that has been thoroughly investigated during the two last decades because of its high efficiency when compared to classical photovoltaics (PV). These high performances are mainly due to the good-matching between the thermal source radiation spectrum and the PV cell conversion spectrum. Maximal efficiencies areobtained with coherent sources that emit in narrow spectral bands, just above the band gap energy of the cell. In this report, a stochastic method to design and optimize such sources, the particle swarm optimization in this case, is firstly presented. This method leads to simple one-dimensional structures, composed of thin films of dielectrics, metals and semiconductors. The radiativeproperties of these sources are easily tunable with control parameters as simple as films thicknesses and doping concentrations. They are stable at high temperatures up to 1000 K. Second, a parametric optimization study of usual materials optical properties models (Drude and Lorentz) is presented in order to maximize radiative heat transfer between semi-infinite planes separated by nanometric gaps. This leads to a simple tool in the form of abacuses which would guide the choice of relevant materials to maximize the output power of nano thermo-photovoltaic devices.

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