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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 Near And Far Field Flow Characteristics Of Circular And Non-circular Turbulent Jets

Tasar, Gursu 01 December 2008 (has links) (PDF)
The atomization problem of high speed viscous jets has many applications in industrial processes and machines. In all these applications, it is required that the droplets have high surface area/volume ratio meaning that the droplets should be as small as possible. This can be achieved with high rates of turbulence and mixing of the flow. In order to constitute a foresight of geometry eects on droplet size, experimental investigation and the determination of flow characteristics in near and far fields of a low-speed air jet have been performed. In order to fulfill this task, three components of instantaneous velocity are measured, using a triple sensor Constant Temperature Anemometer (CTA) system. Through these measurements, mean velocity, Reynolds stress, velocity decay, spreading rate, turbulent kinetic energy, vorticity, and mass entrainment rate values are obtained. Stress-Strain relationship is also observed. Measurements are obtained for a baseline circular nozzle (round jet) as well as for an equilateral triangular and a square nozzle. On the basis of these measurements, the equilateral triangular jet is found to be the best option in order to get highest turbulence and mixing level with smallest core length.
2

Experimental and computational studies of factors affecting impinging jet flowfields

Myszko, M. January 2009 (has links)
An experimental and computational study was made of a single circular jet impinging onto a flat ground board. A 1/2' nozzle running at a fixed nozzle pressure ratio of 1.05 was used in the experimental phase (giving an nozzle exit Reynolds number of 90xlO'), the nozzle to ground plane separation being varied between 2 and 10 nozzle diameters. Measurements were performed in the free and wall jets using single and cross-wire hot-wire anemometry techniques and pitot pressure probes in order to detemine mean velocity and normal and shear stress distributions. Some analysis is also presentedo f earlier measurementso n high pressurer atio impinging jets. Nozzle height was found to effect the initial thickness of the wall jet leaving the impingement region, increasing nozzle to ground plane separation increasing the wall jet thickness, although this separation distance did not seem to affect the rate at which the wall jet grew. Nozzle height was also found to have a large effect on the peak level of turbulence found in the wall jet up to a radial distan ce from the jet axial centre line of 4.5 nozzle diameters, after which the profiles become self-similar. Lowering the nozzle tended to increase the peak level measured in all the turbulent stresses within this development region. The production of turbulent kinetic energy in the wall jet, which is an indication of the amount of work done against the mean flow by the turbulent flow was found to increase dramatically with decreasing nozzle height. This was attributed to greater shearing of the flow at lower nozzle heights due to a thinner wall jet leaving the impingement region. A moving impingement surface was found to cause separation of the wall jet inner boundary layer on the 'approach' side leading to very rapid decay of peak velocity. The point of separation was found to occur at radial positions in the region of 7.0 to 8.0 nozzle diameters, this reducing slightly for lower nozzle heights. A parametric investigation was performed using the k-e turbulence model and the PHOENICS CFD code. It was found that due to inadequacies in the model, it failed to predict accurately the growth of the wall jet, both in terms of its initial thickness and the rate of growth. It did, however, predict an increase in wall jet thickness with both increasing nozzle height and exit turbulence intensity and decreasing nozzle pressure ratio. Modifications were made to the constants in the model to try and improve the predictions,w ith a limited degreeo f successT. he low Reynoldsn umber k-F-t urbulence model was shown to give a slightly improved non-dimensional wall jet profile, although this did not improve the predicted rate of growth of the wall jet.
3

Experimental and computational studies of factors affecting impinging jet flowfields

Myszko, M 27 October 2009 (has links)
An experimental and computational study was made of a single circular jet impinging onto a flat ground board. A 1/2" nozzle running at a fixed nozzle pressure ratio of 1.05 was used in the experimental phase (giving an nozzle exit Reynolds number of 90xlO'), the nozzle to ground plane separation being varied between 2 and 10 nozzle diameters. Measurements were performed in the free and wall jets using single and cross-wire hot-wire anemometry techniques and pitot pressure probes in order to detemine mean velocity and normal and shear stress distributions. Some analysis is also presentedo f earlier measurementso n high pressurer atio impinging jets. Nozzle height was found to effect the initial thickness of the wall jet leaving the impingement region, increasing nozzle to ground plane separation increasing the wall jet thickness, although this separation distance did not seem to affect the rate at which the wall jet grew. Nozzle height was also found to have a large effect on the peak level of turbulence found in the wall jet up to a radial distan ce from the jet axial centre line of 4.5 nozzle diameters, after which the profiles become self-similar. Lowering the nozzle tended to increase the peak level measured in all the turbulent stresses within this development region. The production of turbulent kinetic energy in the wall jet, which is an indication of the amount of work done against the mean flow by the turbulent flow was found to increase dramatically with decreasing nozzle height. This was attributed to greater shearing of the flow at lower nozzle heights due to a thinner wall jet leaving the impingement region. A moving impingement surface was found to cause separation of the wall jet inner boundary layer on the 'approach' side leading to very rapid decay of peak velocity. The point of separation was found to occur at radial positions in the region of 7.0 to 8.0 nozzle diameters, this reducing slightly for lower nozzle heights. A parametric investigation was performed using the k-e turbulence model and the PHOENICS CFD code. It was found that due to inadequacies in the model, it failed to predict accurately the growth of the wall jet, both in terms of its initial thickness and the rate of growth. It did, however, predict an increase in wall jet thickness with both increasing nozzle height and exit turbulence intensity and decreasing nozzle pressure ratio. Modifications were made to the constants in the model to try and improve the predictions,w ith a limited degreeo f successT. he low Reynoldsn umber k-F-t urbulence model was shown to give a slightly improved non-dimensional wall jet profile, although this did not improve the predicted rate of growth of the wall jet.
4

Large Eddy Simulation of Impinging Jets

Hällqvist, Thomas January 2006 (has links)
This thesis deals with Large Eddy Simulation (LES) of impinging air jets. The impinging jet configuration features heated circular jets impinging onto a flat plate. The problem addressed here is of generic nature, with applications in many engineering devices, such as cooling of components in gas turbines, in cars and electronic devices. The flow is inherently unsteady and contains relatively slowly varying coherent structures. Therefore, LES is the method of choice when the Reynolds number is large enough to exclude Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS). The present LES model is a basic model without explicit Sub-Grid-Scale (SGS) modeling and without explicit filtering. Instead, the numerical scheme is used to account for the necessary amount of dissipation. By using the computational grid as a filter the cutoff wavenumber depends explicitly on the grid spacing. The underlying computational grid is staggered and constructed in a Cartesian coordinate system. Heat transfer is modeled by the transport equation for a passive scalar. This is possible due to the negligible influence of buoyancy which implies constant density throughout the flow field. The present method provides accurate results for simple geometries in an efficient manner. A great variety of inlet conditions have been considered in order to elucidate how the dynamics of the flow and heat transfer are affected. The considered studies include top-hat and mollified mean velocity profiles subjected to random and sinusoidal perturbations and top-hat profiles superimposed with solid body rotation. It has been found that the shape of the mean inlet velocity profile has a decisive influence on the development of the flow and scalar fields, whereas the characteristics of the imposed artificial disturbances (under consideration) have somewhat weaker effect. In order to obtain results unequivocally comparable to experimental data on turbulent impinging jets both space and time correlations of the inflow data must be considered, so also the spectral content. This is particularly important if the region of interest is close to the velocity inlet, i.e. for small nozzle-to-plate spacings. Within this work mainly small nozzle-toplate spacings are considered (within the range of 0.25 and 4 nozzle diameters), which emphasizes the importance of the inflow conditions. Thus, additional to the basic methods also turbulent inflow conditions, acquired from a precursor pipe simulation, have been examined. Both for swirling and non-swirling flows. This method emulates fully developed turbulent pipe flow conditions and is the best in the sense of being well defined, but it demands a great deal of computing power and is also rather inflexibility. In case of the basic randomly perturbed methods the top-hat approach has been found to produce results in closest agreement with those originating from turbulent inlet conditions. In the present simulations the growth of individual instability modes is clearly detected. The character of the instability is strongly influenced by the imposed boundary conditions. Due to the lack of correlation random superimposed fluctuations have only a weak influence on the developing flow field. The shape of the mean profile, on the other hand, influences both the growth rate and the frequency of the dominant modes. The top-hat profile yields a higher natural frequency than the mollified. Furthermore, for the top-hat profile coalescence of pairs of vortices takes place within the shear-layer of the axial jet, whereas for the mollified profile (for the considered degree of mollification) it takes place within the wall jet. This indicates that the transition process is delayed for smoother profiles. The amount of wall heat transfer is directly influenced by the character of the convective vortical structures. For the mollified cases wall heat transfer originates predominantly from the dynamics of discrete coherent structures. The influence from eddy structures is low and hence Reynolds analogy is applicable, at least in regions of attached flow. The top-hat and the turbulent inflow conditions yield a higher rate of incoherent small scale structures. This strongly affects the character of wall heat transfer. Also the applied level of swirl at the velocity inlet has significant influence on the rate of heat transfer. The turbulence level increases with swirl, which is positive for heat transfer, and so also the spreading of the jet. The latter effect has a negative influence on wall heat transfer, particularly in the center most regions. This however depends also on the details of the inflow data. / QC 20100831
5

Écoulements générés en milieu fluide par une onde ultrasonore focalisée : streaming acoustique et écoulement de particules solides / Flows generated by a focused ultrasound wave in a liquid medium : acoustic streaming and solid particles flow

Ben Haj Slama, Rafika 22 January 2018 (has links)
Les travaux de recherche du présent projet se situent dans le contexte général de l'optimisation de la technique de sono-thrombolyse (destruction d'un caillot sanguin ou d'un thrombus par cavitation ultrasonore). En effet, certes cette technique a plusieurs avantages par rapport à la solution chirurgicale, mais elle présente des limitations qui sont principalement le risque de libération de fragments du thrombus, susceptibles d'engendrer l'embolie pulmonaire. Face à ces limites actuelles que de la technique de sono-thrombolyse, s'est imposée la nécessité de pousser plus loin les recherches pour mieux comprendre les mécanismes qui la régissent. D'où le projet de la présente thèse qui s'intéresse plus particulièrement aux écoulements générés lors de l'application des ultrasons focalisés dans un liquide. L'objet du présent travail consiste à étudier minutieusement les phénomènes hydrodynamiques et acoustiques, en particulier le streaming acoustique du fluide et la force de radiation ultrasonore agissant sur les particules solides. Cela permettra d'obtenir une connaissance profonde des phénomènes hydrodynamiques se produisant lors de l'application des HIFU dans un milieu liquide chargé de particules.La technique optique de PIV a été adoptée pour mesurer l'écoulement du fluide ainsi que des particules solides. Ceci a permis de caractériser le streaming acoustique induit par la propagation des ultrasons focalisés dans un milieu liquide infini, de le comparer à un écoulement classique de type jet circulaire libre, et de déterminer un diamètre critique au-dessus du quel l'écoulement des particules solides sphériques dans un liquide est dominée par la force de radiation ultrasonore plutôt que par l'entrainement du streaming acoustique. Comme approche numérique, un outil de simulation CFD a été utilisé afin de modéliser le même écoulement de streaming en question et afin de comparer les résultats numériques avec les résultats expérimentaux obtenus / The research work of this project is provided in the context of sono-thrombolysis technique optimization (blood clot or thrombus destruction by ultrasonic cavitation). Indeed, although this technique has several advantages over the surgical solution, but it has limitations that are mainly the risk of thrombus fragments releasing in the circulation, likely to induce pulmonary embolism.In view of these sono-thrombolysis technique current limitations, it has become necessary to carry out further research to better understand the mechanisms that govern it. Hence, comes the project of the present thesis, which is particularly interested in the flows generated by the application of focused ultrasound in a liquid. The purpose of the present work is to accurately study the hydrodynamic and acoustic phenomena, in particular the fluid acoustic streaming and the ultrasound radiation force acting on solid particles. This would provide a deep understanding of the hydrodynamic phenomena occurring during HIFU (High Intensity Focused Ultrasound) application in a liquid medium with particles.Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) optical technique has been adopted to measure the fluid flow as well as solid particles flow. This allowed us to characterize the focused ultrasound induced acoustic streaming in an infinite liquid medium, to compare it with a conventional circular free jet flow, and to determine a critical diameter above which solid spherical particles flow in a liquid is dominated by the radiation force rather than the acoustic streaming drag force. As a numerical approach, a CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) simulation tool was used to model the same streaming flow and to compare the numerical results with the experimental obtained ones

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