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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 numerical study of heat and momentum transfer over a bank of flat tubes

Bahaidarah, Haitham M. S. 01 November 2005 (has links)
The present study considers steady laminar two-dimensional incompressible flow over both in-line and staggered flat tube bundles used in heat exchanger applications. The effects of various independent parameters, such as Reynolds number (Re), Prandtl number (Pr), length ratio (L/Da), and height ratio (H/Da), on the pressure drop and heat transfer were studied. A finite volume based FORTRAN code was developed to solve the governing equations. The scalar and velocity variables were stored at staggered grid locations. Scalar variables (pressure and temperature) and all thermophysical properties were stored at the main grid location and velocities were stored at the control volume faces. The solution to a one-dimensional convection diffusion equation was represented by the power law. The locations of grid points were generated by the algebraic grid generation technique. The curvilinear velocity and pressure fields were linked by the Semi-Implicit Method for Pressure Linked Equations (SIMPLE) algorithm. The line-by-line method, which is a combination of the Tri-Diagonal Matrix Algorithm (TDMA) and the Gauss-Seidel procedure, was used to solve the resulting set of discretization equations. The result of the study established that the flow is observed to attain a periodically fully developed profile downstream of the fourth module. The strength increases and the size of the recirculation gets larger as the Reynolds number increases. As the height ratio increases, the strength and size of the recirculation decreases because the flow has enough space to expand through the tube passages. The increase in length ratio does not significantly impact the strength and size of the recirculation. The non-dimesionalized pressure drop monotonically decreased with an increase in the Reynolds number. In general, the module average Nusselt number increases with an increase in the Reynolds number. The results at Pr = 7.0 indicate a significant increase in the computed module average Nusselt number when compared to those for Pr = 0.7. The overall performance of in-line configuration for lower height ratio (H/Da = 2) and higher length ratio (L/Da = 6) is preferable since it provides higher heat transfer rate for all Reynolds numbers except for the lowest Re value of 25. As expected the staggered configurations perform better than the in-line configuration from the heat transfer point of view.
2

Evaluation of quantitative motility and zona pellucida binding of human spermatozoa in an assisted reproductive programme

Kaskar, Khalied January 1994 (has links)
>Magister Scientiae - MSc / Male factor disorders affect more than 30% of infertile couples. Thus, it has become important to perform a andrological consultation and a basic semen evaluation in all male partners of couples consulting for infertility. The advent and development of assisted reproductive technologies has not only improved clinical results but also enhanced our basic understanding of the physiology of sperm and sperm preparation methods. Assisted reproduction has become among the more successful therapeutic modalities for a wide variety of sperm function disorders e.g. artificial insemination and in vitro fertilization (IVF) (Acosta et al. 1989). It is clear from recent experience that patients with male infertility showing oligozoospermia, asthenozoospermia, teratozoospermia (sometimes in combination), male immunological factor (antisperm antibodies) or ejaculatory problems as well as congenital abnormalities, can be successfully treated with IVF and embryo transfer. Prerequisite pre-fertilization changes by sperm, termed "capacitation" (Austin 1952) provides sperm with the capacity to fertilize eggs. These processes are generally regarded as encompassing all pre-fertilization changes occurring in sperm up 'to, but not including, loss of the acrosome (Bedford 1970). The endpoints of capacitation are often described as the acrosomal loss as well as changes in the motion characteristics. Capacitation alters the pattern of motility exhibited by freely swimming sperm, changing from a fairly rigid flagellar beat pattern to one of extreme flexure, often associated with increased thrust (Johnson et al. 1981) , which is referred to as hyperactivated motility (Yanagimachi 1981). without the transition to hyperactivated motility, sperm are unable to penetrate the zona pellucida (Fraser 1981), and possibly unable to fertilize eggs. Hyperactivation per se is marked by increased curvature in swimming trajectories and/or increased lateral displacement of the sperm head along their path (Burkman 1984). However, the physiological role of this change in motility is not clearly understood because almost all relevant data have been obtained under in vitro conditions. The association of specific seminal characteristics (sperm concentration, percentage motile cells and percentage normal sperm morphology) with the success rate of assisted particular has been The analysis of 1984; the reproductive techniques and IVF in under great scrutiny (Mahadevan and Trounson relationships between conventional semen parameters and fertilization rates in vitro has shown that sperm motility, concentration and morphology must be considered in estimating opportunities for successful intervention, as in the case of IVF and gamete intrafallopian transfer (GIFT) (Oehninger and Hodgen 1991). A reduction in the percentage of progressive motility alone does not seem to have a significant impact on IVF results unless it is below a threshold value of 10%. The semen sample should have an acceptable sperm concentration and morphology and/or that at least 1.5 X 106 motile spermatozoa can be recovered after swim-up separation (Acosta et al. 1989).

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