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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.
21

Brännkammare för träpulver : Teoretisk analys och praktisk försök / Combustion chamber for pulverized wood : Analyses and experiments

Pettersson, Jens January 2008 (has links)
<p>The thesis describes a completely new biofuel system to generate particle-free heat from combustion of ash-containing biofuel particles at high temperatures.</p><p>The suggested system gives opportunities to introduce biofuels in new areas.</p><p>Main components in the suggested system is a heat radiating combustion chamber intended for pulverized wood, combined with regenerators to extract heat from flue gases and simultaneously preheating the combustion air.</p><p>The thesis contains a description of the suggested system, theoretical considerations, calculations regarding the combustion, and includes results from tests performed.</p><p>The results from calculations and tests performed concludes that the system is workable and possible to apply.</p> / <p>Uppsatsen beskriver ett helt nytt system för att åstadkomma partikelfri värme och höga temperaturer från biobränslen.</p><p>Det föreslagna systemet ger goda möjligheter att använda biobränslen inom helt nya områden.</p><p>Systemet består huvudsakligen av en brännkammare för träpulver, utförd som en hålrumsstrålare, samt regenerativa värmeväxlare mellan avgående rökgas och inkommande förbränningsluft.</p><p>Uppsatsen innehåller en beskrivning av det föreslagna systemet, teoretiska överväganden, beräkningar rörande förbränningen, samt redovisar resultat från gjorda försök.</p><p>Resultat från beräkningar och genomförda försök visar att det föreslagna systemet fungerar och är praktiskt möjligt att tillämpa.</p>
22

Computational Modelling Of Heat Transfer In Reheat Furnaces

Harish, J 12 1900 (has links)
Furnaces that heat metal parts (blooms) prior to hot-working processes such as rolling or forging are called pre-forming reheat furnaces. In these furnaces, the fundamental idea is to heat the blooms to a prescribed temperature without very large temperature gradients in them. This is to ensure correct performance of the metal parts subsequent to reheating. Due to the elevated temperature in the furnace chamber, radiation is the dominant mode of heat transfer from the furnace to the bloom. In addition, there is convection heat transfer from the hot gases to the bloom. The heat transfer within the bloom is by conduction. In order to design a new furnace or to improve the performance of existing ones, the heat transfer analysis has to be done accurately. Given the complex geometry and large number of parameters encountered in the furnace, an analytical solution is difficult, and hence numerical modeling has to be resorted to. In the present work, a numerical technique for modelling the steady-state and transient heat transfer in a reheat furnace is developed. The work mainly involves the development of a radiation heat transfer analysis code for a reheat furnace, since a major part of the heat transfer in the furnace chamber is due to radiation from the roof and combustion gases. The code is modified from an existing finite volume method (FVM) based radiation heat transfer solver, The existing solver is a general purpose radiation heat transfer solver for enclosures and incorporates the following features: surface-to-surface radiation, gray absorbing-emitting medium in the enclosure, multiple reflections off the bounding walls, shadowing effects due to obstructions in the enclosure, diffuse reflection and enclosures with irregular geometry. As a part of the present work, it has now been extended to include the following features that characterise radiation heat transfer in the furnace chamber · Combination of specular and diffuse reflection as is the case with most real surfaces · Participating non-gray media, as the combustion gases in the furnace chamber exhibit highly spectral radiative characteristics Transient 2D conduction heat transfer within the metal part is then modelled using a FVM-based code. Radiation heat flux from the radiation model and convection heat flux calculated using existing correlations act as boundary conditions for the conduction model. A global iteration involving the radiation model and the conduction model is carried out for the overall solution. For the study, two types of reheat furnaces were chosen; the pusher-type furnace and the walking beam furnace. The difference in the heating process of the two furnaces implies that they have to be modelled differently. In the pusher-type furnace, the heating of the blooms is only from the hot roof and the gas. In the walking beam furnace, the heating is also from the hearth and the blooms adjacent to any given bloom. The model can predict the bloom residence time for any particular combination of furnace conditions and load dimensions. The effects of variations of emissivities of the load, thickness of the load and the residence time of billet in the furnaces were studied.
23

Modelling long–range radiation heat transfer in a pebble bed reactor / vanderMeer W.A.

Van der Meer, Willem Arie January 2011 (has links)
Through the years different models have been proposed to calculate the total effective thermal conductivity in packed beds. The purpose amongst others of these models is to calculate the temperature distribution and heat flux in high temperature pebble bed reactors. Recently a new model has been developed at the North–West University in South Africa and is called the Multi–Sphere Unit Cell (MSUC) model. The unique contribution of this model is that it manages to also predict the effective thermal conductivity in the near wall region by taking into account the local variation in the porosity. Within the MSUC model the thermal radiation has been separated into two components. The first component is the thermal radiation exchange between spheres in contact with one another, which for the purpose of this study is called the short range radiation. The second, which is defined as the longrange radiation, is the thermal radiation between spheres further than one sphere diameter apart and therefore not in contact with each other. Currently a few shortcomings exist in the modelling of the long–range radiation heat transfer in the MSUC model. It was the purpose of this study to address these shortcomings. Recently, work has been done by Pitso (2011) where Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) was used to characterise the long–range radiation in a packed bed. From this work the Spherical Unit Nodalisation (SUN) model has been developed. This study introduces a method where the SUN model has been modified in order to model the long–range radiation heat transfer in an annular reactor packed with uniform spheres. The proposed solution has been named the Cylindrical Spherical Unit Nodalisation (CSUN, pronounced see–sun) model. For validation of the CSUN model, a computer program was written to simulate the bulk region of the High Temperature Test Unit (HTTU). The simulated results were compared with the measured temperatures and the associated heat flux of the HTTU experiments. The simulated results from the CSUN model correlated well with these experimental values. Other thermal radiation models were also used for comparison. When compared with the other radiation models, the CSUN model was shown to predict results with comparable accuracy. Further research is however required by comparing the new model to experimental values at high temperatures. Once the model has been validated at high temperatures, it can be expanded to near wall regions where the packing is different from that in the bulk region. / Thesis (M.Ing. (Nuclear Engineering))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012.
24

Modelling long–range radiation heat transfer in a pebble bed reactor / vanderMeer W.A.

Van der Meer, Willem Arie January 2011 (has links)
Through the years different models have been proposed to calculate the total effective thermal conductivity in packed beds. The purpose amongst others of these models is to calculate the temperature distribution and heat flux in high temperature pebble bed reactors. Recently a new model has been developed at the North–West University in South Africa and is called the Multi–Sphere Unit Cell (MSUC) model. The unique contribution of this model is that it manages to also predict the effective thermal conductivity in the near wall region by taking into account the local variation in the porosity. Within the MSUC model the thermal radiation has been separated into two components. The first component is the thermal radiation exchange between spheres in contact with one another, which for the purpose of this study is called the short range radiation. The second, which is defined as the longrange radiation, is the thermal radiation between spheres further than one sphere diameter apart and therefore not in contact with each other. Currently a few shortcomings exist in the modelling of the long–range radiation heat transfer in the MSUC model. It was the purpose of this study to address these shortcomings. Recently, work has been done by Pitso (2011) where Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) was used to characterise the long–range radiation in a packed bed. From this work the Spherical Unit Nodalisation (SUN) model has been developed. This study introduces a method where the SUN model has been modified in order to model the long–range radiation heat transfer in an annular reactor packed with uniform spheres. The proposed solution has been named the Cylindrical Spherical Unit Nodalisation (CSUN, pronounced see–sun) model. For validation of the CSUN model, a computer program was written to simulate the bulk region of the High Temperature Test Unit (HTTU). The simulated results were compared with the measured temperatures and the associated heat flux of the HTTU experiments. The simulated results from the CSUN model correlated well with these experimental values. Other thermal radiation models were also used for comparison. When compared with the other radiation models, the CSUN model was shown to predict results with comparable accuracy. Further research is however required by comparing the new model to experimental values at high temperatures. Once the model has been validated at high temperatures, it can be expanded to near wall regions where the packing is different from that in the bulk region. / Thesis (M.Ing. (Nuclear Engineering))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012.
25

Reflexní tepelné izolace pro efektivní využití v nízkoenergetických stavbách / Reflective insulations for effective use in low energy buildings

Kalánek, Jiří January 2020 (has links)
The dissertation thesis is focused on thermal insulating properties of reflective insulation under boundary conditions typical for low-energy buildings. In the introductory part of this thesis the attention is focused on the heat transfer process. There is described primarily heat transfer by radiation. There is also described the reflective insulation and the methods of determination their thermal performance. The remaining part of the thesis deals with the analysis of the results obtained in experimental measurements. Measurement results are compared with the calculation model. Conclusions for technical practice including possibilities of further research are summarized in the final section.
26

Cooling Capacity Assessment of Semi-closed Greenhouses

Lee, Wee Fong 22 June 2010 (has links)
No description available.
27

Phenotypic variation and thermoregulation of the human hand

Payne, Stephanie January 2018 (has links)
The hand has the highest surface area-to-volume ratio of any body part. This property offers the potential for the hand to serve an important function in thermoregulation through radiative heat loss. Theoretically, the capacity for heat loss may be influenced by hand and digit proportions, but the extent to which these proportions influence the hand's radiative properties remains under-investigated. Although hand morphology is highly constrained by both integration and functional dexterity, phenotypic variation in hand and digit proportions across human populations shows broad ecogeographic patterns. These patterns have been associated with climate adaptation. However, the theory linking climate adaptation to such ecogeographic patterns is based on underlying assumptions relating to thermodynamic principles, which have not been tested in vivo. This study sought to determine the influence of hand and digit proportions on heat loss from the hands directly, the additional anthropometric factors that may affect this relationship, and the impact of variation in hand proportions on dexterity in the cold. The relationship between hand proportions and thermoregulation was tested through both laboratory-based investigation and a field study. The laboratory investigation assessed the relationship between hand proportions and heat loss, the influence of body size and composition on this relationship, and the effect of morphological variation on manual dexterity. Participants (N=114; 18-50 years of age), underwent a 3-minute ice-water hand-immersion. Thermal imaging analysis was used to quantify heat loss. Hand and digit proportions were quantified using 2D and 3D scanning techniques; body size and composition were measured using established anthropometric methods and bio-impedance analysis. After accounting for body size, hand width, digit-to-palm length ratio, and skeletal muscle mass were significant predictors of heat loss from the hand, whilsthand length and fat mass were not. A separate set of participants (N=40) performed a Purdue pegboard dexterity test before and after the immersion test, which demonstrated that digit width alone negatively correlated with dexterity. The field study tested whether phenotypic variation in upper limb proportions could be attributed to cold adaptation or selection for dexterity in living populations exposed to significant energetic stress. Upper limb segment lengths were obtained from participants (N=254; 18-59 years of age), from highland and lowland regions of the Nepalese Himalayas using established anthropometric methods, and relative hand proportions were assessed in relation to severe energetic stress associated with life at high altitude. Relative to height, hand length and hand width were not reduced with altitude stress, whilst ulna length was. This indicates that cold adaptation is not shaping hand proportions in this case, although phenotypic variation in other limb segments may be attributed to cold adaptation or a thrifty phenotype mechanism. The current study provides empirical evidence to support the link between surface area-to-volume ratio, thermodynamic principles and ecogeographical patterns in human hand morphology. However, this research also demonstrates the complexity of the hand's role in thermoregulation; not only do other factors such as muscularity affect heat loss from the hand, but hand morphology is also highly constrained by integration and dexterity.
28

Corneal injury to ex-vivo eyes exposed to a 3.8 micron laser /

Fyffe, James G. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, 2005. / Typescript (photocopy).
29

Výpočtové postupy pro tepelně-hydraulický návrh a kontrolu nekonvenčních zařízení na výměnu tepla / Calculation algorithms for thermal-hydraulic design and rating of unconventional heat transfer equipment

Mikeška, Petr January 2008 (has links)
The aim of diploma thesis is creating calculation algorithms off single types unconventional heat transfer equipment and their aplication in thermal - hydraulic calculations in the industrial aplication . The main attention is paid to shell and tube heat exchangers with ROD and disc baffle system and radiation heat exchanger. All of these exchangers are used mainly in process of waste thermic destruction. The theoretical part of the work describes construction details of each heat exchanger and calculation algorithms of these equipments. The practical part of the work applies theoretic calculation alghortims in the industrial aplication which is design and rating. In the final part advantages and disadvantages of results have been assessed for construction and process aspects.
30

Understanding of infrared heating for thermoforming of semi-crystalline thermoplastics / Compréhension de chauffage infrarouge de thermoplastiques semi-cristallins

Boztepe, Sinan 14 December 2018 (has links)
Les thermoplastiques et les composites thermoplastiques sont généralement mis en œuvre par thermoformage et sont alors le plus souvent préchauffés en utilisant un chauffage IR. L’avantage du chauffage radiatif est qu'il permet de chauffer les polymères à cœur grâce au caractère semi-transparent des polymères. Néanmoins, dans le cas des polymères semi-cristallins, le chauffage radiatif est affecté par la structure cristalline et cette thèse a donc eu pour objectif d’améliorer la compréhension de l'interaction entre la structure cristalline et les propriétés optiques dans le but de proposer un modèle prédictif de chauffage de thermoplastiques semi-cristallins.Cette étude répond à une problématique industrielle relative au contrôle de la température des thermoplastiques semi-cristallins dans les procédés recourant au chauffage radiatif. L’optimisation de ces procédés requiert un code de calcul suffisamment robuste pour permettre une bonne prédiction du champ de température tout en conservant des temps de calcul acceptables. Une approche combinée expérimentale et numérique a ainsi été proposée dans le but de modéliser la capacité d’absorption du rayonnement thermique de milieux polymères semi-cristallins et le transfert de chaleur par rayonnement avec changement des phases de cristaux/amorphe. Ces travaux se concentrent sur le PEHD, qui présente un intérêt particulier pour l’entreprise Procter&Gamble.Dans cette thèse, après avoir établi une revue bibliographique mettant en avant les couplages existants entre les phénomènes de diffusion optique, la microstructure des polymères semi-cristallins et la température, une caractérisation et une analyse poussées des propriétés radiatives de deux polyéthylènes sont proposées. Les analyses morphologiques et optiques ont été réalisées à température ambiante et dans des conditions de chauffage afin d’identifier les formations cristallines à l’origine de la diffusion optique dans des polymères semi-cristallins et l’évolution de ce couplage au cours du chauffage. A travers ce travail de recherche, un coefficient d’extinction spectral thermo-dépendant a été proposé afin de décrire le caractère optiquement hétérogène du milieu semi-cristallin par un milieu homogène équivalent. Sur la base de la caractérisation de la capacité d'absorption du rayonnement thermique, un modèle thermique conducto-radiatif thermo-dépendant a été développé. Afin d’évaluer la précision de la modélisation, une méthodologie expérimentale spécifique a été proposée pour mesurer la température de surface par thermographie IR dans le cas du PEHD semi-transparent. L’étape finale a consisté à confronter les résultats issus des simulations numériques basées sur cette modélisation à plusieurs campagnes de mesures expérimentales. Les résultats de ces travaux démontrent la forte influence de la structure morphologique des polymères semi-cristallins sur les transferts de chaleur radiatifs. / Thermoplastics and thermoplastic composites are promising candidates for manufacturing highly cost- effective and environmental-friendly components in terms of rapid forming and recyclability. Thermoforming is extensively used for the processing of thermoplastics where IR heating is widely applied. The major advantage of radiative heating is that the significant portion of radiation penetrates into the semi-transparent polymer media.This thesis focuses on understanding of IR heating of semi-crystalline thermoplastics which aims to analyze the driven mechanisms for radiation transport in optically heterogeneous unfilled semi-crystalline polymer media. Considering the relatively narrow thermoforming window of semi-crystalline thermoplastics, accurate temperature control and close monitoring of temperature field is crucially important for successful forming process. It is thus required to build a numerical model robust enough to allow a good prediction of the temperature field while maintaining acceptable calculation times. In this research work, a combined experimental-numerical approach has been proposed which enables both to characterize the radiation absorption capacity of semi-crystalline polymer media and, to model the radiation heat transfer considering the crystalline/amorphous phases change under heating. This research focuses on a particular polymer - highly crystalline HDPE- which is supported by Procter & Gamble.In this thesis, the literature was reviewed at first for highlighting the existing coupled relation between the optical properties and the crystalline structure of semi-crystalline polymers. The role of crystalline morphology on the optical properties and optical scattering of two type of polyethylene, namely HDPE and LLDPE, were addressed. More specifically, the morphological and optical analyses were performed at room temperature and under heating to determine: which crystalline formations are responsible for optical scattering in semi-crystalline polymer media and, how does their coupled relationship evolve under heating conditions? Hence, one of the key contributions of this research is on establishing a temperature-dependent spectral extinction coefficient of HDPE allowing to describe temperature- dependent radiation absorption capacity of its semi-crystalline medium and, to model radiative transfer considering an equivalent homogeneous medium. Based on the characterization of radiation absorption capacity of semi-crystalline media, a temperature-dependent conduction-radiation model was developed. In order to assess the modeling accuracy, an experimental methodology was proposed for non-invasive surface temperature measurements via IR thermography on semi-transparent polymer media. The final step was to compare the results of numerical simulations with the several IR heating experiments to prove the strong influence of the crystalline morphology on heat transfer.

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