scholarly journals Prediction of oxy-coal flame stand-off using high-fidelity thermochemical models and the one-dimensional turbulence model

2015 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 2829-2837 ◽  
Author(s):  
Babak Goshayeshi ◽  
James C. Sutherland
Water SA ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 45 (3 July) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed M Helmi

Floodways, where a road embankment is permitted to be overtopped by flood water, are usually designed as broad-crested weirs. Determination of the water level above the floodway is crucial and related to road safety. Hydraulic performance of floodways can be assessed numerically using 1-D modelling or 3-D simulation using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) packages. Turbulence modelling is one of the key elements in CFD simulations. A wide variety of turbulence models are utilized in CFD packages; in order to identify the most relevant turbulence model for the case in question, 96 3-D CFD simulations were conducted using Flow-3D package, for 24 broad-crested weir configurations selected based on experimental data from a previous study. Four turbulence models (one-equation, k-ε, RNG k-ε, and k-ω) ere examined for each configuration. The volume of fluid (VOF) algorithm was adopted for free water surface determination. In addition, 24 1-D simulations using HEC-RAS-1-D were conducted for comparison with CFD results and experimental data. Validation of the simulated water free surface profiles versus the experimental measurements was carried out by the evaluation of the mean absolute error, the mean relative error percentage, and the root mean square error. It was concluded that the minimum error in simulating the full upstream to downstream free surface profile is achieved by using one-equation turbulence model with mixing length equal to 7% of the smallest domain dimension. Nevertheless, for the broad-crested weir upstream section, no significant difference in accuracy was found between all turbulence models and the one-dimensional analysis results, due to the low turbulence intensity at this part. For engineering design purposes, in which the water level is the main concern at the location of the flood way, the one-dimensional analysis has sufficient accuracy to determine the water level.


2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 103301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guangyuan Sun ◽  
David O. Lignell ◽  
John C. Hewson ◽  
Craig R. Gin

Author(s):  
Arash Mohtat ◽  
József Kövecses

When interacting with a virtual object (VO) through a haptic device, it is crucial to feedback a contact force to the human operator (HO) that displays the VO physical properties with high fidelity. The core challenge, here, is to expand the renderable range of these properties, including larger stiffness and smaller inertia, at the available sampling rate. To address this challenge, a framework entitled high-fidelity contact rendering (HFCR) has been developed in this paper. The framework consists of three main strategies: an energy-based rendering of the contact force, smooth transition (ST) between contact modes, and remaining leak dissipation (LD). The essence of these strategies is to make the VO emulate its continuous-time counterpart. This is achieved via physically meaningful modifications in the constitutive relations to suppress artificial energy leaks. The strategies are first developed for the one-dimensional (1D) canonical VO; then, generalization to the multivariable case is discussed. Renderability has been analyzed exploring different stability criteria within a unified approach. This leads to stability charts and identification of renderable range of properties in the presence and absence of the HO. The framework has been validated through simulation and various experiments. Results verify its promising aspects for various scenarios including sustained contact and sudden collision events with or without the HO.


Author(s):  
Tarek Echekki ◽  
Alan R. Kerstein ◽  
James C. Sutherland

2008 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Passini

The relation between authoritarianism and social dominance orientation was analyzed, with authoritarianism measured using a three-dimensional scale. The implicit multidimensional structure (authoritarian submission, conventionalism, authoritarian aggression) of Altemeyer’s (1981, 1988) conceptualization of authoritarianism is inconsistent with its one-dimensional methodological operationalization. The dimensionality of authoritarianism was investigated using confirmatory factor analysis in a sample of 713 university students. As hypothesized, the three-factor model fit the data significantly better than the one-factor model. Regression analyses revealed that only authoritarian aggression was related to social dominance orientation. That is, only intolerance of deviance was related to high social dominance, whereas submissiveness was not.


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