Forensic Uncertainty Quantification for Experiments on the Explosively Driven Motion of Particles

Author(s):  
Kyle Hughes ◽  
S. Balachandar ◽  
Nam H. Kim ◽  
Chanyoung Park ◽  
Raphael Haftka ◽  
...  

Six explosive experiments were performed in October 2014 and February of 2015 at the Munitions Directorate of the Air Force Research Laboratory with the goal of providing validation-quality data for particle drag models in the extreme regime of detonation. Three repeated single particle experiments and three particle array experiments were conducted. The time-varying position of the particles was captured within the explosive products by X-ray imaging. The contact front and shock locations were captured by high-speed photography to provide information on the early time gas behavior. Since these experiments were performed in the past and could not be repeated, we faced an interesting challenge of quantifying and reducing uncertainty through a detailed investigation of the experimental setup and operating conditions. This paper presents the results from these unique experiments, which can serve as benchmark for future modeling, and also our effort to reduce uncertainty, which we dub forensic uncertainty quantification (FUQ).

1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. C. Sun ◽  
D. E. Brewe ◽  
P. B. Abel

Cavitation of the oil film in a dynamically loaded journal bearing was studied using high-speed photography and pressure measurement simultaneously. Comparison of the visual and pressure data provided considerable insight into the occurrence and non-occurrence of cavitation. It was found that (1), cavitation typically occurred in the form of one bubble with the pressure in the cavitation bubble close to the absolute zero; and (2), for cavitation-producing operating conditions, cavitation did not always occur; with the oil film then supporting a tensile stress.


Agriculture ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md Nafiul Islam ◽  
Md Zafar Iqbal ◽  
Mohammod Ali ◽  
Milon Chowdhury ◽  
Md Shaha Nur Kabir ◽  
...  

Pepper is one of the most vital agricultural products with high economic value, and pepper production needs to satisfy the growing worldwide population by introducing automatic seedling transplantation techniques. Optimal design and dimensioning of picking device components for an automatic pepper transplanter are crucial for efficient and effective seedling transplantation. Therefore, kinematic analysis, virtual model simulation, and validation testing of a prototype were conducted to propose a best-suited dimension for a clamp-type picking device. The proposed picking device mainly consisted of a manipulator with five grippers and a picking stand. To analyze the influence of design variables through kinematic analysis, 250- to 500-mm length combinations were considered to meet the trajectory requirements and suit the picking workspace. Virtual model simulation and high-speed photography tests were conducted to obtain the kinematic characteristics of the picking device. According to the kinematic analysis, a 350-mm picking stand and a 380-mm manipulator were selected within the range of the considered combinations. The maximum velocity and acceleration of the grippers were recorded as 1.1, 2.2 m/s and 1.3, 23.7 m/s2, along the x- and y-axes, respectively, for 30 to 90 rpm operating conditions. A suitable picking device dimension was identified and validated based on the suitability of the picking device working trajectory, velocity, and acceleration of the grippers, and no significant difference (p ≤ 0.05) occurred between the simulation and validation tests. This study indicated that the picking device under development would increase the pepper seedling picking accuracy and motion safety by reducing the operational time, gripper velocity, acceleration, and mechanical damage.


Author(s):  
N. K. Bourne ◽  
S. C. Garcea ◽  
D. S. Eastwood ◽  
S. Parry ◽  
C. Rau ◽  
...  

The well-known Taylor cylinder impact test, which follows the impact of a flat-ended cylindrical rod onto a rigid stationary anvil, is conducted over a range of impact speeds for two polymers, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and polyetheretherketone (PEEK). In previous work, experiments and a model were developed to capture the deformation behaviour of the cylinder after impact. These works showed a region in which spatial and temporal variation of both longitudinal and radial deformation provided evidence of changes in phase within the material. In this further series of experiments, this region is imaged in a range of impacted targets at the Diamond synchrotron. Further techniques were fielded to resolve compressed regions within the recovered polymer cylinders that showed a fracture zone in the impact region. The combination of macroscopic high-speed photography and three-dimensional X-ray imaging has identified the development of failure with these polymers and shown that there is no abrupt transition in behaviours but rather a continuous range of responses to competing operating mechanisms. The behaviours noted in PEEK in these polymers show critical gaps in understanding of polymer high strain-rate response.


Author(s):  
N.A. Hussary ◽  
J. Heberlein

Abstract The wire arc spraying process, one of several thermal spray processes, gained a sizable part of the thermal spray market, however, more control is needed for this process to be used for high precision coatings. This study is aimed at investigating the liquid metal droplet formation process in order to identify methods for droplet trajectory control. A high speed Kodak imaging system has been used to observe the droplet formation for different operating conditions. Decreasing the upstream pressure and the current levels lead to the reduction in the asymmetric melting of both anode and cathode. By decreasing the interactions of the large eddy structures with the formed metal agglomerates one can achieve better control of the particle trajectories and jet divergence. Thus, coatings can be obtained with higher definition and improved reliability.


Author(s):  
Yongsheng Zhao ◽  
Chi Zhang ◽  
Yuzhen Lin

Based on the flow reactor with rectangle cross-section, this paper studies the spray autoignition characteristics of liquid kerosene injected into air crossflow under high temperature and high pressure conditions. Millisecond-level kerosene injection, millisecond-level photoelectric detection, and high speed photography record experiment techniques are adopted in this research. The operating conditions of this research are as follows: 2.3MPa inlet pressure, 917K inlet temperature, fuel/ air momentum ratio of 52, and Weber number of 355. Photoelectric sensor and photomultiplier equipped with CH filter are used to get the autoignition delay time (ADT). A total of 320 experiments are conducted under the same operating conditions in order to obtain the random ADT probability distribution. The high speed photography is utilized to observe and record the developing process of spray autoignition of kerosene. The results show that the ADT varies from 2.5–5.5millisecond (ms) in the above operating conditions, and confirm the existence of the random behavior of kerosene spray autoignition in the crossflow. These random behaviors of ADT can be correlated well with Gauss distribution. The primary analysis shows that the random behavior stems from the random distributions in the diameter and dispersion due to intrinsic turbulence breakup and transportation which dominate the characteristics of spray autoignition.


1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 268-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. C. U¨nal

Void fraction was measured with high-speed photography in a 26.7 m and a 40.1 m long, sodium-heated helically coiled steam generator tube of 0.018 m ID. The ratio of coil diameter to tube diameter was 38.9. The operating conditions for the tests were as follows: Pressure: 4–18 MN/m2, mass velocity: 429–1518 kg/m2s, heat flux: 0.013–0.42 MW/m2, outlet subcooling: 0.3–12.5 K, outlet steam quality: 0.000032–0.075. For vapor volumetric rate ratios greater than 0.4, the so-called distribution parameter is not affected by centrifugal forces, and is equal to 0.875. For vapor volumetric rate ratios smaller than 0.4, this parameter is affected by centrifugal forces and the aforesaid ratio. The incipient point of boiling and initial point of net vapor generation were determined with high-speed photography in the aforementioned 26.7 m long helical coil for the following range of operating conditions: Pressure: 4–18 MN/m2, mass velocity 757–1518 kg/m2s, heat flux: 0.082–0.413 MW/m2, outlet subcooling: 4.4–12.5 K. The data were correlated by using both the average and local values of the operating conditions.


Author(s):  
T. Conrad ◽  
A. Bibik ◽  
D. Shcherbik ◽  
E. Lubarsky ◽  
B. T. Zinn

This paper describes an experimental investigation of suppressing combustion instabilities in a liquid fueled (n-heptane) atmospheric combustor incorporating an array of “smart” fuel injectors. These injectors were designed so that their spray properties could be manipulated without changing the overall operating conditions (power, mass flow rates, equivalence ratio, etc.) of the combustor. The dependence of these spray properties upon the smart injector settings was determined for a single injector using a series of cold flow experiments, including spray images and PDPA measurements of spray velocities and droplet sizes. The stability characteristics of a combustor incorporating seven such injectors were then determined and correlations were drawn between these characteristics, the single injector spray properties, and combustion behavior measurements taken for a single injector. It was shown that both longitudinal and tangential instability modes were excited in this combustor; the mechanisms of excitation and damping of these modes were then further investigated using high speed photography and spectroscopy measurements. Finally, suppression of both modes of instabilities in this combustor were demonstrated by slow tuning of the injector spray properties.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shen Xi ◽  
Zhang Desheng ◽  
Xu Bin ◽  
Jin Yongxin ◽  
Shi Weidong ◽  
...  

Abstract Cavitating flow is extremely complex in axial and mixed flow pumps, resulting in several adverse effects on pump performance. In this paper, the tip leakage vortex (TLV) cavitation patterns in an axial flow pump model were studied based on high-speed photography and transient pressure measurements. The TLV cavitation morphology and transient development of the induced suction-side-perpendicular cavitating vortices (SSPCVs) were investigated at multi-operating conditions. The time-domain of the transient pressure was employed to clarify the relationship between the tip cavitation and the pressure field. The results showed that cavitation inception occurred earlier with an unstable TLV cavitation shape at part-load conditions. Cavitation was more intense with a decrease of the cavitation number, presenting a larger area of triangular cavitation with the shedding of SSPCV. The inception of SSPCV was attributed to the tail of the shedding cavitation cloud originally attached to the suction surface (SS) of the blade, moving in the direction of the adjacent blade perpendicular to the SS, resulting in a flow blockage. With a further decrease in pressure, the SSPCVs grew in size and strength, accompanied by a rapid degradation in performance of the pump. The cavitation images and the corresponding circumferential pressure distributions showed that the lowest pressure point coincided with the SS corner. After this position, the pressure fluctuated as the cavitation intensity changed. The transient characteristics of SSPCV are a basis for revealing the instability mechanism of its evolution in the axial flow pump.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chuanjin Jiang ◽  
Yuan Xie ◽  
Yuchao Gao ◽  
Wei Chu ◽  
Yiheng Tong ◽  
...  

There is a lack of understanding of the spray characteristics of gas-centered swirl coaxial (GCSC) injectors during self-pulsation occurs. Therefore, the self-pulsation of a GCSC injector was investigated experimentally in this study. Experiments were conducted at atmospheric pressure with filtered water and dried air supplied through a propellant feed system. A back-lighting high-speed photography technique was used to capture unsteady spray features. A laser-based particle size analyzer (LPSA) was used to measure the size of the droplets in the spray. The effects of recess and gas-liquid ratio on spray self-pulsation were analyzed. It was found that the recess of the injector strongly determines the spray pattern. When spray self-pulsation occurs without recess, both the center and periphery of the spray oscillate. With an increase in the mass flow rate of the gas, the boundary between the center and the periphery of the spray becomes more noticeable. Meanwhile, small droplets in the spray center oscillate, with the periphery of the spray being characterized by a periodic “shoulder.” Under the same operating conditions but with a small recess (2 mm), the spray adheres to the injector faceplate. With a larger recess (7 mm), when spray self-pulsation occurs, the spray periodically forms “shoulder” and “neck,” similar to the behavior of self-pulsation in a liquid-centered coaxial injector. Therefore, it can be concluded that spray self-pulsation enhances atomization at the center of the spray to a certain extent. However, atomization becomes worse in the periphery with an oscillating spray.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 115-129
Author(s):  
Shin’ichi Aratani

High speed photography using the Cranz-Schardin camera was performed to study the crack divergence and divergence angle in thermally tempered glass. A tempered 3.5 mm thick glass plate was used as a specimen. It was shown that two types of bifurcation and branching existed as the crack divergence. The divergence angle was smaller than the value calculated from the principle of optimal design and showed an acute angle.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document