4 resultados para Retention Time

em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid


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The present work summarizes research related to the definition of nutrient recommendations for feeds used in the intensive production of rabbit's meat. Fibre is the main chemical constituent of rabbit diets that typically contain 320 to 360 and 50 to 90 g/kg of insoluble and soluble fibre, respectively. Instead, the dietary contents of cereal grains (∼120 to 160 g/kg), fat (15 to 25 g/kg) and protein concentrates (150 to 180 g/kg) are usually low with respect to other intensively reared monogastric animals. Cell wall constituents are not well digested in rabbits, but this effect is compensated by its stimulus of gut motility, which leads to an increasing rate of passage of digesta, and allows achieving an elevated dry matter intake. A high feed consumption and an adequate balance in essential nutrients are required to sustain the elevated needs of high-productive rabbits measured either as reproductive yield, milk production or growth rate in the fattening period. Around weaning, pathologies occur in a context of incomplete development of the digestive physiology of young rabbits. The supply of balanced diets has also been related to the prevention of disorders by means of three mechanisms: (i) promoting a lower retention time of the digesta in the digestive tract through feeding fibre sources with optimal chemical and physical characteristics, (ii) restricting feed intake after weaning or (iii) causing a lower flow of easily available substrates into the fermentative area by modifying feed composition (e.g. by lowering protein and starch contents, increasing its digestibility or partially substituting insoluble with soluble fibre), or by delaying age at weaning. The alteration in the gut microbiota composition has been postulated as the possible primary cause of these pathologies.

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Debido al gran interés existente en el ahorro y recuperación de energía, y en el deseo de obtener productos que permitan usos beneficiosos del fango procedente de la depuración del agua residual, la digestión anaerobia es el proceso de estabilización de uso más extendido. El tiempo de retención de sólidos es un factor clave en el proceso de digestión anaerobia. En base al tiempo de retención de sólidos, se dimensiona el volumen de los digestores anaerobios para así obtener la reducción de materia orgánica deseada, con la correspondiente producción de biogás. La geometría del digestor y su sistema de agitación deben ser adecuados para alcanzar el tiempo de retención de sólidos de diseño. Los primeros trabajos sobre la agitación de los digestores realizaban únicamente experimentos con trazadores y otros métodos de medición. En otros casos, la mezcla era evaluada mediante la producción de biogás. Estas técnicas tenían el gran hándicap de no conocer lo que sucedía realmente dentro del digestor y sólo daban una idea aproximada de su funcionamiento. Mediante aplicación de la mecánica de fluidos computacional (CFD) es posible conocer con detalle las características del fluido objeto de estudio y, por lo tanto, simular perfectamente el movimiento del fango de un digestor anaerobio. En esta tesis se han simulado mediante CFD diferentes digestores a escala real (unos 2000 m3 de volumen) agitados con bomba/s de recirculación para alcanzar los siguientes objetivos: establecer la influencia de la relación entre el diámetro y la altura, de la pendiente de la solera, del número de bombas y del caudal de recirculación en dichos digestores, definir el campo de velocidades en la masa de fango y realizar un análisis energético y económico. Así, es posible conocer mejor cómo funciona el sistema de agitación de un digestor anaerobio a escala real equipado con bomba/s de recirculación. Los resultados obtenidos muestran que una relación diámetro/altura del digestor por encima de 1 empeora la agitación del mismo y que la pendiente en la solera del digestor favorece que la masa de fango esté mejor mezclada, siendo más determinante la esbeltez del tanque que la pendiente de su solera. No obstante, también es necesario elegir adecuadamente los parámetros de diseño del sistema de agitación, en este caso el caudal de recirculación de fango, para obtener una agitación completa sin apenas zonas muertas. En el caso de un digestor con una geometría inadecuada es posible mejorar su agitación aumentando el número de bombas de recirculación y el caudal de las mismas, pero no se llegará a alcanzar una agitación total de la masa de fango debido a su mal diseño original. Anaerobic digestion is the process for waste water treatment sludge stabilization of more widespread use due to the huge interest in saving and recovering energy and the wish to obtain products that allow beneficial uses for the sludge. The solids retention time is a key factor in the anaerobic digestion. Based on the solids retention time, volume anaerobic digester is sized to obtain the desired reduction in organic matter, with the corresponding production of biogas. The geometry of the digester and the stirring system should be adequate to achieve the design solid retention time. Early works on digesters stirring just performed tracer experiments and other measurement methods. In other cases, mixing was evaluated by biogas production. These techniques had the great handicap of not knowing what really happened inside the digester and they only gave a rough idea of its operation. By application of computational fluid dynamics (CFD), it is possible to know in detail the characteristics of the fluid under study and, therefore, simulate perfectly the sludge movement of an anaerobic digester. Different full-scale digesters (about 2000 m3 of volume) agitated with pump/s recirculation have been simulated by CFD in this thesis to achieve the following objectives: to establish the influence of the relationship between the diameter and height, the slope of the bottom, the number of pumps and the recirculation flow in such digesters, to define the velocity field in the mass of sludge and carry out an energy and economic analysis. Thus, it is possible to understand better how the agitation system of a full-scale anaerobic digester equipped with pump/s recirculation works. The results achieved show that a diameter/height ratio of the digester above 1 worsens its stirring and that the slope of the digester bottom favors that the mass of sludge is better mixed, being more decisive the tank slenderness than the slope of its bottom. However, it is also necessary to select properly the design parameters of the agitation system, in this case the sludge recirculation flow rate, for a complete agitation with little dead zones. In the case of a digester with inadequate geometry, its agitation can be improved by increasing the number of recirculation pumps and flow of them, but it will not reach a full agitation of the mass of sludge because of the poor original design.

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Helium retention in irradiated tungsten leads to swelling, pore formation, sample exfoliation and embrittlement with deleterious consequences in many applications. In particular, the use of tungsten in future nuclear fusion plants is proposed due to its good refractory properties. However, serious concerns about tungsten survivability stems from the fact that it must withstand severe irradiation conditions. In magnetic fusion as well as in inertial fusion (particularly with direct drive targets), tungsten components will be exposed to low and high energy ion (helium) irradiation, respectively. A common feature is that the most detrimental situations will take place in pulsed mode, i.e., high flux irradiation. There is increasing evidence on a correlation between a high helium flux and an enhancement of detrimental effects on tungsten. Nevertheless, the nature of these effects is not well understood due to the subtleties imposed by the exact temperature profile evolution, ion energy, pulse duration, existence of impurities and simultaneous irradiation with other species. Physically based Kinetic Monte Carlo is the technique of choice to simulate the evolution of radiation-induced damage inside solids in large temporal and space scales. We have used the recently developed code MMonCa (Modular Monte Carlo simulator), presented in this conference for the first time, to study He retention (and in general defect evolution) in tungsten samples irradiated with high intensity helium pulses. The code simulates the interactions among a large variety of defects and impurities (He and C) during the irradiation stage and the subsequent annealing steps. In addition, it allows us to vary the sample temperature to follow the severe thermo-mechanical effects of the pulses. In this work we will describe the helium kinetics for different irradiation conditions. A competition is established between fast helium cluster migration and trapping at large defects, being the temperature a determinant factor. In fact, high temperatures (induced by the pulses) are responsible for large vacancy cluster formation and subsequent additional trapping with respect to low flux irradiation.

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Helium retention in irradiated tungsten leads to swelling, pore formation, sample exfoliation and embrittlement with deleterious consequences in many applications. In particular, the use of tungsten in future nuclear fusion plants is proposed due to its good refractory properties. However, serious concerns about tungsten survivability stems from the fact that it must withstand severe irradiation conditions. In magnetic fusion as well as in inertial fusion (particularly with direct drive targets), tungsten components will be exposed to low and high energy ion irradiation (helium), respectively. A common feature is that the most detrimental situations will take place in pulsed mode, i.e., high flux irradiation. There is increasing evidence of a correlation between a high helium flux and an enhancement of detrimental effects on tungsten. Nevertheless, the nature of these effects is not well understood due to the subtleties imposed by the exact temperature profile evolution, ion energy, pulse duration, existence of impurities and simultaneous irradiation with other species. Object Kinetic Monte Carlo is the technique of choice to simulate the evolution of radiation-induced damage inside solids in large temporal and space scales. We have used the recently developed code MMonCa (Modular Monte Carlo simulator), presented at COSIRES 2012 for the first time, to study He retention (and in general defect evolution) in tungsten samples irradiated with high intensity helium pulses. The code simulates the interactions among a large variety of defects and during the irradiation stage and the subsequent annealing steps. The results show that the pulsed mode leads to significantly higher He retention at temperatures higher than 700 K. In this paper we discuss the process of He retention in terms of trap evolution. In addition, we discuss the implications of these findings for inertial fusion.