3 resultados para Variable Velocity
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
Damages -reduced in fruit packing lines is a major cause of grace reduction and quality loos in fresh marks: fruit. Fruit must be treated gently during in sir handling to improve their qualityin order to get a good price in a competitive market. The correct post-hardvest handling in fruit packing lines is a prerequisite to cut down the heavy post-harvest losses. Fruit packing lines must be evaluated, studying their design, the impacts applied to the fruits, the characteristics of the materials, etc. This study establishes the possibility of carrying out modifications and tests in a packing line during a long period of time. For this purpose, an experimental fruit packing line has been designed and located in the Agricultural Engineering Department of the Polythecnic University of Madrid with the aim of improving mechanical devices and fruit handling conditions to minimize damage to fruit. The experimental line consists of several transporting belts, one rollers transporter, one sizer, one elevator, one singularizer, and three trays to receive the calibrated fruit. The line has a length of 6.15 m and a width cf 1.9 m. Movement of the different components is regulated by electric motors with variable velocity electronically controlled. The height of the transfer points is variable and can be easily modified. The experimental line has been calibrated using two instrumented spheres IS 100 (8.8 cm Ø and6.2cm Ø). Average acceleration values obtained in all the transfers of the experimental line lay under 80 g's, although there is big variation for some of them being some values above 100 g's.
Resumo:
La presente Tesis Doctoral tiene como objetivo el estudio de flujo turbulento cargado con partículas sólidas a través de canales y tuberías de sección constante usando un enfoque Euleriano-Lagrangiano. El campo de flujo de la fase de transporte (aire) se resuelve usando simulación de grandes escalas (LES), implementada en un programa de volúmenes finitos mientras que las ecuaciones gobernantes de la fase dispersa son resueltas por medio de un algoritmo de seguimiento Lagrangiano de partículas que ha sido desarrollado y acoplado al programa que resuelve el flujo. Se estudia de manera sistemática y progresiva la interacción fluido→partícula (one-way coupling), a través de diferentes configuraciones geométricas en coordenadas cartesianas (canales de sección constante y variable) y en coordenadas cilíndricas (tuberías de sección constante y sección variable) abarcando diferentes números de Reynolds y diferentes tamaños de partículas; todos los resultados obtenidos han sido comparados con datos publicados previamente. El estudio de flujo multifásico a través de, tuberías de sección variable, ha sido abordada en otras investigaciones mayoritariamente de forma experimental o mediante simulación usando modelos de turbulencia menos complejos y no mediante LES. El patrón de flujo que se verifica en una tubería con expansión es muy complejo y dicha configuración geométrica se halla en múltiples aplicaciones industriales que involucran el transporte de partículas sólidas, por ello es de gran interés su estudio. Como hecho innovador, en esta tesis no solo se resuelven las estadísticas de velocidad del fluido y las partículas en tuberías con diferentes tamaños de expansión y diferentes regímenes de flujo sino que se caracteriza, usando diversas formulaciones del número de Stokes y el parámetro de arrastre, el ingreso y acumulación de partículas dentro de la zona de recirculación, obteniéndose resultados coincidentes con datos experimentales. ABSTRACT The objective of this Thesis research is to study the turbulent flow laden with solid particles through channels and pipes with using Eulerian-Lagrangian approach. The flow field of the transport phase (air ) is solved using large eddy simulation ( LES ) implemented in a program of finite volume while the governing equations of the dispersed phase are resolved by means of a particle Lagrangian tracking algorithm which was developed and coupled to principal program flow solver . We studied systematically and progressively the fluid interaction → particle ( one- way coupling ) , through different geometric configurations in Cartesian coordinates ( channel with constant and variable section) and in cylindrical coordinates ( pipes with constant section and variable section ) covering different Reynolds numbers and different particle sizes, all results have been compared with previously published data . The study of multiphase flow through, pipes with variable section has been addressed in other investigations predominantly experimentally or by simulation using less complex models and no turbulence by LES. The flow pattern is verified in a pipe expansion is very complex and this geometry is found in many industrial applications involving the transport of solid particles, so it is of great interest to study. As an innovator fact , in this Thesis not only finds fluid velocity statistics and particles with different sizes of pipe expansion and different flow regimes but characterized, using various formulations of the Stokes number and the drag parameter are resolved, the entry and accumulation of particles within the recirculation zone , matching results obtained with experimental data.
Resumo:
The planar and axisymmetric variable-density flows induced in a quiescent gas by a concentrated source of momentum that is simultaneously either a source or a sink of energy are investigated for application to the description of the velocity and temperature far fields in laminar gaseous jets with either large or small values of the initial jet-to-ambient temperature ratio. The source fluxes of momentum and heat are used to construct the characteristic scales of velocity and length in the region where the density differences are of the order of the ambient density, which is slender for the large values of the Reynolds number considered herein. The problem reduces to the integration of the dimensionless boundary-layer conservation equations, giving a solution that depends on the gas transport properties but is otherwise free of parameters. The boundary conditions at the jet exit for integration are obtained by analysing the self-similar flow that appears near the heat source in planar and axisymmetric configurations and also near the heat sink in the planar case. Numerical integrations of the boundary-layer equations with these conditions give solutions that describe accurately the velocity and temperature fields of very hot planar and round jets and also of very cold plane jets in the far field region where the density and temperature differences are comparable to the ambient values. Simple scaling arguments indicate that the point source description does not apply, however, to cold round jets, whose far field region is not large compared with the jet development region, as verified by numerical integrations