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1 – 10 of over 3000Juan A. Morente, Jorge A. Portí, Cedric Blanchard, Bruno P. Besser, Herbert I.M. Lichtenegger, Alfonso Salinas, Enrique A. Navarro and Gregorio J. Molina‐Cuberos
Two transmission line meshes to simulate electromagnetic waves in the Earth's atmosphere are developed, one with the link transmission lines connected in parallel and the other…
Abstract
Purpose
Two transmission line meshes to simulate electromagnetic waves in the Earth's atmosphere are developed, one with the link transmission lines connected in parallel and the other with connections in series.
Design/methodology/approach
The equations describing propagation of waves through these parallel or series meshes are equivalent to the Maxwell equations for TEr or TMr modes in a spherical cavity with lossy dielectric material between the external conducting surfaces, respectively.
Findings
The transmission line meshes are used for a numerical study of the natural electromagnetic noise due to lightning discharges in the Earth‐ionosphere cavity.
Originality/value
The numerical algorithm finds values for Schumann resonances very close to the experimental ones, which allows us to affirm that this methodology is a valid numerical tool for predicting these resonances on other planets or moons as well.
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Jawali C Umavathi, A J Chamkha and Syed Mohiuddin
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effect of exponential viscosity-temperature relation, exponential thermal conductivity-temperature relation and the combined…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effect of exponential viscosity-temperature relation, exponential thermal conductivity-temperature relation and the combined effects of variable viscosity and variable thermal conductivity on steady free convection flow of viscous incompressible fluid in a vertical channel.
Design/methodology/approach
The governing equations are solved analytically using regular perturbation method. The analytical solutions are valid for small variations of buoyancy parameter and the solutions are found up to first order for variable viscosity. Since the analytical solutions have a restriction on the values of perturbation parameter and also on the higher order solutions, the authors resort to numerical method which is Runge-Kutta fourth order method.
Findings
The skin friction coefficient and the Nusselt number at both the plates are derived, discussed and their numerical values for various values of physical parameters are presented in tables. It is found that an increase in the variable viscosity enhances the flow and heat transfer, whereas an increase in the variable thermal conductivity suppresses the flow and heat transfer for variable viscosity, variable thermal conductivity and their combined effect.
Originality/value
This research is relatively original as, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, not much work is done on the considered problem with variable properties.
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A steady, two‐dimensional natural convection flow of a viscous, incompressible fluid having temperature‐dependent viscosity and thermal conductivity about a truncated cone is…
Abstract
A steady, two‐dimensional natural convection flow of a viscous, incompressible fluid having temperature‐dependent viscosity and thermal conductivity about a truncated cone is considered. We use suitable transformations to obtain the equations governing the flow in convenient form and integrate them by using an implicit finite difference method. Perturbation solutions are employed to obtain the solution in the regimes near and far away from the point of truncation. The results are obtained in terms of the local skin friction and the local Nusselt number. Perturbation solutions are compared with the finite difference solutions and found to be in excellent agreement. The dimensionless velocity, viscosity and thermal conductivity distributions are also displayed graphically, showing the effects of various values of the pertinent parameter for smaller values of Prandtl number.
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Mahantesh M. Nandeppanavar, M.C. Kemparaju, R. Madhusudhan and S. Vaishali
The steady two-dimensional laminar boundary layer flow, heat and mass transfer over a flat plate with convective surface heat flux was considered. The governing nonlinear partial…
Abstract
Purpose
The steady two-dimensional laminar boundary layer flow, heat and mass transfer over a flat plate with convective surface heat flux was considered. The governing nonlinear partial differential equations were transformed into a system of nonlinear ordinary differential equations and then solved numerically by Runge–Kutta method with the most efficient shooting technique. Then, the effect of variable viscosity and variable thermal conductivity on the fluid flow with thermal radiation effects and viscous dissipation was studied. Velocity, temperature and concentration profiles respectively were plotted for various values of pertinent parameters. It was found that the momentum slip acts as a boost for enhancement of the velocity profile in the boundary layer region, whereas temperature and concentration profiles decelerate with the momentum slip.
Design/methodology/approach
Numerical Solution is applied to find the solution of the boundary value problem.
Findings
Velocity, heat transfer analysis is done with comparing earlier results for some standard cases.
Originality/value
100
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Shilpa Chaudhary, Sunita Deswal and Sandeep Singh Sheoran
This study aims to analyse the behaviour of plane waves within a nonlocal transversely isotropic visco-thermoelastic medium having variable thermal conductivity.
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to analyse the behaviour of plane waves within a nonlocal transversely isotropic visco-thermoelastic medium having variable thermal conductivity.
Design/methodology/approach
The concept of enunciation is used in the generalized theory of thermoelasticity in accordance with the Green–Lindsay and Eringen’s nonlocal elasticity models. The linear viscoelasticity model developed by Kelvin–Voigt is used to characterize the viscoelastic properties of transversely isotropic materials.
Findings
It has been noticed that three plane waves, which are coupled together, travel through the medium at three different speeds. The derivation of reflection coefficients and energy ratios for reflected waves is carried out by incorporating suitable boundary conditions. Numerical computations are performed for the amplitude ratios, phase speeds and energy partition and displayed in graphical form.
Originality/value
The outcomes of the numerical simulation demonstrate that the amplitude ratios are significantly influenced by variable thermal conductivity, nonlocal parameters and viscosity. It is further observed from the plots that the phase speeds in a transversely isotropic medium depend on the angle of incidence. In addition, it has been established that the energy is preserved during the reflection phenomenon.
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Mehbub‐ur Rahman and René Marklein
The purpose of this paper is to present a time‐domain technique to compute the electromagnetic wave field and to reconstruct the permittivity and electric conductivity profile of…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to present a time‐domain technique to compute the electromagnetic wave field and to reconstruct the permittivity and electric conductivity profile of a one‐dimensional slab of finite length.
Design/methodology/approach
The forward scattering problem is solved by a Green's function formulation to generate synthetic data that are used as a testbed for the inversion scheme. The inverse scattering problem is solved by reconstructing the unknown permittivity and electric conductivity profile of the medium with the help of an invariant embedding method.
Findings
The Green's operator maps the incident field on either side of the medium to the field at an arbitrary observation point inside the slab and hence, the internal fields can be computed directly without computing the wave field throughout the entire medium. The invariant embedding method requires a finite time trace of reflection data and therefore it is suitable for reconstructing the material parameters in real‐time.
Practical implications
The implemented methods have been validated against synthetic and measured time domain reflectometry data.
Originality/value
This paper fulfils an identified need to determine unknown one‐dimensional profiles and thus plays an important role in electromagnetics, non‐destructive testing, and geophysics.
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T.S. Dhahi, U. Hashim and M.E. Ali
The purpose of this paper was to systematically study the electrical properties of 5‐, 42‐ and 75‐nm gap polysilicon structures to evaluate the potentiality of these structures to…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper was to systematically study the electrical properties of 5‐, 42‐ and 75‐nm gap polysilicon structures to evaluate the potentiality of these structures to be used in biomolecular sensing devices.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors previously reported the fabrication and morphological characterization of these structures. In this report, they electrically probed the presence of nanogap through current measurement. The effects of electrolytes on the capacitance profiles of these structures were systematically studied with air, water and various dilutions of phosphate buffer saline.
Findings
An increment in capacitance was found with the increment in electrolyte concentration. Improvement in current flow, capacitance, permittivity, and conductivity were observed with the smaller size nanogaps, suggesting their applications in low power consuming devices.
Originality/value
Since nanogap‐based dielectric biosensing devices need to be operated with a low level of current to avoid biomolecular damage, these structures should have potential applications in dielectric‐based biomolecular detection using a low cost dielectric analyser.
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Mahyar Ashouri, Mohammad Mehdi Zarei and Ali Moosavi
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effects of geometrical parameters, eccentricity and perforated fins on natural convection heat transfer in a finned horizontal…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effects of geometrical parameters, eccentricity and perforated fins on natural convection heat transfer in a finned horizontal annulus using three-dimensional lattice Boltzmann flux solver.
Design/methodology/approach
Three-dimensional lattice Boltzmann flux solver is used in the present study for simulating conjugate heat transfer within an annulus. D3Q15 and D3Q7 models are used to solve the fluid flow and temperature field, respectively. The finite volume method is used to discretize mass, momentum and energy equations. The Chapman–Enskog expansion analysis is used to establish the connection between the lattice Boltzmann equation local solution and macroscopic fluxes. To improve the accuracy of the lattice Boltzmann method for curved boundaries, lattice Boltzmann equation local solution at each cell interface is considered to be independent of each other.
Findings
It is found that the maximum heat transfer rate occurs at low fin spacing especially by increasing the fin height and decreasing the internal-cylindrical distance. The effect of inner cylinder eccentricity is not much considerable (up to 5.2% enhancement) while the impact of fin eccentricity is more remarkable. Negative fin eccentricity further enhances the heat transfer rate compared to a positive fin eccentricity and the maximum heat transfer enhancement of 91.7% is obtained. The influence of using perforated fins is more considerable at low fin spacing although some heat transfer enhancements are observed at higher fin spacing.
Originality/value
The originality of this paper is to study three-dimensional natural convection in a finned-horizontal annulus using three-dimensional lattice Boltzmann flux solver, as well as to apply symmetry and periodic boundary conditions and to analyze the effect of eccentric annular fins (for the first time for air) and perforated annular fins (for the first time so far) on the heat transfer rate.
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It is well known that the prefabricated vertical drain (PVD) installation process generates a significant soil disturbance around PVD. This disturbed zone significantly affects…
Abstract
Purpose
It is well known that the prefabricated vertical drain (PVD) installation process generates a significant soil disturbance around PVD. This disturbed zone significantly affects the rate of settlement and excess pore pressure dissipation. However, the characteristics of these zones were still uncertain and difficult to quantify; there remains large discrepancy among researchers. This study aims to develop a simple analytical solution for radial consolidation analysis of PVD-installed deposit considering mandrel-induced disturbance.
Design/methodology/approach
The proposed solution takes into account the nonlinear distributions of both horizontal hydraulic conductivity and compressibility toward the drain. The proposed solution was applied to analyze field behavior of test embankment in New South Wales, Australia.
Findings
Both effects significantly increased the time required to achieve a certain degree of consolidation. The effect of hydraulic conductivity on the consolidation rate was more significant than the effect of compressibility variation. And, the increased compressibility in the soil-disturbed zone due to mandrel installation significantly increased vertical strain of the PVD-improved soil deposit. The predicted results using the proposed analytical solution were in good agreement with the field measurements.
Practical implications
A geotechnical engineer could use the proposed analytical solution to predict consolidation behavior of drainage-installed ground.
Originality/value
Consolidation behavior of PVD-installed ground could be reasonably predicted by using the proposed solution with considering variations of both hydraulic conductivity and compressibility due to PVD installation.
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Rajul Garg, Harishchandra Thakur and Brajesh Tripathi
The study aims to highlight the behaviour of one-dimensional and two-dimensional fin models under the natural room conditions, considering the different values of dimensionless…
Abstract
Purpose
The study aims to highlight the behaviour of one-dimensional and two-dimensional fin models under the natural room conditions, considering the different values of dimensionless Biot number (Bi). The effect of convection and radiation on the heat transfer process has also been demonstrated using the meshless local Petrov–Galerkin (MLPG) approach.
Design/methodology/approach
It is true that MLPG method is time-consuming and expensive in terms of man-hours, as it is in the developing stage, but with the advent of computationally fast new-generation computers, there is a big possibility of the development of MLPG software, which will not only reduce the computational time and cost but also enhance the accuracy and precision in the results. Bi values of 0.01 and 0.10 have been taken for the experimental investigation of one-dimensional and two-dimensional rectangular fin models. The numerical simulation results obtained by the analytical method, benchmark numerical method and the MLPG method for both the models have been compared with that of the experimental investigation results for validation and found to be in good agreement. Performance of the fin has also been demonstrated.
Findings
The experimental and numerical investigations have been conducted for one-dimensional and two-dimensional linear and nonlinear fin models of rectangular shape. MLPG is used as a potential numerical method. Effect of radiation is also, implemented successfully. Results are found to be in good agreement with analytical solution, when one-dimensional steady problem is solved; however, two-dimensional results obtained by the MLPG method are compared with that of the finite element method and found that the proposed method is as accurate as the established method. It is also found that for higher Bi, the one-dimensional model is not appropriate, as it does not demonstrate the appreciated error; hence, a two-dimensional model is required to predict the performance of a fin. Radiative fin illustrates more heat transfer than the pure convective fin. The performance parameters show that as the Bi increases, the performance of fin decreases because of high thermal resistance.
Research limitations/implications
Though, best of the efforts have been put to showcase the behaviour of one-dimensional and two-dimensional fins under nonlinear conditions, at different Bi values, yet lot more is to be demonstrated. Nonlinearity, in the present paper, is exhibited by using the thermal and material properties as the function of temperature, but can be further demonstrated with their dependency on the area. Additionally, this paper can be made more elaborative by extending the research for transient problems, with different fin profiles. Natural convection model is adopted in the present study but it can also be studied by using forced convection model.
Practical implications
Fins are the most commonly used medium to enhance heat transfer from a hot primary surface. Heat transfer in its natural condition is nonlinear and hence been demonstrated. The outcome is practically viable, as it is applicable at large to the broad areas like automobile, aerospace and electronic and electrical devices.
Originality/value
As per the literature survey, lot of work has been done on fins using different numerical methods; but to the best of authors’ knowledge, this study is first in the area of nonlinear heat transfer of fins using dimensionless Bi by the truly meshfree MLPG method.
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