• Title/Summary/Keyword: Local equilibrium approximation

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Degradation of SOFC Cell/Stack Performance in Relation to Materials Deterioration

  • Yokokawa, Harumi;Horita, Teruhisa;Yamaji, Katsuhiko;Kishimoto, Haruo;Brito, M.E.
    • Journal of the Korean Ceramic Society
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    • v.49 no.1
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    • pp.11-18
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    • 2012
  • The characteristic features of solid oxide fuel cells are reviewed from the viewpoint of the thermodynamic variables to be developed inside cells/stacks particularly in terms of gradients of chemical potential, electrical potential and temperature and corresponding flows of air, fuel, electricity and heat. Examples of abrupt destruction of SOFC systems were collected from failures in controlling their steady flows, while continuous degradation was caused by materials behaviors under gradients of chemical potentials during a long operation. The local equilibrium approximation has been adopted in NEDO project on the durability/reliability of SOFC stacks/systems; this makes it possible to examine the thermodynamic stability/reactivity as well as mass transfer under the thermodynamic variable gradients. Major results of the NEDO project are described with a focus on degradation/deterioration of electrolyte and electrode materials.

Heat Transfer of an Evaporating Liquid on a Horizontal Plate

  • Joo, Sang-Woo;Park, Min-Soo;Kim, Min-Suk
    • Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology
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    • v.19 no.8
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    • pp.1649-1661
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    • 2005
  • We consider. a horizontal static liquid layer on a planar solid boundary. The layer is evaporating when the plate is heated. Vapor recoil and thermo-capillary are discussed along with the effect of mass loss and vapor convection due to evaporating liquid and non-equilibrium thermodynamic effects. These coupled systems of equations are reduced to a single evolution equation for the local thickness of the liquid layer by using a long-wave asymptotics. The partial differential equation is solved numerically.

Metamagnetism in $Fe_3$Al Alloy

  • Rhee, Joo-Yull;Lee, Young-Pak
    • Journal of the Korean Vacuum Society
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    • v.12 no.S1
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    • pp.60-62
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    • 2003
  • In this study we report the results of ab initio first-principles calculations to investigate the possibility of metamagnetic behavior in Fe$_3$Al alloy. We used the WIEN2k package of full-potential linearized-augmented- plane-wave method within the local-spin-density approximation to the density-functional theory. The exchange-correlation functional is the generalized-gradient approximation of Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof. The theoretical lattice constant, which is about 0.5% smaller than the experimental one, is obtained by minimizing the total energy. If the volume decreases about 9 % from the equilibrium, the total magnetic moment decreases abruptly from 4.6 $\mu_{B}$/f.u. to 4.0 $\mu_{B}$/f.u. Since this change is considerably large (∼14%), it is possible to measure by a simple high-pressure experiment at about 180 kbar.

The Least-Squares Meshfree Method for the Analysis of Rigid-Plastic Deformation (강소성 변형 해석을 위한 최소 제곱 무요소법)

  • 윤성기;권기찬
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.28 no.12
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    • pp.2019-2031
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    • 2004
  • The least-squares formulation for rigid-plasticity based on J$_2$-flow rule and infinitesimal theory and its meshfree implementation using moving least-squares approximation are proposed. In the least-squares formulation the squared residuals of the constitutive and equilibrium equations are minimized. Those residuals are represented in a form of first-order differential system using the velocity and stress components as independent variables. For the enforcement of the boundary and frictional contact conditions, penalty scheme is employed. Also the reshaping of nodal supports is introduced to avoid the difficulties due to the severe local deformation near the contact interface. The proposed least-squares meshfree method does not require any structure of extrinsic cells during the whole process of analysis. Through some numerical examples of metal forming processes, the validity and effectiveness of the method are investigated.

Effect of Brownian Motion in Heat Transfer of H2O-Cu Nanofluid using LBM

  • Li, Kui-Ming;Lee, Yeon-Won
    • Journal of Advanced Marine Engineering and Technology
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    • v.34 no.7
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    • pp.981-990
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    • 2010
  • The main objective of this study is to investigate the fluid flow and the heat transfer characteristics of nanofluids using multi-phase thermal LBM and to realize theenhancement of heat transfer characteristics considered in the Brownian motion. In multi-phase, fluid component($H_2O$) is driven by Boussinesq approximation, and nanoparticles component by the external force gravity and buoyancy. The effect of Brownian motion as a random movement is modified to the internal velocity of nanoparticles(Cu). Simultaneously, the particles of both the phases assume the local equilibrium temperature after each collision. It has been observed that when simulating $H_2O$-Cu nanoparticles, the heat transfer is the highest, at the particle volume fraction 0.5% of the particle diameter 10 nm. The average Nusselt number is increased approximately by 33% at the particle volume fraction 0.5% of the particle diameter 10 nm when compared with pure water.

Development of four-equation turbulence model for prediction of mixed convective heat transfer on a flat plate (수평평판위 의 혼합대류 열전말 계산 을 위한 4-방정식 모델 의 개발)

  • 성형진;정명균
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.193-203
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    • 1983
  • The mixed convective heat transfer problems are characterized by the relatively significant contribution of buoyancy force to the transport processes of momentum and heat. Past analytical studies on this kind of problems have been carried out by employing either the conventional R-.epsilon. turbulence model which includes constant turbulent Prandtl number .sigma.$_{+}$ 1 or an extended R-.epsilon. turbulence model which takes account of the buoyancy effect in appropriate length scale equations. But in the latter case, the temperature variance .the+a.$^{2}$ over bar is approximated by a model under local equilibrium condition and the time scale ratio between velocity and temperature is assumed to be constant. These approximation is known to break down when the buoyancy effect is dominant. The present study is aimed at development of new computational turbulence closure level which can be applied to this rather complex turbulent process. The temperature variance is obtained directly by solving its dynamic transport equation and the time scale ratio which is variable in space is computed by a solution of a dynamic equation for the rate of scalar dissipation .epsilon.$_{\thetod}$ It was found that the computational results are in good agreement with available experimental data of wide range of unstable conditions.

Spin-orbit Coupling Effect on the Structural Optimization: Bismuth Telluride in First-principles (스핀-궤도 각운동량 상호작용의 구조 최적화에 대한 효과: 비스무스 텔루라이드의 제일원리 계산의 경우)

  • Tran, Van Quang;Kim, Miyoung
    • Journal of the Korean Magnetics Society
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.1-6
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    • 2013
  • Spin-orbit coupling (SOC) effect is known to be the physical origin for various exotic magnetic phenomena in the low-dimensional systems. Recently, SOC also draws lots of attention in the study on magnetically doped thermoelectric alloys to determine their properties as the thermoelectric application as well as the topological insulator via the exact electronic structures determination near the Fermi level. In this research, aiming to investigate the spin-orbit coupling effect on the structural properties such as the lattice constants and the bulk modulus of the most widely investigated thermoelectric host material, $Bi_2Te_3$, we carried out the first-principles electronic structure calculation using the all-electron FLAPW (full-potential linearized augmented plane-wave) method. Employing both the local density approximation (LDA) and the generalized gradient approximation (GGA), the structural optimization is achieved by varying the in-plane lattice constant fixing the perpendicular lattice constant and vice versa, to find that the SOC effect increases the equilibrium lattices slightly in both directions while it markedly reduces the bulk modulus value implying the strong orientational dependence, which are attributed to the material's intrinsic structural anisotropy.