• Title/Summary/Keyword: hydraulic support

Search Result 156, Processing Time 0.024 seconds

Advanced Wastewater Treatment of Low Concentration Ammonia Using the Immobilized Nitrifier Consortium (고정화 질화세균을 이용한 저농도 암모니아 폐수의 고도처리)

  • Lee, Jung-Hoon;Kim, Byong-Jin;Kim, Yong-Ha;Yi, Gyeong-Beom;Lim, Jun-Heok;Cheon, Jae-Kee;Suh, Kuen-Hack
    • Korean Chemical Engineering Research
    • /
    • v.40 no.6
    • /
    • pp.763-768
    • /
    • 2002
  • This study was performed in the airlift bioreactor using the nitrifier consortium entrapped in polyvinyl alcohol(PVA) for removing low concentration total ammonia nitrogen(TAN). At the superficial air velocity of 0.83 cm/sec, TAN removal rate and removal efficiency was $316.6{\pm}7.2g/m^3{\cdot}day$ and $92.8{\pm}2.2%$ respectively. Removal rate was continuously increased with decreasing hydraulic residence time(HRT) from 0.5 hr to 0.05 hr, whereas removal efficiency decreased with decreasing HRT. The optimum temperature for nitrification was $30^{\circ}C$ at which removal efficiency was $95.5{\pm}1.5%$. Nitrification was effectively performed at low temperature, $10^{\circ}C$. In the pH range from 7 to 9 in the bioreactor, removal rate and removal efficiency was $310{\pm}10g/m^3{\cdot}day$ and $94{\pm}3%$ respectively.

Comparative Experiments to Assess the Effects of Accumulator Nitrogen Injection on Passive Core Cooling During Small Break LOCA

  • Li, Yuquan;Hao, Botao;Zhong, Jia;Wang, Nan
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.49 no.1
    • /
    • pp.54-70
    • /
    • 2017
  • The accumulator is a passive safety injection device for emergency core cooling systems. As an important safety feature for providing a high-speed injection flow to the core by compressed nitrogen gas pressure during a loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA), the accumulator injects its precharged nitrogen into the system after its coolant has been emptied. Attention has been drawn to the possible negative effects caused by such a nitrogen injection in passive safety nuclear power plants. Although some experimental work on the nitrogen injection has been done, there have been no comparative tests in which the effects on the system responses and the core safety have been clearly assessed. In this study, a new thermal hydraulic integral test facility-the advanced core-cooling mechanism experiment (ACME)-was designed and constructed to support the CAP1400 safety review. The ACME test facility was used to study the nitrogen injection effects on the system responses to the small break loss-of-coolant accident LOCA (SBLOCA) transient. Two comparison test groups-a 2-inch cold leg break and a double-ended direct-vessel-injection (DEDVI) line break-were conducted. Each group consists of a nitrogen injection test and a nitrogen isolation comparison test with the same break conditions. To assess the nitrogen injection effects, the experimental data that are representative of the system responses and the core safety were compared and analyzed. The results of the comparison show that the effects of nitrogen injection on system responses and core safety are significantly different between the 2-inch and DEDVI breaks. The mechanisms of the different effects on the transient were also investigated. The amount of nitrogen injected, along with its heat absorption, was likewise evaluated in order to assess its effect on the system depressurization process. The results of the comparison and analyses in this study are important for recognizing and understanding the potential negative effects on the passive core cooling performance caused by nitrogen injection during the SBLOCA transient.

Analysis Model for Design Based on Stiffness Requirement of Direct Drive Electromechanical Actuator (직구동 전기기계식 구동기의 강성요구규격에 기반한 설계용 해석모델)

  • Oh, Sang Gwan;Lee, Hee Joong;Park, Hyun Jong;Oh, Dongho
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Aeronautical & Space Sciences
    • /
    • v.47 no.10
    • /
    • pp.738-746
    • /
    • 2019
  • Instead of hydraulic actuation systems, an electromechanical actuation system is more efficient in terms of weight, cost, and test evaluation in the thrust vector control of the 7-ton gimbal engine used in the Korea Space Launch Vehicle-II(KSLV-II) $3^{rd}$ stage. The electromechanical actuator is a kind of servo actuator with position feedback and uses a BLDC motor that can operate at high vacuum. In the case of the gimballed rocket engine, a synthetic resonance phenomenon may occur due to a combination of a vibration mode of the actuator itself, a bending mode of the launcher structure, and an inertial load of the gimbals engine. When the synthetic resonance occurs, the control of the rocket attitude becomes unstable. Therefore, the requirements for the stiffness have been applied in consideration of the gimbal engine characteristics, the support structure, and the actuating system. For the 7-ton gimbal engine of the KSLV-II $3^{rd}$ stage, the stiffness requirement of the actuation system is $3.94{\times}10^7N/m$, and the direct drive type electromechanical actuator is designed to satisfy this requirement. In this paper, an equivalent stiffness analysis model of a direct drive electromechanical actuator designed based on the stiffness requirements is proposed and verified by experimental results.

Characterizing three-dimensional mixing process in river confluence using acoustical backscatter as surrogate of suspended sediment (부유사 지표로 초음파산란도를 활용한 합류부 3차원 수체혼합 특성 도출)

  • Son, Geunsoo;Kim, Dongsu;Kwak, Sunghyun;Kim, Young Do;Lyu, Siwan
    • Journal of Korea Water Resources Association
    • /
    • v.54 no.3
    • /
    • pp.167-179
    • /
    • 2021
  • In order to characterize the mixing process of confluence for understanding the impacts of a river on the other river, it has been crucial to analyze the spatial mixing patterns for main streams depending on various inflow conditions of tributaries. However, most conventional studies have mostly relied upon hydraulic or water quality numerical models for understanding mixing pattern analysis of confluences, due to the difficulties to acquire a wide spatial range of in-situ data for characterizing mixing process. In this study, backscatters (or SNR) measured from ADCPs were particularly used to track sediment mixing assuming that it could be a surrogate to estimate the suspended sediment concentration. Raw backscatter data were corrected by considering the beam spreading and absorption by water. Also, an optical Laser diffraction instrument (LISST) was used to verify the method of acoustic backscatter and to collect the particle size distribution of main stream and tributary. In addition, image-based spatial distributions of sediment mixture in the confluence were monitored in various flow conditions by using an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), which were compared with the spatial distribution of acoustic backscatter. As results, we found that when acoustic backscatter by ADCPs were well processed, they could be proper indicators to identify the spatial patterns of the three-dimensional mixing process between two rivers. For this study, flow and sediment mixing characteristics were investigated in the confluence between Nakdong and Nam river.

Role of Wetland Plants as Oxygen and Water Pump into Benthic Sediments (퇴적물내의 산소와 물 수송에 관한 습지 식물의 역할)

  • Choi, Jung-Hyun;Park, Seok-Soon
    • Korean Journal of Ecology and Environment
    • /
    • v.37 no.4 s.109
    • /
    • pp.436-447
    • /
    • 2004
  • Wetland plants have evolved specialized adaptations to survive in the low-oxygen conditions associated with prolonged flooding. The development of internal gas space by means of aerenchyma is crucial for wetland plants to transport $O_2$ from the atmosphere into the roots and rhizome. The formation of tissue with high porosity depends on the species and environmental condition, which can control the depth of root penetration and the duration of root tolerance in the flooded sediments. The oxygen in the internal gas space of plants can be delivered from the atmosphere to the root and rhizome by both passive molecular diffusion and convective throughflow. The release of $O_2$ from the roots supplies oxygen demand for root respiration, microbial respiration, and chemical oxidation processes and stimulates aerobic decomposition of organic matter. Another essential mechanism of wetland plants is downward water movement across the root zone induced by water uptake. Natural and constructed wetlands sediments have low hydraulic conductivity due to the relatively fine particle sizes in the litter layer and, therefore, negligible water movement. Under such condition, the water uptake by wetland plants creates a water potential difference in the rhizosphere which acts as a driving force to draw water and dissolved solutes into the sediments. A large number of anatomical, morphological and physiological studies have been conducted to investigate the specialized adaptations of wetland plants that enable them to tolerate water saturated environment and to support their biochemical activities. Despite this, there is little knowledge regarding how the combined effects of wetland plants influence the biogeochemistry of wetland sediments. A further investigation of how the Presence of plants and their growth cycle affects the biogeochemistry of sediments will be of particular importance to understand the role of wetland in the ecological environment.

Numerical modeling of secondary flow behavior in a meandering channel with submerged vanes (잠긴수제가 설치된 만곡수로에서의 이차류 거동 수치모의)

  • Lee, Jung Seop;Park, Sang Deog;Choi, Cheol Hee;Paik, Joongcheol
    • Journal of Korea Water Resources Association
    • /
    • v.52 no.10
    • /
    • pp.743-752
    • /
    • 2019
  • The flow in the meandering channel is characterized by the spiral motion of secondary currents that typically cause the erosion along the outer bank. Hydraulic structures, such as spur dike and groyne, are commonly installed on the channel bottom near the outer bank to mitigate the strength of secondary currents. This study is to investigate the effects of submerged vanes installed in a $90^{\circ}$ meandering channel on the development of secondary currents through three-dimensional numerical modeling using the hybrid RANS/LES method for turbulence and the volume of fluid method, based on OpenFOAM open source toolbox, for capturing the free surface at the Froude number of 0.43. We employ the second-order-accurate finite volume methods in the space and time for the numerical modeling and compare numerical results with experimental measurements for evaluating the numerical predictions. Numerical results show that the present simulations well reproduce the experimental measurements, in terms of the time-averaged streamwise velocity and secondary velocity vector fields in the bend with submerged vanes. The computed flow fields reveal that the streamwise velocity near the bed along the outer bank at the end section of bend dramatically decrease by one third of mean velocity after the installation of vanes, which support that submerged vanes mitigate the strength of primary secondary flow and are helpful for the channel stability along the outer bank. The flow between the top of vanes and the free surface accelerates and the maximum velocity of free surface flow near the flow impingement along the outer bank increases about 20% due to the installation of submerged vanes. Numerical solutions show the formations of the horseshoe vortices at the front of vanes and the lee wakes behind the vanes, which are responsible for strong local scour around vanes. Additional study on the shapes and arrangement of vanes is required for mitigate the local scour.