• Title/Summary/Keyword: Wake Effects

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Effects of Secondary Flow on the Turbulence Structure of a Flat Plate Wake (2차유동이 평판후류의 난류구조에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Hyeong Soo;Lee, Joon Sik;Kang, Shin Hyung
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.23 no.9
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    • pp.1073-1084
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    • 1999
  • The effects of secondary flow on the structure of a turbulent wake generated by a flat plate was investigated experimentally. The secondary flow was induced In a $90^{\circ}$ curved duct in which the flat plate wake generator was installed. The wake generator was installed in such a way that the wake velocity gradient exists in the span wise direction of the curved duct. Measurements were made in the plane containing the mean radius of curvature where pressure gradient and curvature effects were small compared with the secondary flow effect. All six components of the Reynolds stresses were measured in the curved duct. Turbulence intensities in the curved wake are higher than those in the straight wake due to an increase of the turbulent kinetic energy production by the secondary flow. In the inner wake region, shear stress and strain in the plane containing the velocity gradient of the wake show opposite signs with respect to each other, so that eddy viscosity Is negative in this region. This indicates that gradient-diffusion type turbulence models are not appropriate to simulate this type of flow.

Characteristics of Fatigue Load in a Wind Turbine by the Wake (후류에 의한 풍력터빈의 피로하중 특성)

  • Kim, Chung-Ok;Eum, Hark-Jin;Nam, Hyun-Woo;Kim, Gui-Shik
    • Journal of the Korean Solar Energy Society
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    • v.31 no.6
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    • pp.57-65
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    • 2011
  • The wake generated by a wind turbine has an effect on performance of a downstream wind turbine as well as mechanical loads. This paper investigated characteristics of fatigue load at the blade root due to the wake effects and quantitatively analyzed its effects at operating condition of a 5MW tripod offshore wind turbine using Bladed 4.1 software. The wake effects was studied the way the wake's center position move from the rotor center to the blade tip to the far-away position where the wake doesn't affect the wind turbine. When wake's center was located on the blade tip or the rotor center, damage equivalent fatigue load was higher than other positions. It was up to 10~14% compared to those of non-wake case. Results of this study would be helpful to design wind turbines and wind farms to have lifetimes more than 20 years of the wind turbine.

A Study on the Characteristics of Cylinder Wake Placed in Thermally Stratified Flow (I) (열성층유동장에 놓인 원주후류의 특성에 대한 연구 (1))

  • 김경천;정양범;김상기
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
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    • v.18 no.3
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    • pp.690-700
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    • 1994
  • The effects of thermal stratification on the flow of a stratified fluid past a circular cylinder were examined in a wind tunnel. In order to produce strong thermal stratifications, a compact heat exchanger type variable electric heater is employed. Linear temperature gradient of up to $250^{\circ}C/m$ can be well sustained. The velocity and temperature profiles in the cylinder wake with a strong thermal gradient of $200^{\circ}C/m$ were measured and the smoke wire flow visualization method was used to investigate the wake characteristics. It is found that the temperature field effects as an active contaminant, so that the mean velocity and temperature profiles can not sustain their symmetricity about the wake centerline when such a strong thermal gradient is superimposed. It is evident that the turbulent mixing in the upper half section is stronger than that of the lower half of the wake in a stably stratified flow.

Effects of Wake-Passing Orientation and Frequency on Unsteady Boundary Layer Transition on an Airfoil (주기적 통과 후류의 방향과 주파수가 익형 위 비정상 천이경계층에 미치는 영향)

  • Gang, Sin-Hyeong;Park, Tae-Chun;Jeon, U-Pyeong
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.26 no.5
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    • pp.685-694
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    • 2002
  • Effects of wake-passing orientation and frequency on the wake-induced boundary layer transition on a NACA0012 airfoil are investigated. The wakes are generated by rotating cylinders clockwise (CW) and counterclockwise (CCW) around the airfoil. Time- and phase-averaged streamwise mean velocities and turbulent fluctuations are measured with a single hot-wire probe. Wall skin frictions are estimated by the Computational Preston Tube Method (CPM). The pressure distribution on the airfoil is different according to the wake-passing orientation and frequency. Turbulent patches are generated in the laminar boundary layer due to the passing wake and the boundary layer becomes temporarily transitional. The transition process is significantly affected by the pressure gradient and the turbulent patches. For the receding wake, the turbulent patches propagate more rapidly than those for the approaching wake because adverse pressure gradient becomes larger. As the frequency increases, onset location of transition moles upstream and the boundary layer near the trailing edge becomes more transitional.

PIV analysis of free surface effects on flow around a rotating propeller with varying water depth (자유표면과 수심깊이가 회전하는 프로펠러 주위 유동에 미치는 영향에 대한 PIV 해석)

  • Paik Bu Geun;Lee Jung Yeop;Lee Sang Joon
    • 한국가시화정보학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2004.11a
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    • pp.40-43
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    • 2004
  • The effects of free surface on wake behind a rotating propeller were investigated experimentally in a circulating water channel with the variation of water depth. Instantaneous velocity fields were measured using two-frame PIV technique at tow different blade phases and ensemble-averaged to investigate the phase-averaged flow structure in the wake region. For an isolated propeller, the flow behind the propeller is influenced by the propeller rotation and the free surface. The phase-averaged mean velocity fields show that the potential wake and the viscous wake are formed by the boundary layers developed on the blade surfaces. The interaction between the tip vortices and the slipstream causes the oscillating trajectory of tip vortices. Tip vortices are generated periodically and the slipstream contracts in the near-wake region. The presence of free surface affects the wake structure largely, when the water depth is less than 0.6D. The free surface modifies the vortex structure, especially the tip and trailing vortices and flow structure in slipstreams of the propeller wake behind X/D = 0.3.

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Cell-derived Secretome for the Treatment of Renal Disease

  • Kim, Michael W.;Ko, In Kap;Atala, Anthony;Yoo, James J.
    • Childhood Kidney Diseases
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.67-76
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    • 2019
  • Kidney disease is a major global health issue. Hemodialysis and kidney transplantation have been used in the clinic to treat renal failure. However, the dialysis is not an effective long-term option, as it is unable to replace complete renal functions. Kidney transplantation is the only permanent treatment for end-stage renal disease (ESRD), but a shortage of implantable kidney tissues limits the therapeutic availability. As such, there is a dire need to come up with a solution that provides renal functions as an alternative to the current standards. Recent advances in cell-based therapy have offered new therapeutic options for the treatment of damaged kidney tissues. Particularly, cell secretome therapy utilizing bioactive compounds released from therapeutic cells holds significant beneficial effects on the kidneys. This review will describe the reno-therapeutic effects of secretome components derived from various types of cells and discuss the development of efficient delivery methods to improve the therapeutic outcomes.

Development of an Unsteady Aerodynamic Analysis Module for Rotor Comprehensive Analysis Code

  • Lee, Joon-Bae;Yee, Kwan-Jung;Oh, Se-Jong;Kim, Do-Hyung
    • International Journal of Aeronautical and Space Sciences
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.23-33
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    • 2009
  • The inherent aeromechanical complexity of a rotor system necessitated the comprehensive analysis code for helicopter rotor system. In the present study, an aerodynamic analysis module has been developed as a part of rotorcraft comprehensive program. Aerodynamic analysis module is largely classified into airload calculation routine and inflow analysis routine. For airload calculation, quasi-steady analysis model is employed based on the blade element method with the correction of unsteady aerodynamic effects. In order to take unsteady effects - body motion effects and dynamic stall - into account, aerodynamic coefficients are corrected by considering Leishman-Beddoes's unsteady model. Various inflow models and vortex wake models are implemented in the aerodynamic module to consider wake induced inflow. Specifically, linear inflow, dynamic inflow, prescribed wake and free wake model are integrated into the present module. The aerodynamic characteristics of each method are compared and validated against available experimental data such as Elliot's induced inflow distribution and sectional normal force coefficients of AH-1G. In order to validate unsteady aerodynamic model, 2-D unsteady model for NACA0012 airfoil is validated against aerodynamic coefficients of McAlister's experimental data.

Analysis of the Influence of FOD by Aircraft Exhaust Wake (항공기 배기후류가 FOD 발생에 미치는 영향 분석)

  • Cho, Hwankee
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Aviation and Aeronautics
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    • v.30 no.1
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    • pp.12-19
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    • 2022
  • The exhaust wake of an aircraft engine is discharged in a high temperature and high speed, which can damage objects such as an aircraft in the rear. The exhaust wake can lift small foreign substances lying on the ground or falling off, and the floating foreign substances can enter the intake duct of the aircraft moving from the rear and cause engine FOD (Foreign Object Damage). This study experimentally analyzed how the engine exhaust wake generated from military jet fighters affects the movement of foreign substances and evaluated the effects of foreign substances on the damaged area by measuring wake velocity. The simulation and field experimental results confirmed that the effect of exhaust wake increases as the rear position closer, and that foreign substances lifted by the wake can act as FOD to the adjacent rear aircraft.

PIV Analysis of Free Surface Effects on Flow Around a Rotating Propeller with Varying Water Depth (자유표면과 수심깊이가 회전하는 프로펠러 주위 유동에 미치는 영향에 대한 PIV 해석)

  • Paik, Bu-Geun;Lee, Jung-Yeop;Lee, Sang-Joon
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.42 no.5 s.143
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    • pp.427-434
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    • 2005
  • The free surface influenced the wake behind a rotating propeller and its effects were investigated experimentally in a circulating water channel with the variation of water depth. Instantaneous velocity fields were measured using two-frame PIV technique and ensemble-averaged to study the phase-averaged flow structure in the wake region. For an isolated propeller, the flow behind the propeller is affected only by the propeller rotation speed, the leading on the blades and the proximity of the propeller to the free surface. The phase-averaged mean velocity fields show that the potential wake and the viscous wake developed on the blade surfaces. The interaction between the tip vortices and the slipstream causes the oscillating trajectory of tip vortices. The presence of the free surface greatly affected the wake structure, especially for propeller immersion depth of 0.6D. At small immersion depths, the free surface modified the tip and trailing vortices and the slipstream flow structure downstream of X/D = 0.3 in the propeller wake.

Numerical and wind tunnel simulation of pollutant dispersion in the near wake of buildings

  • Wang, X.;McNamara, K.F.
    • Wind and Structures
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    • v.8 no.6
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    • pp.427-442
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    • 2005
  • Numerical and wind tunnel simulations of pollutant dispersion around rectangular obstacles with five aspect ratios have been conducted in order to identify the effects of flow patterns induced by buildings on plume dispersion in the near wake of buildings. An emission from a low source located upwind of obstacles was used in this simulation. The local flow patterns and concentrations around a cubical obstacle were initially investigated using three RANS turbulence models, (the standard $k-{\varepsilon}$, Shear Stress Transport (SST), Reynolds-Stress RSM turbulence model) and also using Large-eddy simulation (LES). The computed concentrations were compared with those measured in the wind tunnel. Among the three turbulence models, the SST model offered the best performance and thus was used in further investigations. The results show, for normal aspect ratios of width to height, that concentrations in the near wake are appreciably affected because of plume capture by the horseshoe vortex and convection by the vertical vortex pairs. These effects are less important for high aspect ratios. Vertical vortex pairs present a strong ability to exchange mass vertically and acts efficiently to reduce ground-level concentrations in the near wake.