Active Fluidic Turn-Down Rectifier
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Handling Dangerous Liquids
1.2. Fluidic Rectification
- Using passive devices specially designed for performing the rectification task. They are called fluidic diodes. Historically, the diode investigated in [8] was a precursor the present-day pure fluidic devices developed half a century later. The operating principle of the diode is generation of a high pressure drop for the reverse flow direction while there is a much lower pressure drop for the forward flow. Without moving components capable of blocking the reverse direction motion, it is impossible to stop the reverse flow completely. As this flow magnitude decreases because of the high resistance, the hydrodynamic phenomena responsible for the resistance to gradually disappear. It is impossible to get to zero. The performance parameter of fluidic diodes is called diodity: it is the ratio of forward and return resistances and is much lower—by several orders of magnitude—than the analogous ratio of the electric semiconductor diodes.
- Capable of getting much higher forward-to-reverse flow ratio are the less known active rectifier devices. invented later, in the 1970s. Their distant precursor operating in analogy with radio electronic rectifiers was patented as [9]. The real diverter forerunner is [10]. Because of the external driving, their reverse flow may be decreased to zero—because it is led to another exit. These devices were first discussed in [10,11,12,13], with [10] the earliest reference. Particular popularity among them gained the device directing the deflected return flow by Coanda effect [14]. It is pf planar design suitable for use in small flow integral circuits. For large flows, e.g. for cooling the core of a nuclear reactor, is the axisymmetric valve [15]. In the literature, these devices are known as RFD, reverse-flow diverters, a term introduced by Tippetts [12,13]. Instead of opposing the return flow by a high resistance, as in the passive diodes, RFDs dump it away. In their basic versions, these devices are characterised by having three terminals: besides the forward flow inlet and the reverse flow inlet (the two terminals of a diode), there is a third terminal through which the reverse flow is discarded.
1.3. Principle of the Investigated Rectifier
2. Experimental Investigation
2.1. Geometry of the Used Model
2.2. Experimental Setup.
2.3. Measurement Results
2.4. Behaviour Law for the Rectifier Model
3. Potential Applications
3.1. Discontinuing a Reaction in an Emergency Situation
3.2. Generating Vacuum in a Dangerous Space
3.3. Impinging Jet of a Dangerous Fluid
4. Multi-phase Alternatives
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Verification of the existence of a new rectifier principle,
- (2)
- Demonstration of the generated time-mean pressure in the device output terminal (pressure difference relative to the atmospheric input), and
- (3)
- Description of several alternative engineering applications, which justify further investigations of the device.
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
C | kg·s2/m2 | Capacitance |
D | m | Mixing tube diameter |
d | m | Nozzle exit diameter |
Eu | Euler number | |
F | m2 | Cross-sectional area |
Fsecond | m2 | Annular inlet cross-sectional area |
fres | Hz | Resonant frequency of pressure waves |
f | Hz | Frequency of piston motion |
Jhose | m2/kg | nertance of connecting hose |
Jsecond | m2/kg | Inertance of annular space |
J | m2/kg | Inertance |
l | m | Tube or hole length |
M | kg | Mass of gas |
P | Pa | Pressure |
Pb | Pa | Barometric pressure |
PY | Pa | Output pressure |
Pa | Time-mean output pressure difference | |
r | J/kg·K | Gas constant |
Re | Reynolds number | |
Sk | Stokes number | |
s | m | Ideal length of displaced gas column |
T | K | Temperature |
V | m3 | Gas volume |
v | m3/kg | Gas specific volume |
ŵ | m/s | Velocity amplitude |
z | m | Piston stroke |
v | m2/s | Viscosity |
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Tesař, V. Active Fluidic Turn-Down Rectifier. Energies 2019, 12, 3181. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12163181
Tesař V. Active Fluidic Turn-Down Rectifier. Energies. 2019; 12(16):3181. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12163181
Chicago/Turabian StyleTesař, Václav. 2019. "Active Fluidic Turn-Down Rectifier" Energies 12, no. 16: 3181. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12163181
APA StyleTesař, V. (2019). Active Fluidic Turn-Down Rectifier. Energies, 12(16), 3181. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12163181