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This book contains selected papers prepared for the NATO Advanced
Study Institute on "Unsteady Combustion," which was held in Praia
da Granja, Portugal, 6-17 September 1993. Approximately 100
delegates from 14 countries attended. The Institute was the most
recent in a series beginning with "Instrumentation for Combustion
and Flow in Engines," held in Vimeiro, Portugal 1987 and followed
by "Combusting Flow Diagnostics" conducted in Montechoro, Portugal
in 1990. Together, these three Institutes have covered a wide range
of experimental and theoretical topics arising in the research and
development of combustion systems with particular emphasis on
gas-turbine combustors and internal combustion engines. The
emphasis has evolved roughly from instrumentation and experimental
techniques to the mixture of experiment, theory and computational
work covered in the present volume. As the title of this book
implies, the chief aim of this Institute was to provide a broad
sampling of problems arising with time-dependent behaviour in
combustors. In fact, of course, that intention encompasses
practically all possibilities, for "steady" combustion hardly
exists if one looks sufficiently closely at the processes in a
combustion chamber. The point really is that, apart from the
excellent paper by Bahr (Chapter 10) discussing the technology of
combustors for aircraft gas turbines, little attention is directed
to matters of steady performance. The volume is divided into three
parts devoted to the subjects of combustion-induced oscillations;
combustion in internal combustion engines; and experimental
techniques and modelling.
In the tradition of its predecessors, this volume comprises a
selection of the best papers presented at the Ninth International
Symposium on Applications of Laser Techniques to Fluid Mechanics,
held in Lisbon in July 2000.
The papers reflect the state-of-the-art in laser applications of
laser techniques in fluid mechanics describing novel ideas for
instrumentation, instrumentation developments, results of
measurements of wall-bounded flows, free flows and flames and flow
and combustion in engines. The papers demonstrate the continuing
interest in the development of an understanding of new
methodologies and implementation in terms of new instrumentation.
This volume includes revised and extended versions of selected papers presented at the Tenth International Symposium on Applications of Laser Techniques to Fluid Mechanics held in Lisbon in July 2000.The papers describe instrumentation developments for velocity, scalar and multiphase flows and results of measurements of turbulent flows, and combustion and engines. Focus is placed on laser-Doppler anemometry, particle sizing and other methods for the measurement of velocity and scalars, such as particle image velocimetry and laser induced fluorescence. The application of laser techniques to scientific and engineering fluid flow research was emphasized, but contributions to the theory and practice of laser were also considered where they facilitate new improved fluid mechanic research.
Much has been said and written about the abilities of modern
instrumentation to help solve problems of combustion in engines. In
the main, however, the design and fabr ication of combustion
chambers continues to be based on extrapolation of exper ience
gained from use and rig tests, with little input from advanced
techniques such as those based on optical diagnotics. At the same
time, it has become increasingly difficult to design better
combustion chambers without knowledge of the relevant flow
processes. Thus, the future must involve improved understanding
which, in turn, will require detailed measurements of velocity,
temperature and concentration. The need to narrow the gap between
current industrial practice and the acquisition and implementation
of improved techniques motivated the organization of the Advanced
Study Institute upon which this volume is based. This Institute on
Instrumentation for Combustion and Flow in Engines was arranged to
display the needs of industry and the possibilities made available
by modern instrumentation and, at the same time, to make clear the
relative advantages of optical and probe techniques. Held at
Vimeiro during the period from 13 to 26 September, 1987, the
Institute was attended by 120 participants and 16 invited
lecturers.
This book consists of papers prepared for and presented at a NATO
sponsored Advanced Study Institute which was held in Montechoro,
Portugal during the period 16-27 April, 1990. This Institute was
attended by approximately ninety delegates from fifteen countries
and followed from a related Institute held in Vimeiro, Portugal in
1987 (see the book entitled "Instrumentation for Combustion and
Flow in Engines", edited by D. F. G. Dur~o, J. H. Whitelaw and P.
O. Witzel. The purposes of the first Institute related closely to
instrumentation for use in gas-turbine combustors and the cylinders
of internal-combustion engines. These topics were also addressed in
the second Institute, though in a manner which was wider ranging
and chosen to demonstrate and explain the development and
application of measurement methods to combusting flows in general.
The papers contained in this boo~ were selected to provide the
reader with a comprehensive and up-to-date view of the variety of
experimental techniques available to measure in combusting flows.
Included are discussions of their range and applicability,
potential accuracy and ease of use. Thus, the first paper provides
a brief overview and the second an indication of those aspects of
combustion which should influence the choice of flow property to be
measured and the technique to be used.
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Laser Techniques and Applications in Fluid Mechanics - Proceedings of the 6th International Symposium Lisbon, Portugal, 20-23 July, 1992 (Paperback, 1993 ed.)
R.J. Adrian, D.F.G. Durao, F Durst, M.V. Heitor, M. Maeda, …
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R3,002
Discovery Miles 30 020
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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For this sixth volume 01 proceedings stemming lrom a Symposium on
the Applications 01 Laser Techniques to Fluid Techniques, we have
selected thirty one papers which are presented in live chapters.
They represent some 01 the best papers presented at the Sixth
Symposium which was again held at the Calouste Gulbenkian
Foundation in Lisbon, this time lrom 20 to 23 July 1992. The total
number of papers at the Symposium was slightly larger than in 1990
and was selected from a much increased number of abstracts, with a
considerably smaller of accepted manuscripts. Thus, this volume
represents some 01 the best 01 the best. The topics we have chosen
to include are Laser Anemometer Optics and Processing, Two-Phase
Flow Instrumentation, Whole-Field Velocimetry, Complex Flow
Applications and Engine and Combusting Flows, and they show that
there continues to be a healthy interest in the development 01
understanding of the methodology and its implementation in terms 01
new instrumentation, and this is emphasised by the increasing
number 01 companies which have attended the Symposium in recent
years in order to demonstrate their range 01 products. At the same
time, it is clear that there is an increasing range of applications
01 the corresponding laser techniques and this is represented, in
part, by the chapters concerned with Complex and Engine and
Combusting Flows. In general, we are very pleased with the way the
application 01 laser techniques has grown and hope that this se
ries 01 Symposia has played its part.
This book consists of papers prepared for and presented at a NATO
sponsored Advanced Study Institute which was held in Montechoro,
Portugal during the period 16-27 April, 1990. This Institute was
attended by approximately ninety delegates from fifteen countries
and followed from a related Institute held in Vimeiro, Portugal in
1987 (see the book entitled "Instrumentation for Combustion and
Flow in Engines", edited by D. F. G. Dur~o, J. H. Whitelaw and P.
O. Witzel. The purposes of the first Institute related closely to
instrumentation for use in gas-turbine combustors and the cylinders
of internal-combustion engines. These topics were also addressed in
the second Institute, though in a manner which was wider ranging
and chosen to demonstrate and explain the development and
application of measurement methods to combusting flows in general.
The papers contained in this boo~ were selected to provide the
reader with a comprehensive and up-to-date view of the variety of
experimental techniques available to measure in combusting flows.
Included are discussions of their range and applicability,
potential accuracy and ease of use. Thus, the first paper provides
a brief overview and the second an indication of those aspects of
combustion which should influence the choice of flow property to be
measured and the technique to be used.
|
Laser Techniques Applied to Fluid Mechanics - Selected Papers from the 9th International Symposium Lisbon, Portugal, July 13-16, 1998 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2000)
R.J. Adrian, D.F.G. Durao, F Durst, M.V. Heitor, M. Maeda, …
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R1,648
Discovery Miles 16 480
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In the tradition of its predecessors, this volume comprises a
selection of the best papers presented at the Ninth International
Symposium on Applications of Laser Techniques to Fluid Mechanics,
held in Lisbon in July 2000.
The papers reflect the state-of-the-art in laser applications of
laser techniques in fluid mechanics describing novel ideas for
instrumentation, instrumentation developments, results of
measurements of wall-bounded flows, free flows and flames and flow
and combustion in engines. The papers demonstrate the continuing
interest in the development of an understanding of new
methodologies and implementation in terms of new instrumentation.
|
Turbulent Shear Flows I - Selected Papers from the First International Symposium on Turbulent Shear Flows, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA, April 18-20, 1977 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1979)
F Durst, B.E. Launder, F.W. Schmidt, J.H. Whitelaw
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R2,965
Discovery Miles 29 650
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The present book contains papers that have been selected from
contributions to the First International Symposium on Turbulent
Shear Flows which was held from the 18th to 20th April 1977 at The
Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA.
Attend ees from close to 20 countries presented over 100
contributions at this meeting in which many aspects of the current
activities in turbulence research were covered. Five topics
received particular attention at the Symposium: Free Flows Wall
Flows Recirculating Flows Developments in Reynolds Stress Closures
New Directions in Modeling This is also reflected in the five
chapters of this book with contributions from research workers from
different countries. Each chapter covers the most valuable
contributions of the conference to the particular chapter topic. Of
course, there were many additional good con tributions to each
subject at the meeting but the limitation imposed on the length of
this volume required that a selection be made. The realization of
the First International Symposium on Turbulent Shear Flows was p-
sible by the general support of: U. S. Army Research Office U. S.
Navy Research Office Continuing Education Center of The
Pennsylvania State University The conference organization was
carried out by the organizing committee consisting of: F. Durst,
Universitat Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Fed. Rep. of Germany V. W.
Goldschmidt, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind. , USA B. E.
Launder, University of California, Davis, Calif. , USA F. W.
Schmidt, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Penna.
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Turbulent Shear Flows 3 - Selected Papers from the Third International Symposium on Turbulent Shear Flows, The University of California, Davis, September 9-11, 1981 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1982)
L. J. S Bradbury, F Durst, B.E. Launder, F.W. Schmidt, J.H. Whitelaw
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R2,953
Discovery Miles 29 530
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In spite of intensive efforts over many decades, the problem of
turbulence remains as challenging as ever and the number of papers,
books and conferences on this topic con tinues to grow. As
experimental techniques and computing power have developed, the
breadth of investigations into the structure and development of
turbulent flows has in creased to encompass many diverse fields of
application in engineering, physics, biolo gy and so on. As a
consequence, it is now very difficult for a single research worker
to keep in touch with the many developments that are taking place
in turbulence. One of the few opportunities for obtaining some
overall view of the subject arises from large international
symposia on turbulence and, although they have some drawbacks, it
is this opportunity that is one of their main merits. The
International Symposium on Turbulent Shear Flows has now been held
on three occasions and they seem to be established as a major
opportunity for papers on a very diverse range of topics to be
presented at a single meeting. This volume is a collec tion of
papers from the third symposium that was held at the University of
California, Davis from 9-11 September 1981. The papers are divided
into four sections entitled Wall Flows, Scalar Transport,
Recirculating Flows and Fundamentals. This collection represents
about a third of the total number of papers presented.
This book contains selected papers prepared for the NATO Advanced
Study Institute on "Unsteady Combustion", which was held in Praia
da Granja, Portugal, 6-17 September 1993. Approximately 100
delegates from 14 countries attended. The Institute was the most
recent in a series beginning with "Instrumentation for Combustion
and Flow in Engines", held in Vimeiro, Portugal 1987 and followed
by "Combusting Flow Diagnostics" conducted in Montechoro, Portugal
in 1990. Together, these three Institutes have covered a wide range
of experimental and theoretical topics arising in the research and
development of combustion systems with particular emphasis on
gas-turbine combustors and internal combustion engines. The
emphasis has evolved roughly from instrumentation and experimental
techniques to the mixture of experiment, theory and computational
work covered in the present volume. As the title of this book
implies, the chief aim of this Institute was to provide a broad
sampling of problems arising with time-dependent behaviour in
combustors. In fact, of course, that intention encompasses
practically all possibilities, for "steady" combustion hardly
exists if one looks sufficiently closely at the processes in a
combustion chamber. The point really is that, apart from the
excellent paper by Bahr (Chapter 10) discussing the technology of
combustors for aircraft gas turbines, little attention is directed
to matters of steady performance. The volume is divided into three
parts devoted to the subjects of combustion-induced oscillations;
combustion in internal combustion engines; and experimental
techniques and modelling.
This volume contains papers selected from contributions made to the
Fourth Symposium on "Applications of Laser Anemometry." It is
divided into three chapters concerned respectively with
single-phase flows, two-phase flows and instrumentation. In the
first chapter, the papers are concerned with fundamental
investigations of shear flows as well as important applications
including the Earth's boundary layer and internal combustion
engines. The two-phase flows include applications of amplitude- and
phase-based techniques to the sprays of Diesel and gas-turbine
engines and to a fluidised bed and slurry flows. The new
instrumentation includes miniature and multipoint LDV arrangements,
PIDV and photochromic visualisation as well as improved
explanations of laser-based systems.
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Developments in Laser Techniques and Fluid Mechanics - Selected Papers from the 8th International Symposium, Lisbon, Portugal 8-11 July, 1996 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1997)
R.J. Adrian, D.F.G. Durao, F Durst, M.V. Heitor, M. Maeda, …
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R3,013
Discovery Miles 30 130
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume comprises a selection of the best papers presented at
the Eighth International Symposium on Applications of Laser
Techniques to Fluid Mechanics, held in Lisbon in July 1996.
The papers describe novel ideas for instrumentation,
instrumentation developments, results of measurements of
wall-bounded flows, free flows and flames and flow and combustion
in engines. The papers demonstrate the continuing interest in the
development of an understanding of new methodologies and
implementation in terms of new instrumentation.
|
Turbulent Shear Flows 4 - Selected Papers from the Fourth International Symposium on Turbulent Shear Flows, University of Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, FRG, September 12-14, 1983 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1985)
L. J. S Bradbury, F Durst, B.E. Launder, F.W. Schmidt, J.H. Whitelaw
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R4,492
Discovery Miles 44 920
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The Fourth International Symposium on Turbulent Shear Flows took
place at Karlsruhe University in Germany. The papers presented at
this Symposium encompassed a similar range to that of the previous
meetings, with greater emphasis placed on experimental work, and
continued a trend towards the examination of complex flows. Once
again, three dimensional, recirculating and reacting flows featured
strongly in the programme and were complemented by consideration of
two-phase flows and discussions of both numerical and experimental
techniques. The Symposium brought together some 300 participants
from all over the world, and it was evident that there is a need
for Turbulent Shear Flows Symposia, in order to obtain and
communicate new information useful to researchers in the field of
turbulent flows and of interest to engineers who design flow
equipment. This volume contains 27 papers selected from more than
100 presentations at the Symposium which have been reviewed and
edited before publication. Together they provide an indication of
the status of current knowledge on the subjects represented at the
Sympo sium. They are grouped into four sections, namely: *
Fundamentals * Free Flows * Boundary Layers * Reacting Flows As in
previous volumes in this series, each section begins with an
introductory article con sidering the papers which follow in the
broader context of available literature and current research.
Much has been said and written about the abilities of modern
instrumentation to help solve problems of combustion in engines. In
the main, however, the design and fabr ication of combustion
chambers continues to be based on extrapolation of exper ience
gained from use and rig tests, with little input from advanced
techniques such as those based on optical diagnotics. At the same
time, it has become increasingly difficult to design better
combustion chambers without knowledge of the relevant flow
processes. Thus, the future must involve improved understanding
which, in turn, will require detailed measurements of velocity,
temperature and concentration. The need to narrow the gap between
current industrial practice and the acquisition and implementation
of improved techniques motivated the organization of the Advanced
Study Institute upon which this volume is based. This Institute on
Instrumentation for Combustion and Flow in Engines was arranged to
display the needs of industry and the possibilities made available
by modern instrumentation and, at the same time, to make clear the
relative advantages of optical and probe techniques. Held at
Vimeiro during the period from 13 to 26 September, 1987, the
Institute was attended by 120 participants and 16 invited
lecturers.
This volume includes revised and extended versions of selected
papers presented at the Tenth International Symposium on
Applications of Laser Techniques to Fluid Mechanics held at the
Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon, during the period of July
10 to 13, 2000. The papers describe instrumentation developments
for Velocity, Scalar and Multi-Phase Flows and results of
measurements of Turbulent Flows, and Combustion and Engines. The
papers demonstrate the continuing and healthy interest in the
development of understanding of new methodologies and
implementation in terms of new instrumentation. The prime objective
of the Tenth Symposium was to provide a forum for the presentation
of the most advanced research on laser techniques for flow
measurements, and communicate significant results to fluid
mechanics. The application of laser techniques to scientific and
engineering fluid flow research was emphasized, but contributions
to the theory and practice of laser methods were also considered
where they facilitate new improved fluid mechanic research.
Attention was placed on laser-Doppler anemometry, particle sizing
and other methods for the measurement of velocity and scalars, such
as particle image velocimetry and laser induced fluorescence.
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