Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Radiation ignition'
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Ring, Harvey Brents III. "Radiative ignition of a wall jet." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/18937.
Full textCoffin, Derrick Brian. "Effects of turbulence on radiation induced ignition of solid fuels." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/17879.
Full textMayo, M. E. "Interaction of laser radiation with urinary calculi." Thesis, Department of Applied Science, Security and Resillience, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1826/4013.
Full textMayo, Michael E. "Interaction of laser radiation with urinary calculi." Thesis, Cranfield University, 2009. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/4013.
Full textFrankman, David J. "Radiation and Convection Heat Transfer in Wildland Fire Environments." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2009. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd3066.pdf.
Full textGaillard, Romain Philippe. "The interaction of picosecond high intensity laser pulses with preformed plasmas and solid targets." Thesis, Imperial College London, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.313744.
Full textGallacher, Jonathan R. "The Influence of Season, Heating Mode and Slope Angle on Wildland Fire Behavior." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2016. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5691.
Full textPhuoc, Tran Xuan. "Ignition of polymeric material under radiative and convective exposure." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/18399.
Full textLi, Xianming. "The effect of gas-surface interactions on radiative ignition of PMMA." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/15888.
Full textHenson, Jonathan Charles. "Numerical simulation of spark ignition engines with special emphasis on radiative heat transfer." Thesis, Loughborough University, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.297589.
Full textBillaud, Yann. "Modélisation hybride stochastique-déterministe des incendies de forêts." Thesis, Aix-Marseille 1, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011AIX10100/document.
Full textMost of the area burned by forest fires is attributable to the few fires that escape initial attack to become large. As a consequence large-scale fires produce a large amount of green-house gases and particles which contribute to the global warming. Heterogeneous conditions of weather, fuel, and topography are generally encountered during the propagation of large fires. This shapes irregular contours and fractal post-fire patterns, as revealed by satellite maps. Among existing wildfire spread models, stochastic models seem to be good candidates for studying the erratic behavior of large fires, due to the above-mentioned heterogeneous conditions. The model we developed is a variant of the so-called small-world network model. Flame radiation and fuel piloted ignition are taken into account in a deterministic way at the macroscopic scale. The radiative interaction domain of a burning cell is determined from Monte Carlo simulation using the solid flame model. Some cases are studied, ranging from relatively simple to more complex geometries like an irregular flame fronts or an ethanol pool fire. Then, a numerical model is developed to investigate the piloted ignition of litters composed of maritime pine needles. A genetic algorithm is used to locate a set of model parameters that provide optimal agreement between the model predictions and the experimental data in terms of ignition time and mass loss. The model results had shown the importance of char surface oxidation for heat fluxes close to the critical flux for ignition. Finally, the small-world network model was used to simulate fire patterns in heterogeneous landscapes. Model validation was achieved to an acceptable degree in terms of contours, burned area and fractal properties, through comparison of results with data from a small controlled bushfire experiment and a historical Mediterranean fire. Therefore, it has been proven to be a powerful tool in the sizing of fortifications as fuel break areas at the wildland urban interface or in the understanding of atypical behavior in particular configurations (talweg, slope breaking, etc.). It has also been used for the optimization of an in-situ sensor network whose purpose is to detect precociously and to locate precisely small fires, preventing them from spreading and burning out of control. Our objective was to determine the minimum number and placement of sensors deployed in the forest
Vauzour, Benjamin. "Étude expérimentale du transport d'électrons rapides dans le cadre de l'allumage rapide pour la fusion inertielle." Thesis, Bordeaux 1, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012BOR14496/document.
Full textThe framework of this PhD thesis is the validation of the fast ignition scheme for the nuclear fusion by inertial confinement. It consists in the experimental study of the various processes involved in fast electron beams propagation, produced by intense laser pulses (10^{19} W.cm-2), through dense matter either solid or compressed. In this work we present the results of three experiments carried out on different laser facilities in order to generate fast electron beams in various conditions and study their propagation in different states of matter, from the cold solid to the warm and dense plasma.The first experiment was performed with a high intensity contrast on the UHI100 laser facility (CEA Saclay). The study of fast electron energy deposition inside thin aluminium targets highlights a strong target heating at shallow depths, where the collectivs effects are predominant, thus producing a steep temperature profile between front (300eV) and rear (20eV) sides over 20µm thickness. A numerical simulation of the experiment shows that this temperature gradient induces the formation of a shock wave, breaking through the rear side of the target and thus leading to increase the thermal emission. The experimental chronometry of the shock breakthrough allowed validating the model of the collective transport of electrons.Two other experiments were dedicated to the study of fast electron beam propagation inside compressed targets. In the first experiment on the LULI2000 laser facility, the plane compression geometry allowed to precisely dissociate the energy losses due to resistive effects from those due to the collisional ones. By comparing our experimental results with simulations, we observed a significative increase of the fast electron beam energy losses with the compression and the target heating to temperatures close to the Fermi temperature. The second experiment, performed in a cylindrical geometry, demonstrated a fast electron beam guiding phenomenon due to self-generated magnetic fields in presence of sharp radial resistivity gradients. Furthermore, in the temperature and density conditions achieved here, the increase of collisional energy losses with density is compensated by the decreasing resistive energy losses due to the transition of the conductivity into the high-temperatures Spitzer regime
Drissi, Mohamed. "Un modèle de propagation de feux de végétation à grande échelle." Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013AIXM4704.
Full textThe present work is devoted to the development of a hybrid model for predicting the rate of spread of wildland fires at a large scale, taking into account the local heterogeneities related to vegetation, topography, and meteorological conditions. Some methods for generating amorphous network, representative of real vegetation landscapes, are proposed. Mechanisms of heat transfer from the flame front to the virgin fuel are modeled: radiative preheating from the flame and embers, convective preheating from hot gases, radiative heat losses and piloted ignition of the receptive vegetation item. Flame radiation is calculated by combining the solid flame model with the Monte Carlo method and by taking into account its attenuation by the atmospheric layer between the flame and the receptive vegetation. The model is applied to simple configurations where the fire spreads on a flat or inclined terrain, with or without a constant wind. Model results are in good agreement with literature data. A sensitivity study is conducted to identify the most influential parameters of the model. Eventually, the model is validated by comparing predicted fire patterns with those obtained from a prescribed burning in Australia and from a historical fire that occurred in Corsica in 2009, showing a very good agreement in terms of fire patterns, rate of spread, and burned area
English, Justin. "HEAT TRANSFER CHARACTERISTICS IN WILDLAND FUELBEDS." UKnowledge, 2014. http://uknowledge.uky.edu/me_etds/52.
Full textBeaucourt-Jacquet, Céline. "Étude expérimentale du guidage du faisceau d’électrons dans le cadre de l’allumage rapide de cibles de fusion." Thesis, Bordeaux 1, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012BOR14741/document.
Full textThe work presented in this thesis is realised in the framework of the fast ignition of inertial confinement fusion for energy production. In this scheme the compression and the ignition phases are decoupled. During the second phase, the electron beam must cross over 300 µm in the dense fuel to deposit its energy in the dense core and ignite the fusion reactions.The major problem of the scheme is related to the divergence of the electron beam while it crosses the dense matter. Among the different propositions to inhibit the electron divergence we consider here the schemes without cone that are based on the effect of magnetic collimation. In particular, A.P.L. Robinson and his co-authors [Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 025002, 2008] suggested a simple way to control the electron beam divergence by using a sequence of two laser pulses. The first one creates a magnetic background favourable for the confinement of the second electron beam resulting from the second interaction. The validation of this scheme is the major goal of this thesis.We present the results of experimental sudies and numerical modeling of the electron beam guiding with help of two consequent laser pulses. The experiment was performed on the Vulcan facility at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory at Didcot in UK, based on the proposal submitted by an international group of scientists in the framework of the European project for inertial fusion energy HiPER. This experiment allowed us to define a combination of laser and target parameters where the electron beam guiding takes place. The analysis of experimental data and numerical modelling is realised with the hydrodynamic code CHIC coupled to the charged particules transport module M1. The interpretation of the experimental results allowed us to explain the experimental data and the physical basis of guiding and to define the magnetic conditionflavourable to the electron beam guidance
Yang, Jeng Renn, and 楊正任. "Effects of Support Fiber Conduction and Liquid-Phase Radiative Absoprtion on Droplet Evaporation and Analysis of n-Heptane Droplet Ignition Considering Detailed Chemistry." Thesis, 2001. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/69499593998917870633.
Full text國立清華大學
動力機械工程學系
89
This work provides the quantitative analyses of droplet evaporation and ignition. Many droplet evaporation and ignition experiments are performed in a furnace and the droplet is supported by a fiber to avoid the experimental difficulties associated with free-falling droplets. In such arrangements, the droplet obtains additional heat transfer from the support fiber and radiation from the furnace wall. First, we investigate the effect of support fiber conduction on droplet evaporation in a weakly convective flow experimentally and theoretically. Experimentally, n-heptane or n-hexadecane droplet with initial diameter of 700 mm or 1000 mm was suspended at the tip of a horizontal or vertical quartz fiber (diameter of 50 mm, 150 mm, or 300 mm) to evaporate in an upward hot gas flow (temperature of 490 K or 750 K) generated by a flat-flame burner or an electrical heater. For all the tests, the droplet Reynolds number ranged from 5 to 17. Theoretically, a simple one-dimensional transient conduction model is formulated in combination with a transient droplet evaporation model which accounts for the heat and mass transfer between the droplet and the ambience with the film theory. The calculations agree well with experiments for all the droplet diameter histories measured, with the effect of fiber conduction on the evaporation rate correctly predicted. In general, fiber conduction leads to enhancement of evaporation, with stronger effect for a lower gas temperature and a larger fiber. However, the total heat inputs are attenuated for fiber diameter of 300 mm. Fiber orientation effect appears negligible. Also found is that the evaporation rate is enhanced in an oxygen-containing gas flow due to the additional oxidation heating around the droplet. Secondly, fiber conduction and liquid-phase radiative absorption are considered in the comprehensive simulation of droplet evaporation under microgravity for pressures up to 20atm. For droplet size variation and evaporation rate constants, good agreement is found between our calculations and the experimental data of Nomura et al. (1996). Radiative absorption and fiber conduction enhance the evaporation rate significantly. Our results indicate that the discrepancy between current theoretical and experimental results is because these models ignored the conduction into the droplet through the fiber and the liquid-phase absorption of the radiation from the furnace wall. These effects existed since all the experiments for microgravity droplet evaporation have been conducted in a hot furnace with the droplet suspended by a fiber. At a low temperature of 470K, the discrepancies are mainly due to the additional fiber conduction, while at a high temperature of 750K, the liquid-phase radiative absorption becomes mainly responsible. Thirdly, we investigate autoignition of n-heptane droplets under microgravity numerically. Our model includes the transience in both the gas and liquid phases, non-ideal thermophysical properties, and the 116-step heptane reaction mechanism of Griffiths. Two-stage ignition manifests for ambient temperature less than 900 K at elevated pressures of 0.5 and 1.0 MPa. The predicted first delays and total delays agree well with the experimental data in the literature. The second delay decreases greatly with increasing pressure because the cool flame shifts closer to the droplet and the evaporation strengthens to yield a stronger Stefan flow supplying more fuel vapor for reaction. The Stefan flow effect, in combination with the inhomogeneous temperature and fuel vapor distributions, explains why the NTC present in homogeneous mixtures is not observed in droplet ignition experiments. For a droplet smaller than the minimum ignition diameter, only first ignition with cool flame is reached. The absence of ZTC in our simulations may be attributed to the weaker inverse temperature dependence of the reaction mechanism adopted.