Search results for "MINERALOGY"
showing 10 items of 1516 documents
Numerical sensitivity studies on the impact of aerosol properties and drop freezing modes on the glaciation, microphysics, and dynamics of clouds
2006
[1] Numerical simulations were performed to investigate the effects of drop freezing in immersion and contact modes for a convective situation. For the description of heterogeneous drop freezing, new approaches were used considering the significantly different ice nucleating efficiencies of various ice nuclei. An air parcel model with a sectional two-dimensional description of the cloud microphysics was employed. Sensitivity studies were undertaken by varying the insoluble particle types as well as the soluble fraction of the aerosol particles showing the effects of these parameters on drop freezing and their possible impact on the vertical cloud dynamics. The soluble fraction ɛ decides whe…
Analysis of thermally induced flows in the laboratory by geoelectrical 3-D tomography
2010
[1] Many natural bodies as well as materials inside industrial installations, such as the Earth's mantle and the glass inside melting furnaces, exchange matter through convection. These processes result from differences in temperature, density, and chemical concentration. In this analysis, we focus on the visualization of thermally driven flows in the laboratory. In nature and in industrial installations, it is difficult to measure the temperature inside the object of interest directly. We benchmark a new DC-geoelectrical 3-D tomography method for temperature measurements that allows obtaining temperature values without influencing the flow pattern. For verification of the method, we use di…
CdTe crystal growth process by the Bridgman method: numerical simulation
2001
Abstract Numerical simulation of the CdTe crystal growth process by the Bridgman method is made by using the commercial computational code FLUENT for the mathematical solution of the governing equations. To reduce computational effort, we have made use of a two level strategy. In the first level we have considered the whole system formed by the ampoule with the liquid–solid charge, the furnace, and the air between them. The heat transfer is assumed to occur by conduction, convection and radiation between the furnace and the ampoule, and only by conduction through the ampoule wall and the solid and liquid CdTe. In the second level we focus on the ampoule and its content, using the values of …
Heat transfer simulation in a vertical Bridgman CdTe growth configuration
1999
Modelling and numerical simulation of crystal growth processes have been shown to be powerful tools in order to understand the physical effects of different parameters on the growth conditions. In this study a finite difference/control volume technique for the study of heat transfer has been employed. This model takes into account the whole system: furnace temperature profile, air gap between furnace walls and ampoule, ampoule geometry, crucible coating if any, solid and liquid CdTe thermal properties, conduction, convection and radiation of heat and phase change. We have used the commercial code FLUENT for the numerical resolution that can be running on a personal computer. Results show th…
Heat generation associated with collision of two plates: the Himalayan geothermal belt
1998
Abstract An analysis of heat discharged by thermal fluids along the c. 3000-km-long Himalayan geothermal belt (HGB) shows that heat transfer is concentrated along 30- to 50-km-wide `heat bands' which are associated with at least 600 geothermal systems. The bands have been interpreted as segments of major, concentric slip lines caused by plastic deformation of the ductile crust within the Asian plate resulting from plate collision. Assuming that this crust behaves like an ideal plastic medium, the heat transfer within and along a slip line can be estimated. It amounts to c. 55 mW/m2 for a 40-km-wide band. Estimates of present-day heat discharges point to 20–35 mW/m2 for convective, and 10–30…
Analysis of the dopant segregation effects at the floating zone growth of large silicon crystals
1997
Abstract A computer simulation is carried out to study the dopant concentration fields in the molten zone and in the growing crystal for the floating zone (FZ) growth of large (> 100mm) Si crystals with the needle-eye technique and with feed/crystal rotation. The mathematical model developed in the previous work is used to calculate the shape of the molten zone and the velocity field in the melt. The influence of melt convection on the dopant concentration field is considered. The significance of the rotation scheme of the feed rod and crystal on the dopant distribution is investigated. The calculated dopant concentration directly at the growth interface is used to determine the normalized …
Convective phenomena in large melts including magnetic fields
2007
The set of characteristic parameters which describe modern large industrial CZ silicon single crystal growth systems is introduced. The main melt flow driving mechanisms are considered, and the characteristic density values of various in the melt acting forces are estimated. The analysis is illustrated with examples of numerical simulation and comparisons with experiments.
The simulation of morphology of dissimilar copper–steel electron beam welds using level set method
2010
Abstract In present work, the simulation of morphology and velocity field in dissimilar electron beam welds formed between the metals with limited solubility is described by the example of copper–stainless steel couple. Finite element software COMSOL Multiphysics 3.5 has been employed due to its flexibility in solving of coupled multiphysical problems. The domination of horizontal flows allows reducing the model to two dimensions. Level set method has been used to determine the position of the interface between immiscible components basing on coupled heat transfer and fluid flow pseudo-stationary solution. The evolution of the shape, fluid flow and mixing pattern in function of operational …
Sintering of copper nanopowders under hydrogen: an in situ X-ray diffraction analysis.
2003
Abstract The reduction by hydrogen gas of the cuprite layer on copper nanocrystals and the subsequent sintering of the nano-particles were studied using in-situ X-ray diffraction and dilatometry. Spherical nanocrystals produced by evaporation and condensation have an average size of 35 nm, exhibiting a large surface curvature. Each nanoparticle is coated with a 3.5 nm layer of Cu 2 O, which is rough and disordered, as revealed by high-resolution electron microscopy. Reduction by hydrogen of this curved cuprite layer occurs at 363 K, which is ≈65 K lower than is observed on a layer supported by micrometer-sized or bulk copper with a flat surface. The reduction process and its effect on the s…
Evidence for Photoinduced Hole Coupling in BaTiO3:Co
1995
A possible photoinduced correlation mechanism in BaTiO 3 : Co is described. The underlying microscopic process is a local hole photoinjection at a Co 3+ site close to a preexisting metastable hole, The Jahn-Teller field at the Co 2+ site transfers this pair of holes in the next cell along the rhombic direction [111] before normal polaronic or band conduction. The spatial extension of this correlation depends on a characteristic «delocalization» length. This unstable conductive state appears to be possibly frozen in a permanent way below T c