On the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materials

The focus of this work is to understand the current state of permeability measurement and prediction methods for fibrous, porous media and to suggest improvements. For this purpose the most widely used and accepted measurement technique, the channel flow method, is used to experimentally investigate...

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Main Author: Sharma, Sanjay
Other Authors: Siginer, Dennis A.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Wichita State University 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10057/3288
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spelling ndltd-WICHITA-oai-soar.wichita.edu-10057-32882013-04-19T21:00:25ZOn the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materialsSharma, SanjayElectronic dissertationsThe focus of this work is to understand the current state of permeability measurement and prediction methods for fibrous, porous media and to suggest improvements. For this purpose the most widely used and accepted measurement technique, the channel flow method, is used to experimentally investigate the effects of fiber sizing and fluid viscosity on the permeability of glass and carbon fibers. Experiments have shown that the variation in permeability occurs due primarily to the fluid viscosity and not the nature of fluid, which other researchers have proposed. Studies were also carried out on both sized and unsized fibers to show that significant permeability variation occurs when fluids of different viscosity are used. Further, experimental studies on the effect of secondary flow have revealed that, for fiber products representative of the aerospace industry, secondary flow has little effect, which challenges models proposed by other researchers. Previous studies had shown a dual scale flow for fiber products with a significantly lower fiber volume fraction. A novel acoustical method based on standardized impedance tube measurements has been developed to predict physical properties—both permeability and characteristic length—of the porous medium. The predicted permeability values from the acoustical method for the range of porosity studied in this work compare well enough with existing permeability models’ predictions to warrant further study. The acoustical method is quick and repeatable, and when compared with the existing flow methods may provide a convenient alternative. It also provides a measure of fiber arrangement (via the “viscous characteristic length”) that should be studied further to explain variations in permeability measurements due to alternative fiber product architecture.Thesis (Ph.D.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Mechanical EngineeringWichita State UniversitySiginer, Dennis A.2010-11-30T17:01:28Z2010-11-30T17:01:28Z20102010-05Dissertationxvi, 130 p.5242260 bytes1843 bytesapplication/pdftext/plaind10010http://hdl.handle.net/10057/3288en_USCopyright Sanjay Sharma, 2010. All rights reserved
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Electronic dissertations
spellingShingle Electronic dissertations
Sharma, Sanjay
On the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materials
description The focus of this work is to understand the current state of permeability measurement and prediction methods for fibrous, porous media and to suggest improvements. For this purpose the most widely used and accepted measurement technique, the channel flow method, is used to experimentally investigate the effects of fiber sizing and fluid viscosity on the permeability of glass and carbon fibers. Experiments have shown that the variation in permeability occurs due primarily to the fluid viscosity and not the nature of fluid, which other researchers have proposed. Studies were also carried out on both sized and unsized fibers to show that significant permeability variation occurs when fluids of different viscosity are used. Further, experimental studies on the effect of secondary flow have revealed that, for fiber products representative of the aerospace industry, secondary flow has little effect, which challenges models proposed by other researchers. Previous studies had shown a dual scale flow for fiber products with a significantly lower fiber volume fraction. A novel acoustical method based on standardized impedance tube measurements has been developed to predict physical properties—both permeability and characteristic length—of the porous medium. The predicted permeability values from the acoustical method for the range of porosity studied in this work compare well enough with existing permeability models’ predictions to warrant further study. The acoustical method is quick and repeatable, and when compared with the existing flow methods may provide a convenient alternative. It also provides a measure of fiber arrangement (via the “viscous characteristic length”) that should be studied further to explain variations in permeability measurements due to alternative fiber product architecture. === Thesis (Ph.D.)--Wichita State University, College of Engineering, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering
author2 Siginer, Dennis A.
author_facet Siginer, Dennis A.
Sharma, Sanjay
author Sharma, Sanjay
author_sort Sharma, Sanjay
title On the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materials
title_short On the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materials
title_full On the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materials
title_fullStr On the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materials
title_full_unstemmed On the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materials
title_sort on the improvement of permeability assessment of fibrous materials
publisher Wichita State University
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10057/3288
work_keys_str_mv AT sharmasanjay ontheimprovementofpermeabilityassessmentoffibrousmaterials
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