A New Facility for Studying Shock Wave Passage over Dust Layers

To ensure safety regarding dust explosion hazards, it is important to study the dust lifting process experimentally and identify important parameters that will be valuable for development and validation of numerical predictions of this phenomenon. A new shock tube test section was developed and inte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marks, Brandon
Other Authors: Petersen, Eric L
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/151046
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-1510462013-12-18T03:55:11ZA New Facility for Studying Shock Wave Passage over Dust LayersMarks, BrandonDust LayerDusty GasShock-tubeFluidsTo ensure safety regarding dust explosion hazards, it is important to study the dust lifting process experimentally and identify important parameters that will be valuable for development and validation of numerical predictions of this phenomenon. A new shock tube test section was developed and integrated into an existing shock tube facility. The test section allows for shadowgraph or laser scattering techniques to track dust layer particle motion. The test section is designed to handle an initial pressure of 1 atm with an incident shock wave velocity up to Mach 2 to mimic real world conditions. The test section features an easily removable dust pan and inserts to allow for adjustment of dust layer thickness. The design allows for the changing of experimental variables including initial pressure, Mach number, dust layer thickness and characteristics of the dust itself. A separate vacuum manifold was designed to protect existing equipment from negative side effects of the dust. A study was performed to demonstrate the capabilities of the new facility and to compare results with experimental trends formerly established in the literature. Forty-micron limestone dust with a layer thickness of 3.2 mm was subjected to Mach 1.22 and 1.38 shock waves, and a high-speed shadowgraph was used for flow visualization. Dust layer rise height was graphed with respect to shock wave propagation. Dust particles subjected to a Mach 1.38 shock wave rose more rapidly and to a greater height with respect to shock wave propagation than particles subjected to a Mach 1.22 shock wave. These results are in agreement with trends found in the literature, and a new area of investigation was identified.Petersen, Eric LMannan, M SamRanjan, Devesh2013-12-16T20:00:22Z2013-082013-05-30August 20132013-12-16T20:00:22ZThesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/151046en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Dust Layer
Dusty Gas
Shock-tube
Fluids
spellingShingle Dust Layer
Dusty Gas
Shock-tube
Fluids
Marks, Brandon
A New Facility for Studying Shock Wave Passage over Dust Layers
description To ensure safety regarding dust explosion hazards, it is important to study the dust lifting process experimentally and identify important parameters that will be valuable for development and validation of numerical predictions of this phenomenon. A new shock tube test section was developed and integrated into an existing shock tube facility. The test section allows for shadowgraph or laser scattering techniques to track dust layer particle motion. The test section is designed to handle an initial pressure of 1 atm with an incident shock wave velocity up to Mach 2 to mimic real world conditions. The test section features an easily removable dust pan and inserts to allow for adjustment of dust layer thickness. The design allows for the changing of experimental variables including initial pressure, Mach number, dust layer thickness and characteristics of the dust itself. A separate vacuum manifold was designed to protect existing equipment from negative side effects of the dust. A study was performed to demonstrate the capabilities of the new facility and to compare results with experimental trends formerly established in the literature. Forty-micron limestone dust with a layer thickness of 3.2 mm was subjected to Mach 1.22 and 1.38 shock waves, and a high-speed shadowgraph was used for flow visualization. Dust layer rise height was graphed with respect to shock wave propagation. Dust particles subjected to a Mach 1.38 shock wave rose more rapidly and to a greater height with respect to shock wave propagation than particles subjected to a Mach 1.22 shock wave. These results are in agreement with trends found in the literature, and a new area of investigation was identified.
author2 Petersen, Eric L
author_facet Petersen, Eric L
Marks, Brandon
author Marks, Brandon
author_sort Marks, Brandon
title A New Facility for Studying Shock Wave Passage over Dust Layers
title_short A New Facility for Studying Shock Wave Passage over Dust Layers
title_full A New Facility for Studying Shock Wave Passage over Dust Layers
title_fullStr A New Facility for Studying Shock Wave Passage over Dust Layers
title_full_unstemmed A New Facility for Studying Shock Wave Passage over Dust Layers
title_sort new facility for studying shock wave passage over dust layers
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/151046
work_keys_str_mv AT marksbrandon anewfacilityforstudyingshockwavepassageoverdustlayers
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