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Search Results (1,004)

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Keywords = acoustic ratio

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16 pages, 17061 KiB  
Article
Numerical Analysis of Cavitation Suppression on a NACA 0018 Hydrofoil Using a Surface Cavity
by Pankaj Kumar, Ebrahim Kadivar and Ould el Moctar
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(8), 1517; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13081517 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
This study examines the hydrodynamic and acoustic performance of plain NACA0018 hydrofoil and modified NACA0018 hydrofoils (foil with a cavity on suction surface) at a Reynolds number (Re) of 40,000, which is indicative of small-scale turbines and [...] Read more.
This study examines the hydrodynamic and acoustic performance of plain NACA0018 hydrofoil and modified NACA0018 hydrofoils (foil with a cavity on suction surface) at a Reynolds number (Re) of 40,000, which is indicative of small-scale turbines and marine applications. A cavity was created on suction side surface at 40–50% of the chord length, which is chosen for its efficacy in cavitation control. The present analysis examines the impact of the cavity on lift-to-drag-ratio (L/D) and cavity length at three cavitation numbers (1.7, 1.2, and 0.93) for plain and modified hydrofoils. Simulations demonstrate a significant enhancement of 7% in the lift-to-drag ratio relative to traditional designed foils. Contrary to earlier observations, the cavity length increases instead of decreasing for the modified hydrofoil. Both periodic steady and turbulent inflow conditions are captured that simulate the complex cavity dynamics and flow–acoustic interactions. It is found that a reduction in RMS velocity with modified blade suggests flow stabilization. Spectral analysis using Mel-frequency techniques confirms the cavity’s potential to reduce low-frequency flow-induced noise. These findings offer new insights for designing quieter and more efficient hydrofoils and turbine blades. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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20 pages, 3035 KiB  
Article
Study of Taconis-Based Cryogenic Thermoacoustic Engine with Hydrogen and Helium
by Matthew P. Shenton, Jacob W. Leachman and Konstantin I. Matveev
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4114; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154114 - 2 Aug 2025
Viewed by 287
Abstract
Taconis oscillations represent spontaneous excitation of acoustic modes in tubes with large temperature gradients in cryogenic systems. In this study, Taconis oscillations in hydrogen and helium systems are enhanced with a porous material resulting in a standing-wave thermoacoustic engine. A theoretical model is [...] Read more.
Taconis oscillations represent spontaneous excitation of acoustic modes in tubes with large temperature gradients in cryogenic systems. In this study, Taconis oscillations in hydrogen and helium systems are enhanced with a porous material resulting in a standing-wave thermoacoustic engine. A theoretical model is developed using the thermoacoustic software DeltaEC, version v6.4b2.7, to predict system performance, and an experimental apparatus is constructed for engine characterization. The low-amplitude thermoacoustic model predicts the pressure amplitude, frequency, and temperature gradient required for excitation of the standing-wave system. Experimental measurements, including the onset temperature ratio, acoustic pressure amplitudes, and frequencies, are recorded for different stack materials and geometries. The findings indicate that, independent of stack, hydrogen systems excite at smaller temperature differentials than helium (because of different properties such as lower viscosity for hydrogen), and the stack geometry and material affect the onset temperature ratio. However, pressure amplitude in the excited states varies minimally. Initial measurements are also conducted in a cooling setup with an added regenerator. The configuration with stainless-steel mesh screens produces a small cryogenic refrigeration effect with a decrease in temperature of about 1 K. The reported characterization of a Taconis-based thermoacoustic engine can be useful for the development of novel thermal management systems for cryogenic storage vessels, including refrigeration and pressurization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section A5: Hydrogen Energy)
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21 pages, 3864 KiB  
Article
Sub-MHz EMAR for Non-Contact Thickness Measurement: How Ultrasonic Wave Directivity Affects Accuracy
by Alexander Siegl, David Auer, Bernhard Schweighofer, Andre Hochfellner, Gerald Klösch and Hannes Wegleiter
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4746; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154746 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 266
Abstract
Electromagnetic acoustic resonance (EMAR) is a well-established non-contact method for ultrasonic thickness measurement, typically operated at frequencies above 1 MHz using an electromagnetic acoustic transducer (EMAT). This study successfully extends EMAR into the sub-MHz range, allowing supply voltages below 60 V and thus [...] Read more.
Electromagnetic acoustic resonance (EMAR) is a well-established non-contact method for ultrasonic thickness measurement, typically operated at frequencies above 1 MHz using an electromagnetic acoustic transducer (EMAT). This study successfully extends EMAR into the sub-MHz range, allowing supply voltages below 60 V and thus offering safer and more cost-effective operation. Experiments were conducted on copper blocks approximately 20 mm thick, where a relative thickness accuracy of better than 0.2% is obtained. Regarding this result, the research identifies a critical design principle: Stable thickness resonances and subsequently accurate thickness measurement are achieved when the ratio of ultrasonic wavelength to EMAT track width (λ/w) falls below 1. This minimizes the excitation and interactions with structural eigenmodes, ensuring consistent measurement reliability. To support this, the study introduces a system-based model to simulate the EMAR method. The model provides detailed insights into how wave propagation affects the accuracy of EMAR measurements. Experimental results align well with the simulation outcome and confirm the feasibility of EMAR in the sub-MHz regime without compromising precision. These findings highlight the potential of low-voltage EMAR as a safer, cost-effective, and highly accurate approach for industrial ultrasonic thickness measurements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Electromagnetic Sensing and Its Applications)
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20 pages, 25581 KiB  
Article
Phase Synchronisation for Tonal Noise Reduction in a Multi-Rotor UAV
by Burak Buda Turhan, Djamel Rezgui and Mahdi Azarpeyvand
Drones 2025, 9(8), 544; https://doi.org/10.3390/drones9080544 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 222
Abstract
This study aims to investigate the effects of phase synchronisation on tonal noise reduction in a multi-rotor UAV using an electronic phase-locking system. Experiments at the University of Bristol explored the impact of relative phase angle, propeller spacing, and blade geometry on acoustic [...] Read more.
This study aims to investigate the effects of phase synchronisation on tonal noise reduction in a multi-rotor UAV using an electronic phase-locking system. Experiments at the University of Bristol explored the impact of relative phase angle, propeller spacing, and blade geometry on acoustic performance, including psychoacoustic annoyance. Results show that increasing the phase angle consistently reduces the sound pressure level (SPL) due to destructive interference. For the two-bladed configuration, the highest noise reduction occurred at relative phase angle Δψ=90, with a 19 dB decrease at the first blade-passing frequency (BPF). Propeller spacing had minimal impact when phase synchronisation was applied. The pitch-to-diameter (P/D) ratio also influenced results: for P/D=0.55, reductions ranged from 13–18 dB; and for P/D=1.0, reductions ranged from 10–20 dB. Maximum psychoacoustic annoyance was observed when propellers were in phase (Δψ=0), while annoyance decreased with increasing phase angle, confirming the effectiveness of phase control for noise mitigation. For the five-bladed configuration, the highest reduction of 15 dB occurred at Δψ=36, with annoyance levels also decreasing with phase offset. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Urban Air Mobility Solutions: UAVs for Smarter Cities)
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21 pages, 2794 KiB  
Article
Medical Data over Sound—CardiaWhisper Concept
by Radovan Stojanović, Jovan Đurković, Mihailo Vukmirović, Blagoje Babić, Vesna Miranović and Andrej Škraba
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4573; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154573 - 24 Jul 2025
Viewed by 347
Abstract
Data over sound (DoS) is an established technique that has experienced a resurgence in recent years, finding applications in areas such as contactless payments, device pairing, authentication, presence detection, toys, and offline data transfer. This study introduces CardiaWhisper, a system that extends the [...] Read more.
Data over sound (DoS) is an established technique that has experienced a resurgence in recent years, finding applications in areas such as contactless payments, device pairing, authentication, presence detection, toys, and offline data transfer. This study introduces CardiaWhisper, a system that extends the DoS concept to the medical domain by using a medical data-over-sound (MDoS) framework. CardiaWhisper integrates wearable biomedical sensors with home care systems, edge or IoT gateways, and telemedical networks or cloud platforms. Using a transmitter device, vital signs such as ECG (electrocardiogram) signals, PPG (photoplethysmogram) signals, RR (respiratory rate), and ACC (acceleration/movement) are sensed, conditioned, encoded, and acoustically transmitted to a nearby receiver—typically a smartphone, tablet, or other gadget—and can be further relayed to edge and cloud infrastructures. As a case study, this paper presents the real-time transmission and processing of ECG signals. The transmitter integrates an ECG sensing module, an encoder (either a PLL-based FM modulator chip or a microcontroller), and a sound emitter in the form of a standard piezoelectric speaker. The receiver, in the form of a mobile phone, tablet, or desktop computer, captures the acoustic signal via its built-in microphone and executes software routines to decode the data. It then enables a range of control and visualization functions for both local and remote users. Emphasis is placed on describing the system architecture and its key components, as well as the software methodologies used for signal decoding on the receiver side, where several algorithms are implemented using open-source, platform-independent technologies, such as JavaScript, HTML, and CSS. While the main focus is on the transmission of analog data, digital data transmission is also illustrated. The CardiaWhisper system is evaluated across several performance parameters, including functionality, complexity, speed, noise immunity, power consumption, range, and cost-efficiency. Quantitative measurements of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) were performed in various realistic indoor scenarios, including different distances, obstacles, and noise environments. Preliminary results are presented, along with a discussion of design challenges, limitations, and feasible applications. Our experience demonstrates that CardiaWhisper provides a low-power, eco-friendly alternative to traditional RF or Bluetooth-based medical wearables in various applications. Full article
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17 pages, 4162 KiB  
Article
Evaluation of Wake Structure Induced by Helical Hydrokinetic Turbine
by Erkan Alkan, Mehmet Ishak Yuce and Gökmen Öztürkmen
Water 2025, 17(15), 2203; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152203 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 188
Abstract
This study investigates the downstream wake characteristics of a helical hydrokinetic turbine through combined experimental and numerical analyses. A four-bladed helical turbine with a 20 cm rotor diameter and blockage ratio of 53.57% was tested in an open water channel under a flow [...] Read more.
This study investigates the downstream wake characteristics of a helical hydrokinetic turbine through combined experimental and numerical analyses. A four-bladed helical turbine with a 20 cm rotor diameter and blockage ratio of 53.57% was tested in an open water channel under a flow rate of 180 m3/h, corresponding to a Reynolds number of approximately 90 × 103. Velocity measurements were collected at 13 downstream cross-sections using an Acoustic Doppler Velocimeter, with each point sampled repeatedly. Standard error analysis was applied to quantify measurement uncertainty. Complementary numerical simulations were conducted in ANSYS Fluent using a steady-state k-ω Shear Stress Transport (SST) turbulence model, with a mesh of 4.7 million elements and mesh independence confirmed. Velocity deficit and turbulence intensity were employed as primary parameters to characterize the wake structure, while the analysis also focused on the recovery of cross-sectional velocity profiles to validate the extent of wake influence. Experimental results revealed a maximum velocity deficit of over 40% in the near-wake region, which gradually decreased with downstream distance, while turbulence intensity exceeded 50% near the rotor and dropped below 10% beyond 4 m. In comparison, numerical findings showed a similar trend but with lower peak velocity deficits of 16.6%. The root mean square error (RMSE) and mean absolute error (MAE) between experimental and numerical mean velocity profiles were calculated as 0.04486 and 0.03241, respectively, demonstrating reasonable agreement between the datasets. Extended simulations up to 30 m indicated that flow profiles began to resemble ambient conditions around 18–20 m. The findings highlight the importance of accurately identifying the downstream distance at which the wake effect fully dissipates, as this is crucial for determining appropriate inter-turbine spacing. The study also discusses potential sources of discrepancies between experimental and numerical results, as well as the limitations of the modeling approach. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optimization-Simulation Modeling of Sustainable Water Resource)
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16 pages, 13319 KiB  
Article
Research on Acoustic Field Correction Vector-Coherent Total Focusing Imaging Method Based on Coarse-Grained Elastic Anisotropic Material Properties
by Tianwei Zhao, Ziyu Liu, Donghui Zhang, Junlong Wang and Guowen Peng
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4550; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154550 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 223
Abstract
This study aims to address the challenges posed by uneven energy amplitude and a low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in the total focus imaging of coarse-crystalline elastic anisotropic materials. A novel method for acoustic field correction vector-coherent total focus imaging, based on the materials’ [...] Read more.
This study aims to address the challenges posed by uneven energy amplitude and a low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in the total focus imaging of coarse-crystalline elastic anisotropic materials. A novel method for acoustic field correction vector-coherent total focus imaging, based on the materials’ properties, is proposed. To demonstrate the effectiveness of this method, a test specimen, an austenitic stainless steel nozzle weld, was employed. Seven side-drilled hole defects located at varying positions and depths, each with a diameter of 2 mm, were examined. An ultrasound simulation model was developed based on material backscatter diffraction results, and the scattering attenuation compensation factor was optimized. The acoustic field correction function was derived by combining acoustic field directivity with diffusion attenuation compensation. The phase coherence weighting coefficients were calculated, followed by image reconstruction. The results show that the proposed method significantly improves imaging amplitude uniformity and reduces the structural noise caused by the coarse crystal structure of austenitic stainless steel. Compared to conventional total focus imaging, the detection SNR of the seven defects increased by 2.34 dB to 10.95 dB. Additionally, the defect localization error was reduced from 0.1 mm to 0.05 mm, with a range of 0.70 mm to 0.88 mm. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ultrasound Imaging and Sensing for Nondestructive Testing)
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73 pages, 19750 KiB  
Article
Transcriptomic Profiling of the Immune Response in Orthotopic Pancreatic Tumours Exposed to Combined Boiling Histotripsy and Oncolytic Reovirus Treatment
by Petros Mouratidis, Ricardo C. Ferreira, Selvakumar Anbalagan, Ritika Chauhan, Ian Rivens and Gail ter Haar
Pharmaceutics 2025, 17(8), 949; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics17080949 - 22 Jul 2025
Viewed by 317
Abstract
Background: Boiling histotripsy (BH) uses high-amplitude, short-pulse focused ultrasound to disrupt tissue mechanically. Oncolytic virotherapy using reovirus has shown modest clinical benefit in pancreatic cancer patients. Here, reovirus and BH were used to treat pancreatic tumours, and their effects on the immune [...] Read more.
Background: Boiling histotripsy (BH) uses high-amplitude, short-pulse focused ultrasound to disrupt tissue mechanically. Oncolytic virotherapy using reovirus has shown modest clinical benefit in pancreatic cancer patients. Here, reovirus and BH were used to treat pancreatic tumours, and their effects on the immune transcriptome of these tumours were characterised. Methods: Orthotopic syngeneic murine pancreatic KPC tumours grown in immune-competent subjects, were allocated to control, reovirus, BH and combined BH and reovirus treatment groups. Acoustic cavitation was monitored using a passive broadband cavitation sensor. Treatment effects were assessed histologically with hematoxylin and eosin staining. Single-cell multi-omics combining whole-transcriptome analysis with the expression of surface-expressed immune proteins was used to assess the effects of treatments on tumoural leukocytes. Results: Acoustic cavitation was detected in all subjects exposed to BH, causing cellular disruption in tumours 6 h after treatment. Distinct cell clusters were identified in the pancreatic tumours 24 h post-treatment. These included neutrophils and cytotoxic T cells overexpressing genes associated with an N2-like and an exhaustion phenotype, respectively. Reovirus decreased macrophages, and BH decreased regulatory T cells compared to controls. The combined treatments increased neutrophils and the ratio of various immune cells to Treg. All treatments overexpressed genes associated with an innate immune response, while ultrasound treatments downregulated genes associated with the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) complex. Conclusions: Our results show that the combined BH and reovirus treatments maximise the overexpression of genes associated with the innate immune response compared to that seen with each individual treatment, and illustrate the anti-immune phenotype of key immune cells in the pancreatic tumour microenvironment. Full article
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15 pages, 2952 KiB  
Article
Experimental Measurements on the Influence of Inlet Pipe Configuration on Hydrodynamics and Dissolved Oxygen Distribution in Circular Aquaculture Tank
by Yanfei Wu, Jianeng Chen, Fukun Gui, Hongfang Qi, Yang Wang, Ying Luo, Yanhong Wu, Dejun Feng and Qingjing Zhang
Water 2025, 17(15), 2172; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152172 - 22 Jul 2025
Viewed by 276
Abstract
Optimizing hydrodynamic performance and dissolved oxygen (DO) distribution is essential for improving water quality management in industrial recirculating aquaculture systems. This study combines experimental measurements and data analysis to evaluate the effects of the inlet pipe flow rate (Q), [...] Read more.
Optimizing hydrodynamic performance and dissolved oxygen (DO) distribution is essential for improving water quality management in industrial recirculating aquaculture systems. This study combines experimental measurements and data analysis to evaluate the effects of the inlet pipe flow rate (Q), deployment distance ratio (d/r), deployment angle (θ), inlet pipe structure on hydrodynamics and the dissolved oxygen distribution across various tank layers. The flow field distribution in the tanks was measured using Acoustic Doppler Velocimetry (ADV), and the hydrodynamic characteristics, including average velocity (vavg) and the velocity uniformity coefficient (DU50), were quantitatively analyzed. The dissolved oxygen content at different tank layers was recorded using an Aquameter GPS portable multi-parameter water quality analyzer. The findings indicate that average velocity (vavg) and the velocity uniformity coefficient (DU50) are key determinants of the hydrodynamic characteristic of circular aquaculture tanks. Optimal hydrodynamic performance occurs for the vertical single-pipe porous configuration at Q = 9 L/s, d/r = 1/4, and θ = 45°,the average velocity reached 0.0669 m/s, and the uniformity coefficients attained a maximum value of 40.4282. In a vertical single-pipe porous structure, the tank exhibits higher dissolved oxygen levels compared to a horizontal single-pipe single-hole structure. Under identical water inflow rates and deployment distance ratios, dissolved oxygen levels in the surface layer of the circular aquaculture tank are significantly greater than that in the bottom layer. The results of this study provide valuable insights for optimizing the engineering design of industrial circular aquaculture tanks and addressing the dissolved oxygen distribution across different water layers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Water, Agriculture and Aquaculture)
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21 pages, 7587 KiB  
Article
Rapid Identification Method for Concrete Defect Boundaries Based on Acoustic-Mode Gradient Analysis
by Yong Yang, Peixuan Shen, Ziming Qi and Shiqi Liu
Buildings 2025, 15(14), 2569; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15142569 - 21 Jul 2025
Viewed by 209
Abstract
Concrete is extensively utilized in infrastructure projects. However, issues like construction quality and external loads can lead to the formation of thin-plate-like voids with considerable aspect ratios, posing serious safety risks and highlighting the need for effective boundary detection. This paper addresses the [...] Read more.
Concrete is extensively utilized in infrastructure projects. However, issues like construction quality and external loads can lead to the formation of thin-plate-like voids with considerable aspect ratios, posing serious safety risks and highlighting the need for effective boundary detection. This paper addresses the challenges of traditional acoustic detection methods, which often suffer from low efficiency, poor adaptability to environmental conditions, and difficulties in measuring defect sizes. It explores a spatially diverse MIC Array system. Unlike single-point MIC that can only capture multi-directional sound field information from one excitation point, this array improves efficiency through simultaneous multi-channel data acquisition. This study develops a vibration model for a circular thin plate with fixed boundaries, examines the gradient relationships in various directions, and introduces a method that integrates MIC array technology with acoustic vibration techniques. The focus is on identifying concrete defect boundaries, where a single excitation at the same measurement point can yield different first-order vibration modes recorded by various MICs. A gradient-based approach is proposed to determine defect boundaries based on the locations of different MICs in the array. Experiments were carried out using circular thin-plate concrete samples with pre-existing voids. For instance, at boundary measurement point 15, the first-order modal data collected by MIC0 and MIC4 were 7.80×104 Pa and 5.42×106 Pa, respectively, exhibiting a significant gradient difference, which verified the accuracy and rapidity of identifying concrete void boundaries. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Materials, and Repair & Renovation)
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18 pages, 4389 KiB  
Article
Acoustic Wave Propagation Characteristics of Maize Seed and Surrounding Region with the Double Media of Seed–Soil
by Yadong Li, Caiyun Lu, Hongwen Li, Jin He, Zhinan Wang and Chengkun Zhai
Agriculture 2025, 15(14), 1540; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15141540 - 17 Jul 2025
Viewed by 342
Abstract
When monitoring seed positions in soil using ultrasonic waves, the main challenge is obtaining acoustic wave characteristics at the seed locations. This study developed a three-dimensional ultrasonic model with the double media of seed–soil using the discrete element method to visualize signal variations [...] Read more.
When monitoring seed positions in soil using ultrasonic waves, the main challenge is obtaining acoustic wave characteristics at the seed locations. This study developed a three-dimensional ultrasonic model with the double media of seed–soil using the discrete element method to visualize signal variations and analyze propagation characteristics. The effects of the compression ratio (0/6/12%), excitation frequency (20/40/60 kHz), and amplitude (5/10/15 μm) on signal variation and attenuation were analyzed. The results show consistent trends: time/frequency domain signal intensity increased with a higher compression ratio and amplitude but decreased with frequency. Comparing ultrasonic signals at soil particles before and after the seed along the propagation path shows that the seed significantly absorbs and attenuates ultrasonic waves. Time domain intensity drops 93.99%, and first and residual wave frequency peaks decrease by 88.06% and 96.39%, respectively. Additionally, comparing ultrasonic propagation velocities in the double media of seed–soil and the single soil medium reveals that the velocity in the seed is significantly higher than that in the soil. At compression ratios of 0%, 6%, and 12%, the sound velocity in the seed is 990.47%, 562.72%, and 431.34% of that in the soil, respectively. These findings help distinguish seed presence and provide a basis for ultrasonic seed position monitoring after sowing. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Digital Agriculture, Smart Farming and Crop Monitoring)
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21 pages, 1661 KiB  
Article
Performance Assessment of B-Series Marine Propellers with Cupping and Face Camber Ratio Using Machine Learning Techniques
by Mina Tadros and Evangelos Boulougouris
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(7), 1345; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13071345 - 15 Jul 2025
Viewed by 384
Abstract
This study investigates the performance of B-series marine propellers enhanced through geometric modifications, namely face camber ratio (FCR) and cupping percentage modifications, using a machine learning (ML)-driven optimization framework. A large dataset of over 7000 open-water propeller configurations is curated, incorporating variations in [...] Read more.
This study investigates the performance of B-series marine propellers enhanced through geometric modifications, namely face camber ratio (FCR) and cupping percentage modifications, using a machine learning (ML)-driven optimization framework. A large dataset of over 7000 open-water propeller configurations is curated, incorporating variations in blade number, expanded area ratio (EAR), pitch-to-diameter ratio (P/D), FCR, and cupping percentage. A multi-layer artificial neural network (ANN) is trained to predict thrust, torque, and open-water efficiency (ηo) with a high coefficient of determination (R2), greater than 0.9999. The ANN is integrated into an optimization algorithm to identify optimal propeller designs for the KRISO Container Ship (KCS) using empirical constraints for cavitation and tip speed. Unlike prior studies that rely on boundary element method (BEM)-ML hybrids or multi-fidelity simulations, this study introduces a geometry-coupled analysis of FCR and cupping—parameters often treated independently—and applies empirical cavitation and acoustic (tip speed) limits to guide the design process. The results indicate that incorporating 1.0–1.5% cupping leads to a significant improvement in efficiency, up to 9.3% above the reference propeller, while maintaining cavitation safety margins and acoustic limits. Conversely, designs with non-zero FCR values (0.5–1.5%) show a modest efficiency penalty (up to 4.3%), although some configurations remain competitive when compensated by higher EAR, P/D, or blade count. The study confirms that the combination of cupping with optimized geometric parameters yields high-efficiency, cavitation-safe propellers. Furthermore, the ML-based framework demonstrates excellent potential for rapid, accurate, and scalable propeller design optimization that meets both performance and regulatory constraints. Full article
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23 pages, 8675 KiB  
Article
Research on the Deterioration Mechanism of PPF Mortar-Masonry Stone Structures Under Freeze–Thaw Conditions
by Jie Dong, Hongfeng Zhang, Zhenhuan Jiao, Zhao Yang, Shaohui Chu, Jinfei Chai, Song Zhang, Lunkai Gong and Hongyu Cui
Buildings 2025, 15(14), 2468; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15142468 - 14 Jul 2025
Viewed by 303
Abstract
Significant progress has been made in the low-temperature toughness and crack resistance of polypropylene fiber-reinforced composites. However, there is still a gap in the research on damage evolution under freeze–thaw cycles and complex stress ratios. To solve the problem of durability degradation of [...] Read more.
Significant progress has been made in the low-temperature toughness and crack resistance of polypropylene fiber-reinforced composites. However, there is still a gap in the research on damage evolution under freeze–thaw cycles and complex stress ratios. To solve the problem of durability degradation of traditional rubble masonry in cold regions, this paper focuses on the study of polypropylene fiber-mortar-masonry blocks with different fiber contents. Using acoustic emission and digital image technology, the paper conducts a series of tests on the scaled-down polypropylene fiber-mortar-masonry structure, including uniaxial compressive tests, three-point bending tests, freeze–thaw cycle tests, and tests with different stress ratios. Based on the Kupfer criterion, a biaxial failure criterion for polypropylene fiber mortar-masonry stone (PPF-MMS) was established under different freeze–thaw cycles. A freeze–thaw damage evolution model was also developed under different stress ratios. The failure mechanism of PPF-MMS structures was analyzed using normalized average deviation (NAD), RA-AF, and other parameters. The results show that when the dosage of PPF is 0.9–1.1 kg/m3, it is the optimal content. The vertical stress shows a trend of increasing first and then decreasing with the increase in the stress ratio, and when α = 0.5, the degree of strength increase reaches the maximum. However, the freeze–thaw cycle has an adverse effect on the internal structure of the specimens. Under the same number of freeze–thaw cycles, the strength of the specimens without fiber addition decreases more rapidly than that with fiber addition. The NAD evolution rate exhibits significant fluctuations during the middle loading period and near the damage failure, which can be considered precursors to specimen cracking and failure. RA-AF results showed that the specimens mainly exhibited tensile failure, but the occurrence of tensile failure gradually decreased as the stress ratio increased. Full article
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25 pages, 7489 KiB  
Article
Influence of Recycled Tire Steel Fiber Content on the Mechanical Properties and Fracture Characteristics of Ultra-High-Performance Concrete
by Junyan Yu, Qifan Wu, Dongyan Zhao and Yubo Jiao
Materials 2025, 18(14), 3300; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18143300 - 13 Jul 2025
Viewed by 361
Abstract
Ultra-high-performance concrete (UHPC) reinforced with recycled tire steel fibers (RTSFs) was studied to evaluate its mechanical properties and cracking behavior. Using acoustic emission (AE) monitoring, researchers tested various RTSF replacement rates in compression and flexural tests. Results revealed a clear trend: mechanical properties [...] Read more.
Ultra-high-performance concrete (UHPC) reinforced with recycled tire steel fibers (RTSFs) was studied to evaluate its mechanical properties and cracking behavior. Using acoustic emission (AE) monitoring, researchers tested various RTSF replacement rates in compression and flexural tests. Results revealed a clear trend: mechanical properties initially improved then declined with increasing RTSF content, peaking at 25% replacement. AE analysis showed distinct patterns in energy release and crack propagation. Signal timing for energy and ringing count followed a delayed-to-advanced sequence, while b-value and information entropy changes indicated optimal flexural performance at specific replacement rates. RA-AF classification demonstrated that shear failure reached its minimum (25% replacement), with shear cracks increasing at higher ratios. These findings demonstrate RTSFs’ dual benefits: enhancing UHPC performance while promoting sustainability. The 25% replacement ratio emerged as the optimal balance, improving strength while delaying crack formation. This study provides insights into the mechanism by which waste tire steel fibers enhance the performance of UHPC. This research provides valuable insights for developing eco-friendly UHPC formulations using recycled materials, offering both environmental and economic advantages for construction applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Construction and Building Materials)
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37 pages, 6555 KiB  
Review
Biomimetic Lattice Structures Design and Manufacturing for High Stress, Deformation, and Energy Absorption Performance
by Víctor Tuninetti, Sunny Narayan, Ignacio Ríos, Brahim Menacer, Rodrigo Valle, Moaz Al-lehaibi, Muhammad Usman Kaisan, Joseph Samuel, Angelo Oñate, Gonzalo Pincheira, Anne Mertens, Laurent Duchêne and César Garrido
Biomimetics 2025, 10(7), 458; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics10070458 - 12 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1034
Abstract
Lattice structures emerged as a revolutionary class of materials with significant applications in aerospace, biomedical engineering, and mechanical design due to their exceptional strength-to-weight ratio, energy absorption properties, and structural efficiency. This review systematically examines recent advancements in lattice structures, with a focus [...] Read more.
Lattice structures emerged as a revolutionary class of materials with significant applications in aerospace, biomedical engineering, and mechanical design due to their exceptional strength-to-weight ratio, energy absorption properties, and structural efficiency. This review systematically examines recent advancements in lattice structures, with a focus on their classification, mechanical behavior, and optimization methodologies. Stress distribution, deformation capacity, energy absorption, and computational modeling challenges are critically analyzed, highlighting the impact of manufacturing defects on structural integrity. The review explores the latest progress in hybrid additive manufacturing, hierarchical lattice structures, modeling and simulation, and smart adaptive materials, emphasizing their potential for self-healing and real-time monitoring applications. Furthermore, key research gaps are identified, including the need for improved predictive computational models using artificial intelligence, scalable manufacturing techniques, and multi-functional lattice systems integrating thermal, acoustic, and impact resistance properties. Future directions emphasize cost-effective material development, sustainability considerations, and enhanced experimental validation across multiple length scales. This work provides a comprehensive foundation for future research aimed at optimizing biomimetic lattice structures for enhanced mechanical performance, scalability, and industrial applicability. Full article
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