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Keywords = bubbling FB

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12 pages, 3312 KB  
Article
Experimental Optimization of a Venturi-Type Fine Bubble Generation System Based on Gas Absorption Rate
by Gabriel Toma and Jesús Rafael Alcántara Avila
Fluids 2025, 10(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids10020025 - 24 Jan 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2560
Abstract
Fine bubbles (FBs) are defined by the ISO/TC 281 as gas bubbles with a diameter of less than 100 μm, and they have interesting properties such as high surface-to-volume ratio, low buoyancy, long residence time, electric charge, and self-pressurization effect. Typically, FBs are [...] Read more.
Fine bubbles (FBs) are defined by the ISO/TC 281 as gas bubbles with a diameter of less than 100 μm, and they have interesting properties such as high surface-to-volume ratio, low buoyancy, long residence time, electric charge, and self-pressurization effect. Typically, FBs are characterized in terms of size distribution, concentration, and zeta potential through specialized microscopic and nanoscopic measuring devices. This work proposes a multi-objective optimization problem to find the optimal conditions to generate FBs from experimental macroscopic measurements in terms of dissolved oxygen (DO). Then, detailed microscopic measurements in terms of size distribution and zeta potential are conducted. Additionally, two venturi-type Fine Bubble Generators (FBGs) were 3D-printed in-house to evaluate the relationship between the internal structure and the generation of FBs. The best FBGs have an obstacle in the diverging section that promotes FB generation under the evaluated experimental conditions. Under the best operating conditions, FBs were stable over 7 days with a size distribution between 60 and 90 nm and with an average of −21 mV. Full article
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30 pages, 11511 KB  
Article
Sources and Radiations of the Fermi Bubbles
by Vladimir A. Dogiel and Chung-Ming Ko
Universe 2024, 10(11), 424; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10110424 - 12 Nov 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2137
Abstract
Two enigmatic gamma-ray features in the galactic central region, known as Fermi Bubbles (FBs), were found from Fermi-LAT data. An energy release, (e.g., by tidal disruption events in the Galactic Center, GC), generates a cavity with a shock that expands into the local [...] Read more.
Two enigmatic gamma-ray features in the galactic central region, known as Fermi Bubbles (FBs), were found from Fermi-LAT data. An energy release, (e.g., by tidal disruption events in the Galactic Center, GC), generates a cavity with a shock that expands into the local ambient medium of the galactic halo. A decade or so ago, a phenomenological model of the FBs was suggested as a result of routine star disruptions by the supermassive black hole in the GC which might provide enough energy for large-scale structures, like the FBs. In 2020, analytical and numerical models of the FBs as a process of routine tidal disruption of stars near the GC were developed; these disruption events can provide enough cumulative energy to form and maintain large-scale structures like the FBs. The disruption events are expected to be 104105yr1, providing an average power of energy release from the GC into the halo of E˙3×1041 erg s1, which is needed to support the FBs. Analysis of the evolution of superbubbles in exponentially stratified disks concluded that the FB envelope would be destroyed by the Rayleigh–Taylor (RT) instabilities at late stages. The shell is composed of swept-up gas of the bubble, whose thickness is much thinner in comparison to the size of the envelope. We assume that hydrodynamic turbulence is excited in the FB envelope by the RT instability. In this case, the universal energy spectrum of turbulence may be developed in the inertial range of wavenumbers of fluctuations (the Kolmogorov–Obukhov spectrum). From our model we suppose the power of the FBs is transformed partly into the energy of hydrodynamic turbulence in the envelope. If so, hydrodynamic turbulence may generate MHD fluctuations, which accelerate cosmic rays there and generate gamma-ray and radio emission from the FBs. We hope that this model may interpret the observed nonthermal emission from the bubbles. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Studying Astrophysics with High-Energy Cosmic Particles)
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21 pages, 4203 KB  
Article
Effect of Ultrafine Bubbles on Various Stocking Density of Striped Catfish Larviculture in Recirculating Aquaculture System
by Ujang Subhan, Iskandar, Zahidah, Camellia Panatarani and I Made Joni
Fishes 2022, 7(4), 190; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040190 - 29 Jul 2022
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 4602
Abstract
The effects of ultrafine bubbles on the high stock density of striped catfish larvae in a recirculating aquaculture system (RAS) are described in this research (UFBs-RAS). In this study, the various stock densities of striped catfish were investigated regarding the effect of oxygen [...] Read more.
The effects of ultrafine bubbles on the high stock density of striped catfish larvae in a recirculating aquaculture system (RAS) are described in this research (UFBs-RAS). In this study, the various stock densities of striped catfish were investigated regarding the effect of oxygen saturation on the yolk sac absorption rate, length growth rate, and yolk sac utilization efficiency at the endogenous stage. The survival rate, the specific growth rate (weight, length, and biomass), and the gross feeding efficiency were examined at an exogenous stage. The results showed that the ultrafine bubbles generator in the recirculating aquaculture system (UFBs-RAS) provide the dissolved oxygen concentration up to 128.97%sat. The oxygen saturated state in FBs-RAS at the stock density 100 fish/L (D100) provided high yolk sac utilization efficiency in the endogenous stage and high survival, specific growth rate, and gross feeding efficiency in the exogenous stage. It was emphasized that the performance was possible due to surplus oxygen up to 1.58 mg/L at the stock density of 100 fish/L and accomplished minimum ammonia (NH3-N) content much lower than the limit (0.12 µg/L). Thus, the striped catfish larviculture with UFBs-RAS-provided oxygen balance subsequently improved the production rate significantly with cost-effective production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Aquaculture)
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18 pages, 2958 KB  
Article
A Combined Experimental and Numerical Thermo-Hydrodynamic Investigation of High-Temperature Fluidized-Bed Thermal Energy Storage
by Mehdi Mehrtash, Esra Polat Karadiken and Ilker Tari
Processes 2022, 10(6), 1097; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10061097 - 1 Jun 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2984
Abstract
The present research describes the design, analysis, and modeling of an air-granular particle fluidized-bed system with dimensions of 0.08 m × 0.4 m × 0.08 m. The hydrodynamic and thermal experiments are designed to verify the numerical model previously created for this purpose. [...] Read more.
The present research describes the design, analysis, and modeling of an air-granular particle fluidized-bed system with dimensions of 0.08 m × 0.4 m × 0.08 m. The hydrodynamic and thermal experiments are designed to verify the numerical model previously created for this purpose. The gas-solid two-phase flow is described using a three-dimensional, two-fluid model based on the Eulerian–Eulerian method. The experiment is conducted, and the numerical model is updated for the new geometry while maintaining the solution parameters. Silica sand and sintered bauxite particles are employed in both experimental and numerical investigations to examine the behaviors of these particles. The hydrodynamic validity of the numerical model is established by the use of experimental findings for pressure drop and bed expansion ratio. The thermal tests are conducted with 585 K hot sand, and the temperature distribution in the bed is measured using K-type thermocouples and compared with the simulation data. Both the hydrodynamical and thermal experimental data appear to agree with the conclusions of the computational analyses. The validated model is then used to mimic the performance of the bed at elevated temperatures. The performance indicators are discussed and calculated for 973 K, demonstrating that as the temperature rises, the system efficiency increases. Full article
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16 pages, 1031 KB  
Review
Fluidized Bed Combustion and Gasification of Fossil and Renewable Slurry Fuels
by Francesco Miccio, Federica Raganati, Paola Ammendola, Farouk Okasha and Michele Miccio
Energies 2021, 14(22), 7766; https://doi.org/10.3390/en14227766 - 19 Nov 2021
Cited by 21 | Viewed by 5319
Abstract
This article provides a comprehensive review of the state of the art and more recent developments of the thermochemical treatments of slurry fuels in fluidized beds (FB). The review focuses on FB combustion and gasification of slurry fuels based on coal, biomass, sludge, [...] Read more.
This article provides a comprehensive review of the state of the art and more recent developments of the thermochemical treatments of slurry fuels in fluidized beds (FB). The review focuses on FB combustion and gasification of slurry fuels based on coal, biomass, sludge, and wastes from industry, agriculture, and the civil sector. The investigations at research and industrial levels over the last decades are presented and discussed, highlighting the adopted technological solutions, the results in terms of feasibility and efficiency, and the perspectives of future development. The different behavior between bubbling and circulating beds was addressed, in particular the optimal choice depending on the process (combustion/gasification/pyrolysis) and fuel properties (e.g., water content). Fundamental studies on interactions between the slurry fuels and the hot bed materials are also reviewed. The cumulative trend of reviewed investigations over the last decades depicts the abandonment of coal-based mixtures used in large plants, and the growing interest in the use of biomass-based slurries for small size application. In this respect, the shift from coal to biomass opens new challenges because of the different properties of biomass (density, fibrous structure, spontaneous degradation, hydrophilic behavior, etc.). Biomass-based slurries circumvent problems posed by using solid dry biomass, particularly in handling, storing, and feeding. Although slurry fuels represent a narrow sector, the results of the research investigations and the experience gained with coal can be exploited to contribute to the achievement of a circular approach based on renewable resources in the near future. Full article
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