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21 pages, 4581 KiB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Variations and Drivers of the Ecological Footprint of Water Resources in the Yangtze River Delta
by Aimin Chen, Lina Chang, Peng Zhao, Xianbin Sun, Guangsheng Zhang, Yuanping Li, Haojun Deng and Xiaoqin Wen
Water 2025, 17(15), 2340; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152340 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
With the acceleration of urbanization in China, water resources have become a key factor restricting regional sustainable development. Current research primarily examines the temporal or spatial variations in the water resources ecological footprint (WREF), with limited emphasis on the integration of both spatial [...] Read more.
With the acceleration of urbanization in China, water resources have become a key factor restricting regional sustainable development. Current research primarily examines the temporal or spatial variations in the water resources ecological footprint (WREF), with limited emphasis on the integration of both spatial and temporal scales. In this study, we collected the data and information from the 2005–2022 Statistical Yearbook and Water Resources Bulletin of the Yangtze River Delta Urban Agglomeration (YRDUA), and calculated evaluation indicators: WREF, water resources ecological carrying capacity (WRECC), water resources ecological pressure (WREP), and water resources ecological surplus and deficit (WRESD). We primarily analyzed the temporal and spatial variation in the per capita WREF and used the method of Geodetector to explore factors driving its temporal and spatial variation in the YRDUA. The results showed that: (1) From 2005 to 2022, the per capita WREF (total water, agricultural water, and industrial water) of the YRDUA generally showed fluctuating declining trends, while the per capita WREF of domestic water and ecological water showed obvious growth. (2) The per capita WREF and the per capita WRECC were in the order of Jiangsu Province > Anhui Province > Shanghai City > Zhejiang Province. The spatial distribution of the per capita WREF was similar to those of the per capita WRECC, and most areas effectively consume water resources. (3) The explanatory power of the interaction between factors was greater than that of a single factor, indicating that the spatiotemporal variation in the per capita WREF of the YRDUA was affected by the combination of multiple factors and that there were regional differences in the major factors in the case of secondary metropolitan areas. (4) The per capita WREF of YRDUA was affected by natural resources, and the impact of the ecological condition on the per capita WREF increased gradually over time. The impact factors of secondary metropolitan areas also clearly changed over time. Our results showed that the ecological situation of per capita water resources in the YRDUA is generally good, with obvious spatial and temporal differences. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Water Resources Management, Policy and Governance)
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24 pages, 8377 KiB  
Article
Investigation of Wind Pressure Dynamics on Low-Rise Buildings in Sand-Laden Wind Environments
by Di Hu, Teng Zhang and Qiang Jin
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2779; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152779 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
To enhance the structural safety in wind-sand regions, this study employs the Euler-Lagrange numerical method to investigate the wind pressure characteristics of typical low-rise auxiliary buildings in a strong wind-blown sand environment. The results reveal that sand particle motion dissipates wind energy, leading [...] Read more.
To enhance the structural safety in wind-sand regions, this study employs the Euler-Lagrange numerical method to investigate the wind pressure characteristics of typical low-rise auxiliary buildings in a strong wind-blown sand environment. The results reveal that sand particle motion dissipates wind energy, leading to a slight reduction in average wind speed, while the increase in small-scale vortex energy enhances fluctuating wind speed. In the sand-laden wind field, the average wind pressure coefficient shows no significant change, whereas the fluctuating wind pressure coefficient increases markedly, particularly in the windward region of the building. Analysis of the skewness and kurtosis of wind pressure reveals that the non-Gaussian characteristics of wind pressure are amplified in the sand-laden wind, thereby elevating the risk of damage to the building envelope. Consequently, it is recommended that the design fluctuating wind load for envelopes and components of low-rise buildings in wind-sand regions be increased by 10% to enhance structural resilience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)
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21 pages, 3336 KiB  
Article
A Computerized Analysis of Flow Parameters for a Twin-Screw Compressor Using SolidWorks Flow Simulation
by Ildiko Brinas, Florin Dumitru Popescu, Andrei Andras, Sorin Mihai Radu and Laura Cojanu
Computation 2025, 13(8), 189; https://doi.org/10.3390/computation13080189 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
Twin-screw compressors (TSCs) are widely used in various industries. Their performance is influenced by several parameters, such as rotor profiles, clearance gaps, operating speed, and thermal effects. Traditionally, optimizing these parameters relied on experimental methods, which are costly and time-consuming. However, advancements in [...] Read more.
Twin-screw compressors (TSCs) are widely used in various industries. Their performance is influenced by several parameters, such as rotor profiles, clearance gaps, operating speed, and thermal effects. Traditionally, optimizing these parameters relied on experimental methods, which are costly and time-consuming. However, advancements in computational tools, such as Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and Finite Element Analysis (FEA), have revolutionized compressor analysis. This study presents a CFD analysis of a specific model of a TSC in a 5 male/6 female lobe configuration using the SolidWorks Flow Simulation environment—an approach not traditionally applied to such positive displacement machines. The results visually present internal flow trajectories, fluid velocities, pressure distributions, temperature gradients, and leakage behaviors with high spatial and temporal resolution. Additionally, torque fluctuations and isosurface visualizations revealed insights into mechanical loads and flow behavior. The proposed method allows for relatively easy adaptation to different TSC configurations and can also be a useful tool for engineering and educational purposes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Computational Methods for Fluid Flow)
28 pages, 5190 KiB  
Article
Assessing the Coevolution Between Ecosystem Services and Human Well-Being in Ecotourism-Dominated Counties: A Case Study of Chun’an, Zhejiang Province, China
by Weifeng Jiang and Lin Lu
Land 2025, 14(8), 1604; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081604 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
Investigating the coevolution between ecosystem services (ES) and human well-being (HWB) holds significant implications for achieving the sustainable operation of human–environment systems. However, limited research has focused on ES-HWB interactions in ecotourism-dominated counties. To address this gap, this study takes Chun’an County in [...] Read more.
Investigating the coevolution between ecosystem services (ES) and human well-being (HWB) holds significant implications for achieving the sustainable operation of human–environment systems. However, limited research has focused on ES-HWB interactions in ecotourism-dominated counties. To address this gap, this study takes Chun’an County in Zhejiang Province, China, as a case study, with the research objective of exploring the processes, patterns, and mechanisms of the coevolution between ecosystem services (ES) and human well-being (HWB) in ecotourism-dominated counties. By integrating multi-source heterogeneous data, including land use data, the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), and statistical records, and employing methods such as the dynamic equivalent factor method, the PLUS model, the coupling coordination degree model, and comprehensive evaluation, we analyzed the synergistic evolution of ES-HWB in Chun’an County from 2000 to 2020. The results indicate that (1) the ecosystem service value (ESV) fluctuated between 30.15 and 36.85 billion CNY, exhibiting a spatial aggregation pattern centered on the Qiandao Lake waterbody, with distance–decay characteristics. The PLUS model confirms ecological conservation policies optimize ES patterns. (2) The HWB index surged from 0.16 to 0.8, driven by tourism-led economic growth, infrastructure investment, and institutional innovation, facilitating a paradigm shift from low to high well-being at the county level. (3) The ES-HWB interaction evolved through three phases—disordered, antagonism, and coordination—revealing tourism as a key mediator driving coupled human–environment system sustainability via a pressure–adaptation–synergy transmission mechanism. This study not only advances the understanding of ES-HWB coevolution in ecotourism-dominated counties, but also provides a transferable methodological framework for sustainable development in similar regions. Full article
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23 pages, 1517 KiB  
Article
Physics-Informed Neural Network Enhanced CFD Simulation of Two-Dimensional Green Ammonia Synthesis Reactor
by Ran Xu, Shibin Zhang, Fengwei Rong, Wei Fan, Xiaomeng Zhang, Yunlong Wang, Liang Zan, Xu Ji and Ge He
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2457; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082457 - 3 Aug 2025
Viewed by 136
Abstract
The synthesis of “green ammonia” from “green hydrogen” represents a critical pathway for renewable energy integration and industrial decarbonization. This study investigates the green ammonia synthesis process using an axial–radial fixed-bed reactor equipped with three catalyst layers. A simplified two-dimensional physical model was [...] Read more.
The synthesis of “green ammonia” from “green hydrogen” represents a critical pathway for renewable energy integration and industrial decarbonization. This study investigates the green ammonia synthesis process using an axial–radial fixed-bed reactor equipped with three catalyst layers. A simplified two-dimensional physical model was developed, and a multiscale simulation approach combining computational fluid dynamics (CFD) with physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) employed. The simulation results demonstrate that the majority of fluid flows axially through the catalyst beds, leading to significantly higher temperatures in the upper bed regions. The reactor exhibits excellent heat exchange performance, ensuring effective preheating of the feed gas. High-pressure zones are concentrated near the top and bottom gas outlets, while the ammonia mole fraction approaches 100% near the bottom outlet, confirming superior conversion efficiency. By integrating PINNs, the prediction accuracy was substantially improved, with flow field errors in the catalyst beds below 4.5% and ammonia concentration prediction accuracy above 97.2%. Key reaction kinetic parameters (pre-exponential factor k0 and activation energy Ea) were successfully inverted with errors within 7%, while computational efficiency increased by 200 times compared to traditional CFD. The proposed CFD–PINN integrated framework provides a high-fidelity and computationally efficient simulation tool for green ammonia reactor design, particularly suitable for scenarios with fluctuating hydrogen supply. The reactor design reduces energy per unit ammonia and improves conversion efficiency. Its radial flow configuration enhances operational stability by damping feed fluctuations, thereby accelerating green hydrogen adoption. By reducing fossil fuel dependence, it promotes industrial decarbonization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section AI-Enabled Process Engineering)
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23 pages, 1146 KiB  
Review
A Review of Optimization Scheduling for Active Distribution Networks with High-Penetration Distributed Generation Access
by Kewei Wang, Yonghong Huang, Yanbo Liu, Tao Huang and Shijia Zang
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4119; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154119 - 3 Aug 2025
Viewed by 239
Abstract
The high-proportion integration of renewable energy sources, represented by wind power and photovoltaics, into active distribution networks (ADNs) can effectively alleviate the pressure associated with advancing China’s dual-carbon goals. However, the high uncertainty in renewable energy output leads to increased system voltage fluctuations [...] Read more.
The high-proportion integration of renewable energy sources, represented by wind power and photovoltaics, into active distribution networks (ADNs) can effectively alleviate the pressure associated with advancing China’s dual-carbon goals. However, the high uncertainty in renewable energy output leads to increased system voltage fluctuations and localized voltage violations, posing safety challenges. Consequently, research on optimal dispatch for ADNs with a high penetration of renewable energy has become a current focal point. This paper provides a comprehensive review of research in this domain over the past decade. Initially, it analyzes the voltage impact patterns and control principles in distribution networks under varying levels of renewable energy penetration. Subsequently, it introduces optimization dispatch models for ADNs that focus on three key objectives: safety, economy, and low carbon emissions. Furthermore, addressing the challenge of solving non-convex and nonlinear models, the paper highlights model reformulation strategies such as semidefinite relaxation, second-order cone relaxation, and convex inner approximation methods, along with summarizing relevant intelligent solution algorithms. Additionally, in response to the high uncertainty of renewable energy output, it reviews stochastic optimization dispatch strategies for ADNs, encompassing single-stage, two-stage, and multi-stage approaches. Meanwhile, given the promising prospects of large-scale deep reinforcement learning models in the power sector, their applications in ADN optimization dispatch are also reviewed. Finally, the paper outlines potential future research directions for ADN optimization dispatch. Full article
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16 pages, 10446 KiB  
Article
Transient Vortex Dynamics in Tip Clearance Flow of a Novel Dishwasher Pump
by Chao Ning, Yalin Li, Haichao Sun, Yue Wang and Fan Meng
Machines 2025, 13(8), 681; https://doi.org/10.3390/machines13080681 - 2 Aug 2025
Viewed by 171
Abstract
Blade tip leakage vortex (TLV) is a critical phenomenon in hydraulic machinery, which can significantly affect the internal flow characteristics and deteriorate the hydraulic performance. In this paper, the blade tip leakage flow and TLV characteristics in a novel dishwasher pump were investigated. [...] Read more.
Blade tip leakage vortex (TLV) is a critical phenomenon in hydraulic machinery, which can significantly affect the internal flow characteristics and deteriorate the hydraulic performance. In this paper, the blade tip leakage flow and TLV characteristics in a novel dishwasher pump were investigated. The correlation between the vorticity distribution in various directions and the leakage vortices was established within a rotating coordinate system. The results show that the TLV in a composite impeller can be categorized into initial and secondary leakage vortices. The initial leakage vortex originates from the evolution of two corner vortices that initially form at different locations within the blade tip clearance. This vortex induces pressure fluctuations at the impeller inlet; its shedding is identified as the primary contributor to localized energy loss within the flow passage. These findings provide insights into TLVs in complex pump geometries and provide solutions for future pump optimization strategies. Full article
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14 pages, 2230 KiB  
Article
Complete Mitochondrial (mtDNA) Genome Analysis of Economically Significant Fish Cirrhinus cirrhosus in Bangladesh
by Tajmirul Huda, Md. Alamgir Kabir and Md. Golam Rabbane
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(15), 7473; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26157473 - 2 Aug 2025
Viewed by 168
Abstract
Complete mitochondrial DNA genome annotation of an ecologically and commercially important fish species Cirrhinus cirrhosus was executed with next-generation sequencing (NGS) for nucleotide and phylogenetic analyses. The findings of this study showed that the Cirrhinus cirrhosus mitochondrial genome contained 16,593 bp, including 13 [...] Read more.
Complete mitochondrial DNA genome annotation of an ecologically and commercially important fish species Cirrhinus cirrhosus was executed with next-generation sequencing (NGS) for nucleotide and phylogenetic analyses. The findings of this study showed that the Cirrhinus cirrhosus mitochondrial genome contained 16,593 bp, including 13 protein-coding genes, 2 ribosomal RNA genes, 22 tRNA genes, and a D-loop region. The overall base composition was 32% adenine, 25% thiamine, 16% guanine, and 27% cytosine. This mitochondrial DNA exhibits an AT biasness, with 56% AT content in its genome. Significant fluctuations were identified in the AT and GC skew values of the ND6 gene, indicating that the selection and mutation forces acting on this gene might be different from those acting on other genes. The Ka/Ks ratios of most protein-coding genes were less than 1, indicating very strong natural selection pressure. Phylogenetic analysis of Cirrhinus cirrhosus with Cirrhinus mrigala and Bangana tungting suggested a closer evolutionary relationship among these species, which might have shared a more recent common ancestor. It has been also found that the genera Labeo and Cirrhinus are not monophyletic. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Genetics and Genomics)
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21 pages, 6892 KiB  
Article
Nose-Wheel Steering Control via Digital Twin and Multi-Disciplinary Co-Simulation
by Wenjie Chen, Luxi Zhang, Zhizhong Tong and Leilei Liu
Machines 2025, 13(8), 677; https://doi.org/10.3390/machines13080677 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 149
Abstract
The aircraft nose-wheel steering system serves as a critical component for ensuring ground taxiing safety and maneuvering efficiency. However, its dynamic control stability faces significant challenges under complex operational conditions. Existing research predominantly focuses on single-discipline modeling, with insufficient in-depth analysis of the [...] Read more.
The aircraft nose-wheel steering system serves as a critical component for ensuring ground taxiing safety and maneuvering efficiency. However, its dynamic control stability faces significant challenges under complex operational conditions. Existing research predominantly focuses on single-discipline modeling, with insufficient in-depth analysis of the coupling effects between hydraulic system dynamics and mechanical dynamics. Traditional PID controllers exhibit limitations in scenarios involving nonlinear time-varying conditions caused by normal load fluctuations of the landing gear buffer strut during high-speed landing phases, including increased control overshoot and inadequate adaptability to abrupt load variations. These issues severely compromise the stability of high-speed deviation correction and overall aircraft safety. To address these challenges, this study constructs a digital twin model based on real aircraft data and innovatively implements multidisciplinary co-simulation via Simcenter 3D, AMESim 2021.1, and MATLAB R2020a. A fuzzy adaptive PID controller is specifically designed to achieve adaptive adjustment of control parameters. Comparative analysis through co-simulation demonstrates that the proposed mechanical–electrical–hydraulic collaborative control strategy significantly reduces response delay, effectively minimizes control overshoot, and decreases hydraulic pressure-fluctuation amplitude by over 85.2%. This work provides a novel methodology for optimizing steering stability under nonlinear interference scenarios, offering substantial engineering applicability and promotion value. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Robotics, Mechatronics and Intelligent Machines)
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30 pages, 866 KiB  
Article
Balancing Profitability and Sustainability in Electric Vehicles Insurance: Underwriting Strategies for Affordable and Premium Models
by Xiaodan Lin, Fenqiang Chen, Haigang Zhuang, Chen-Ying Lee and Chiang-Ku Fan
World Electr. Veh. J. 2025, 16(8), 430; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj16080430 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 185
Abstract
This study aims to develop an optimal underwriting strategy for affordable (H1 and M1) and premium (L1 and M2) electric vehicles (EVs), balancing financial risk and sustainability commitments. The research is motivated by regulatory pressures, risk management needs, and sustainability goals, necessitating an [...] Read more.
This study aims to develop an optimal underwriting strategy for affordable (H1 and M1) and premium (L1 and M2) electric vehicles (EVs), balancing financial risk and sustainability commitments. The research is motivated by regulatory pressures, risk management needs, and sustainability goals, necessitating an adaptation of traditional underwriting models. The study employs a modified Delphi method with industry experts to identify key risk factors, including accident risk, repair costs, battery safety, driver behavior, and PCAF carbon impact. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to examine premium adjustments under different risk scenarios, categorizing EVs into four risk segments: Low-Risk, Low-Carbon (L1); Medium-Risk, Low-Carbon (M1); Medium-Risk, High-Carbon (M2); and High-Risk, High-Carbon (H1). Findings indicate that premium EVs (L1 and M2) exhibit lower volatility in underwriting costs, benefiting from advanced safety features, lower accident rates, and reduced carbon attribution penalties. Conversely, budget EVs (H1 and M1) experience higher premium fluctuations due to greater accident risks, costly repairs, and higher carbon costs under PCAF implementation. The worst-case scenario showed a 14.5% premium increase, while the best-case scenario led to a 10.5% premium reduction. The study recommends prioritizing premium EVs for insurance coverage due to their lower underwriting risks and carbon efficiency. For budget EVs, insurers should implement selective underwriting based on safety features, driver risk profiling, and energy efficiency. Additionally, incentive-based pricing such as telematics discounts, green repair incentives, and low-carbon charging rewards can mitigate financial risks and align with net-zero insurance commitments. This research provides a structured framework for insurers to optimize EV underwriting while ensuring long-term profitability and regulatory compliance. Full article
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21 pages, 3327 KiB  
Article
Numerical Analysis of Heat Transfer and Flow Characteristics in Porous Media During Phase-Change Process of Transpiration Cooling for Aerospace Thermal Management
by Junhyeon Bae, Jukyoung Shin and Tae Young Kim
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4070; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154070 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 218
Abstract
Transpiration cooling that utilizes the phase change of a liquid coolant is recognized as an effective thermal protection technique for extreme environments. However, the introduction of phase change within the porous structure brings about challenges, such as vapor blockage, pressure fluctuations, and temperature [...] Read more.
Transpiration cooling that utilizes the phase change of a liquid coolant is recognized as an effective thermal protection technique for extreme environments. However, the introduction of phase change within the porous structure brings about challenges, such as vapor blockage, pressure fluctuations, and temperature inversion, which critically influence system reliability. This study conducts numerical analyses of coupled processes of heat transfer, flow, and phase change in transpiration cooling using a Two-Phase Mixture Model. The simulation incorporates a Local Thermal Non-Equilibrium approach to capture the distinct temperature fields of the solid and fluid phases, enabling accurate prediction of the thermal response within two-phase and single-phase regions. The results reveal that under low heat flux, dominant capillary action suppresses dry-out and expands the two-phase region. Conversely, high heat flux causes vaporization to overwhelm the capillary supply, forming a superheated vapor layer and constricting the two-phase zone. The analysis also explains a paradoxical pressure drop, where an initial increase in flow rate reduces pressure loss by suppressing the high-viscosity vapor phase. Furthermore, a local temperature inversion, where the fluid becomes hotter than the solid matrix, is identified and attributed to vapor counterflow and its subsequent condensation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section J1: Heat and Mass Transfer)
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14 pages, 6710 KiB  
Article
Bow Thruster at Normal and Off-Design Conditions
by Mehrdad Kazemi and Nikolai Kornev
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(8), 1463; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13081463 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 163
Abstract
Reliable prediction of tunnel thruster performance under reverse, or off-design, reverse operating direction (ROD) conditions, is crucial for modern vessels that require bidirectional thrust from a single unit—such as yachts and offshore support vessels. Despite the increasing demand for such a capability, there [...] Read more.
Reliable prediction of tunnel thruster performance under reverse, or off-design, reverse operating direction (ROD) conditions, is crucial for modern vessels that require bidirectional thrust from a single unit—such as yachts and offshore support vessels. Despite the increasing demand for such a capability, there remains limited understanding of the unsteady hydrodynamic behavior and performance implications of ROD operation. This study addresses this gap through a scale-resolving computational fluid dynamics (CFD) investigation of a full-scale, fixed-pitch propeller with a diameter of 0.62, installed in a tunnel geometry representative of yacht-class side thrusters. Using advanced turbulence modeling, we compare the thruster’s performance under both the normal operating direction (NOD) and ROD. The results reveal notable differences: in ROD, the upstream separation zone was more compact and elongated, average thrust increases by approximately 3–4%, and torque and pressure fluctuations rise by 15–30%. These findings demonstrate that a single tunnel thruster can meet bidirectional manoeuvring requirements. However, the significantly elevated unsteady loads during ROD operation offer a plausible explanation for the increased noise and vibration frequently observed in practice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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17 pages, 2495 KiB  
Article
Production Capacity and Temperature–Pressure Variation Laws in Depressurization Exploitation of Unconsolidated Hydrate Reservoir in Shenhu Sea Area
by Yuanwei Sun, Yuanfang Cheng, Yanli Wang, Jian Zhao, Xian Shi, Xiaodong Dai and Fengxia Shi
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2418; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082418 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 253
Abstract
The Shenhu sea area is rich in unconsolidated hydrate reserves, but the formation mineral particles are small, the rock cementation is weak, and the coupling mechanism of hydrate phase change, fluid seepage, and formation deformation is complex, resulting in unclear productivity change law [...] Read more.
The Shenhu sea area is rich in unconsolidated hydrate reserves, but the formation mineral particles are small, the rock cementation is weak, and the coupling mechanism of hydrate phase change, fluid seepage, and formation deformation is complex, resulting in unclear productivity change law under depressurization exploitation. Therefore, a thermal–fluid–solid–chemical coupling model for natural gas hydrate depressurization exploitation in the Shenhu sea area was constructed to analyze the variation law of reservoir parameters and productivity. The results show that within 0–30 days, rapid near-well pressure drop (13.83→9.8 MPa, 36.37%) drives peak gas production (25,000 m3/d) via hydrate dissociation, with porosity (0.41→0.52) and permeability (75→100 mD) increasing. Within 30–60 days, slower pressure decline (9.8→8.6 MPa, 12.24%) and fines migration cause permeability fluctuations (120→90 mD), reducing gas production to 20,000 m3/d. Within 60–120 days, pressure stabilizes (~7.6 MPa) with residual hydrate saturation < 0.1, leading to stable low permeability (60 mD) and gas production (15,000 m3/d), with cumulative production reaching 2.2 × 106 m3. This study clarifies that productivity is governed by coupled “pressure-driven dissociation–heat limitation–fines migration” mechanisms, providing key insights for optimizing depressurization strategies (e.g., timed heat supplementation, anti-clogging measures) to enhance commercial viability of unconsolidated hydrate reservoirs. Full article
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16 pages, 3664 KiB  
Article
Wave Prediction Error Compensation and PTO Optimization Control Method for Improving the WEC Power Quality
by Tianlong Lan, Jiarui Wang, Luliang He, Peng Qian, Dahai Zhang and Bo Feng
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4043; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154043 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 181
Abstract
Reliable wave prediction plays a significant role in wave energy converter (WEC) research, but there are still prediction errors that would increase the uncertainty for the power grid and reduce the power quality. The efficiency and stability of the power take-off (PTO) system [...] Read more.
Reliable wave prediction plays a significant role in wave energy converter (WEC) research, but there are still prediction errors that would increase the uncertainty for the power grid and reduce the power quality. The efficiency and stability of the power take-off (PTO) system are also important research topics in WEC applications. In order to solve the above-mentioned problems, this paper presents a model predictive control (MPC) method composed of a prediction error compensation controller and a PTO optimization controller. This work aims to address the limitations of existing wave prediction methods and improve the efficiency and stability of hydraulic PTO systems in WECs. By controlling the charging and discharging of the accumulator, the power quality is enhanced by reducing grid frequency fluctuations and voltage flicker through prediction error compensation. In addition, an efficient and stable hydraulic PTO system can be obtained by keeping the operation pressure of the hydraulic motor at the optimal range. Thus, smoother power output minimizes grid-balancing penalties and storage wear, and stable hydraulic pressure extends PTO component lifespan. Finally, comparative numerical simulation studies are provided to show the efficacy of the proposed method. The results validate that the dual-controller MPC framework reduces power deviations by 74.3% and increases average power generation by 31% compared to the traditional method. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section A3: Wind, Wave and Tidal Energy)
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17 pages, 5158 KiB  
Article
Enhancing Oil Recovery Through Vibration-Stimulated Waterflooding: Experimental Insights and Mechanisms
by Shixuan Lu, Zhengyuan Zhang, Liming Dai and Na Jia
Fuels 2025, 6(3), 56; https://doi.org/10.3390/fuels6030056 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 214
Abstract
Vibration-stimulated waterflooding (VS-WF) is a promising enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method, especially for reservoirs with high-viscosity or emulsified oil. This study explores the effect of low-frequency vibration (2 Hz and 5 Hz) on oil mobilization under constant pressure and flow rate, using both [...] Read more.
Vibration-stimulated waterflooding (VS-WF) is a promising enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method, especially for reservoirs with high-viscosity or emulsified oil. This study explores the effect of low-frequency vibration (2 Hz and 5 Hz) on oil mobilization under constant pressure and flow rate, using both crude and emulsified oil samples. Vibration significantly improves recovery by inducing stick-slip flow, lowering the threshold pressure, and enhancing oil phase permeability while suppressing the water phase flow. Crude oil recovery increased by up to 24% under optimal vibration conditions, while emulsified oil showed smaller gains due to higher viscosity. Intermittent vibration achieved similar recovery rates to continuous vibration, but with reduced energy use. Statistical analysis revealed a strong correlation between pressure fluctuations and oil production in vibration-assisted tests, but no such relationship in non-vibration cases. These results provide insight into the mechanisms behind vibration-enhanced recovery, supported by analysis of pressure and flow rate responses during waterflooding. Full article
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