Title: What%20is%20mechanical%20engineering?
1What is mechanical engineering?
- Paul D. Ronney
- Professor, Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering
- ronney_at_usc.edu
- http//carambola.usc.edu
- Slides available at
- http//carambola.usc.edu/whatisme
2Definition of ME
- If it needs engineering but it doesnt involve
electrons, chemical reactions, arrangement of
molecules, life forms, isnt a structure
(building/bridge/dam) and doesnt fly, a
mechanical engineer will take care of it - (if it does involve electrons, chemical
reactions, arrangement of molecules, life forms,
is a structure or does fly, thats OK too)
3ME curriculum
- Basic sciences - math, chemistry, physics
- Breadth, distribution
- Tools
- Computer graphics, computer aided design
- Electronics
- Experimental engineering instrumentation
- Mechanical design - nuts, bolts, gears, welds
- Computational methods - convert continuous
mathematical equations into discrete equations - F ma ? F m(dV/dt) m(Vnew-Vold)/(tnew-told)
4ME curriculum
- Core engineering science
- Mechanics
- Statics ?F 0
- Dynamics ?F ma
- Strength of materials
- Mechanical stress
- Vibration of beams
- Fluid mechanics - F ma applied to a fluid
5ME curriculum
- Core engineering science continued
- Thermodynamics
- 1st Law - energy is conserved - you cant win
- 2nd Law - entropy always increases - you cant
break even - Heat transfer
- Conduction - q -kA(dT/dx)
- Convection - q hA(Tf - Tw)
- Radiation - q ??FA(T4 - Tw4)
- Control systems
6ME curriculum
- Laboratory experience virtually every semester
- Synthesis
- Senior seminar
- Senior design project - capstone
- Non-credit enrichment
- Undergraduate research
- Undergraduate student paper competitions in ASME
- SAE Formula racecar
7Curriculum
Semester
Fall 1 Math 125 Chem 105 Intro Eng Writing
Spring 1 Math 126 Phys 151 Computer Humanities
Fall 2 Math 226 Phys 152 Statics Humanities
Spring 2 Math 245 Phys 153 Dynamics Humanities
Fall 3 Engineering Math AME Lab Fluids / Gas Dynamics Heat Transfer
Spring 3 Computer Analysis AME Lab Thermo-dynamics Advanced Writing
Fall 4 Tech elective Tech elective Controls Humanities
Spring 4 Design Projects Lab Tech elective Humanities
Mathematics 19 units General Education 27 units
Science 16 units Engineering 66-68 units
8Examples of industries employing MEs
- Automotive
- Combustion
- Engines, transmissions
- Suspensions
- Aerospace (w/ aerospace engineers)
- Control systems
- Heat transfer in turbines
- Fluid mechanics (internal external)
- Biomedical (w/ physicians)
- Biomechanics - prosthesis
- Flow and transport in vivo
- Computers (w/ computer engineers)
- Heat transfer
- Packaging of components systems
9Examples of industries employing MEs
- Construction (w/ civil engineers)
- Heating, ventilation, air conditioning (HVAC)
- Stress analysis
- Electrical power generation (w/ electrical
engineers) - Steam power cycles - heat and work
- Mechanical design of turbines, generators, ...
- Petrochemicals (w/ chemical, petroleum engineers)
- Oil drilling - stress, fluid flow, structures
- Design of refineries - piping, pressure vessels
- Robotics (w/ electrical engineers)
- Mechanical design of actuators, sensors
- Stress analysis
10Personal experience 1 - automotive engineering
- Why internal combustion engines? - alternatives
their limitations - External combustion - steam engine
- Heat transfer is too slow ( 100x slower than
combustion) - 10 B-747 engines large coal-fueled electric
power plant - Electric vehicles
- Batteries are heavy 1000 lbs/gallon of gasoline
equiv. - Fuel cells better, but still nowhere near
gasoline - "Zero emissions" myth - exports pollution
- Solar
- Need 30 ft x 30 ft collector for 15 hp
- (Arizona, high noon, mid-summer)
- Nuclear
- Who are we kidding ???
- Moral - hard to beat gasoline-fueled
premixed-charge IC engine for - Power/weight power/volume of engine
- Energy/weight energy/volume of liquid
hydrocarbon fuel
11Things you need to understand before you invent
the clean 100 mpg 1000 hp engine, revolutionize
the automotive industry and shop for your
retirement home on the French Riviera
- Room for improvement - factor of 2x in efficiency
- Ideal Otto cycle engine with compression ratio
8 52 - Real engine 30 maximum
- Differences because of
- Heat losses
- Friction losses
- Throttling losses
12Things you need to understand
- Room for improvement - 8 in pollutants
- Pollutants are a non-equilibrium effect
- Burn Fuel O2 N2 ? H2O CO2 CO UHC NO
- Expand CO UHC NO frozen at high levels
- With slow adiabatic (no heat loss) expansion
- CO UHC NO ? H2O CO2 N2
- ...but we cant slow down the expansion or make
it adiabatic - Room for improvement - very little in power
- IC engines are air processors
- Fuel takes up little space - air flow power
- Limitation on air flow due to
- Friction
- Mechanical strength - limitation on rotation rate
- Slow burn
- Choked flow past intake valves
13Throttleless engines
- Premixed-charge IC engines frequently operated at
lower than maximum torque output (throttled
conditions) - Throttling adjusts torque output of engines by
reducing intake density through decrease in
pressure ( P rRT) - Throttling losses substantial at part load
14The TPCE concept
- Throttleless Premixed-charge Engine (TPCE)
- U. S. Patent No. 5,184,592
- Use intake temperature increment via exhaust heat
transfer to reduce r - Increasing Tintake leads to leaner lean misfire
limit - use air/fuel ratio AND Tintake to control
torque - Provides Diesel-like economy with gasoline-like
power - Retrofit to existing engines possible by changing
only intake, exhaust, control systems
15TPCE operating limitations
16Test apparatus
- Production 4-cylinder engines
17USC engine lab
18Results
- Substantially improved fuel economy (up to 16 )
compared to throttled engine at same power RPM - Emissions
- Untreated NOx performance
- lt 0.8 grams per kW-hr
- gt 10 x lower than throttled engine )
- lt 0.2 grams per mile for 15 hp road load _at_ 55
mi/hr - CO and UHC comparable to throttled engine
- May need only inexpensive 2-way oxidizing
catalyst for CO UHC in TPCE engines
19TPCE performance
20Pulsed corona discharge ignition
- Collaboration with Prof. Martin Gundersen, USC
EE-EP - Multi-point ignition of flames has potential to
increase burning rates (thus performance) of IC
engines - Lasers, multi-point sparks may not be practical
- Energy efficiency
- Multiple intrusive electrodes
- How to obtain multi-point, energy efficient
ignition?
21Transient plasma (pulsed corona) discharges
- Initial phase of spark discharge (lt 100
nanoseconds) - highly conductive (arc) channel
not yet formed (like what happens on a much
longer time scale before a lightning bolt forms) - Characteristics
- Multiple streamers of electrons
- High energy (10s of eV) electrons
- Enabling technology USC-built discharge
generators having high wall-plug efficiency
(gt50) - far greater than laser sources
22Images of corona discharge flame
- Axial (left) and radial (right) views of
discharge - Axial view of discharge flame
- (6.5 CH4-air, 33 ms between images)
23Pulsed corona discharges in IC engine-like
geometry
24Flame ignition by pulsed corona discharges
- Rise time 2x faster with corona, with far lower
energy input - Have ignited with corona only (no arc) up to 10
atm
Discharge type Delay time (ms) Rise time (ms)
Corona 20 10
Corona arc 9 19
Spark 13.2 19
25Personal experience - micropower generation
- Hydrocarbon fuels have numerous advantages over
batteries - 100 X higher energy density
- Much higher power / weight power / volume of
engine - Inexpensive
- Nearly infinite shelf life
- Environmentally superior to disposable batteries
- 31 billion/yr of disposable batteries ends up in
landfills - 6 billion/yr market for rechargables
26The challenge of microcombustion
- but converting fuel energy to electricity with
a small device has not yet proved practical
despite numerous applications - Foot soldiers
- Portable electronics - laptop computers, cell
phones... - Micro air and space vehicles (enabling
technology) - Most approaches use scaled-down macroscopic
combustion engines, but may have problems with - Heat losses - flame quenching, unburned fuel CO
emissions - Friction losses
- Sealing, tolerances, manufacturing, assembly
27Micro-scale combustion power generation
- Three projects
- Thermoelectric power generation
- Single-chamber solid-oxide fuel cell
- Microscale jet or rocket engine
- Common themes
- No moving parts
- Use common fuels in air
- Spiral counterflow heat exchanger for thermal
management - Thermal transpiration for pumping of fuel and air
- Non-traditional fabrication
- Collaborations with faculty industry in
micro-fabrication, materials science,
28Smallest existing combustion engine
- Cox Tee Dee .010
- Application model airplanesWeight 0.49
oz.Bore 0.237 6.02 mmStroke
0.226 5.74 mmDisplacement 0.00997 cu in - (0.163 cm3)
- RPM 30,000
- Power 5 watts
- Poor performance
- Low efficiency (4-5)
- Emissions noise unacceptable for indoor
applications
29Some power MEMS concepts - gas turbine (MIT)
- Friction heat losses
- Made from silicon - very high thermal
conductivity - heat transfer along casing
rotor, from turbine to compressor - Very high rotational speed ( 2 million RPM)
needed for compression (speed of sound doesnt
scale!) - Manufacturing tolerances
30Worlds smallest operational gas turbine - Ewald
Schuster, USC-AME
- Mass Flow..... .049KG/s
- RPM .. 220k
- Weight..... 6.5 ounces
- Thrust...4 Pounds
- Fuel consumption...2.6 oz /min
- Fuel .Jet-A
- Pressure ratio ... 21
31Testing and first flight of 2.25 Turbine
32Direct methanol fuel cell
Methanol is easily stored compared to H2, but has
6x lower energy/mass and requires a lot more
equipment! (CMU concept shown)
33Thermal management
- Swiss roll heat recirculating burner -
- minimizes heat losses
- Toroidal 3D geometry
- further reduces losses -
- minimizes external temperature
- on all surfaces
2D Swiss roll combustor (Weinberg, 1970s)
1D counterflow heat exchanger and combustor
34Approach for thermal-fluid design
- Key issue SCALING - if it works at the
macroscale, will it work at the microscale? - Test macroscale versions of mesoscale combustor
- Use experiments to calibrate/verify computer
simulations at various Reynolds number (Re) - Demonstrate
- Scale down process (macro ? meso)
- Ability to model (macro, meso) over a range of Re
- Use computer models to optimize mesoscale device
(difficult to use diagnostics at small scales)
35Macroscale experiments
- Initial 2-D inconel designs - high thermal
conductivity (poor performance at small scales)
thermal expansion (warpage) - Titanium - 2x lower conductivity expansion than
inconel - Implementation of experiments
- PC control and data acquisition using LabView
- Mass flow controllers for fuel air
- Thermocouples (7)
36Mesoscale experiments
- Wire-EDM fabrication
- Pt igniter wire / catalyst
37Numerical model - Swiss roll
- FLUENT, 2D, 32,000 cells
- Conduction (solid gas), convection (gas),
radiation (solid-solid only) - Chemical reaction
inlet
outlet
38Reaction zone structure
- Reaction zone centered at low fuel because
maximum heat recirculation needed for high enough
T for flame survival - Higher fuel, less recirculation needed - flame
moves away from center - High fuel
- Low fuel
-
39Power generation - thermoelectrics
- Same principal as thermocouple, material
optimized for power generation - Imbed in wall between hot (outgoing product) and
cold (incoming reactant) streams - US Patent No. 6,613,972 (9/2/2003)
Typical thermoelectric configuration -
alternating n- and p-type elements
Overall configuration - Wall itself is electrical
conductor
40Thermoelectrics
- Widely used in deep space missions, some
commercial applications - TE efficiency typically 15 of Carnot with same DT
41Thermoelectric microgenerator problem
- TE wall material thermal conductivity k 1
W/mC - Gas k 0.025 - 0.1 W/mC
- ? Thermal resistance between gas TE wall gtgt
resistance across TE - ? Most ?T between gas TE wall, not across TE
- ? No power generation!
- Macroscale devices - strong turbulence,
convective heat transfer, low thermal resistance,
but microscale Reynolds too low! - Need dirty tricks for microscale devices!
42Dirty tricks
- Integrated TE wall T-fin design greatly reduces
Rgs/RTE - without massive pressure drops due to
aggressive fins in flow channel - Metal fins (blue) have high thermal conductivity
- act as thermal short-circuit - Air acts as thermal open-circuit
- Elongating base of T-fin and TE walls reduces
Rgs/RTE - US Patent No. 6,613,972 (9/2/2003)
-
43Power generation - SOFC in a Swiss roll
- PI Sossina Haile, CalTech
- Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOFCs) use hydrocarbon
fuels directly, but need high T - Swiss roll for thermal management
- Patent pending
44Single Chamber Fuel Cell in Swiss roll
- Maximum power density 375 mW/cm2 at T 540C
demonstrated with hydrocarbon fuel, unlike PEM
fuel cells that use hydrogen or (maybe) methanol
Â
Cell voltage (V)
Cell power (mW/cm2)
45Anode supported cell in Swiss roll
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46Fabrication of microscale parts
- EFAB (Electrochemical Fabrication)
- Micromachining process developed at USC
- Commercialization by Microfabrica Inc., Burbank,
CA - Analogous to macroscale rapid prototyping,
solid freeform fabrication - Produces arbitrary 3-D structures by stacking
layers - JPL (Pasadena, CA) process for electrochemical
deposition of TE elements - Can electrodeposit materials with structural,
sacrificial, catalytic, thermoelectric, magnetic,
etc. properties - Enables device fabrication using a single
monolithic process - No clean room required for device fabrication
47Instant Masking
- Pre-fabricated masks serve as reusable printing
plates - Polymer mask patterned on anode using
conventional photolithography
48EFAB process flow
Selectively deposited material (usually
sacrificial)
Blanket deposited 2nd material (usually
structural)
Blanket deposit 2nd material
Selectively deposit 1st material Using Instant
Masking
Planarize layer
Repeat for all layers
Etch sacrificial material
49EFAB highlights
- Minimum isolated feature 20 x 20 µm, maximum
feature size 5000 µm
12-layer chain, 290 ?m wide (worlds narrowest?)
Nickel micro-combustor 38 layers, 300 µm tall
2nd generation folded micro-combustor
50Application of ME concepts to bacteria
- Collaboration with Prof. Steven Finkel, USC
Molecular Biology - Propagating fronts are ubiquitous in nature -
flames, solid rocket propellants, some acid/base
polymerization reactions - Flames Fuel Oxidant Heat ? More heat
- Two essential ingredients
- Reactive medium (e.g. fuel-air mixture)
- Autocatalyst - product of reaction that also
accelerates the reaction (e.g. thermal energy) - Self-propagation occurs when the autocatalyst
diffuses into the reactive medium, initiating
reaction and creating more autocatalyst, e.g. A
nB ? (n1)B
51Bacterial fronts
- What about bacteria? Nutrient bugs ? more
bugs? - Many bacteria (e.g. E. coli) are motile - swim to
find favorable environments - diffusion-like
process - and multiply (react with nutrients) - Two modes run (swim in straight line) tumble
(change direction) - like random walk - Longer run times if favorable nutrient gradient
- Suggests possiblity of flames
52Motile bacteria
- Bacteria swim by spinning flagella - drag on rod
is about twice as large in crossflow compared to
axial flow (G. I. Taylor showed this enables
propulsion even though Re 10-4) (If you had
flagella, you could swim in quicksand or
molasses) - Flagella rotate as a group to propel, spread out
and rotate individually to tumble
http//www.rowland.org/bacteria/movies.html
53Propagation rates of motile bacteria fronts
- As agar concentration increases, motility of
bacteria and thus the propagation speed (s)
decreases substantially
54Quenching limit of bacteria fronts
- Quenching limit min. or max. value of some
parameter (e.g. reactant concentration or channel
width) for which steady front can exist - Quenching channels made using filter paper
infused with antibiotic - bacteria killed near
the wall, mimics heat loss to a cold wall in
flames - Bacteria can propagate through a wide channel but
not the narrow channel, indicating a quenching
limit - Quenching described in terms of a minimum Peclet
Number - Pe sw/D (w channel width)
- For the test case shown s 1.75 x 10-4 cm/s, D
3.7 x 10-5 cm2/s, w at quenching limit 2.1 cm ?
Pe 9.8 - similar to flames and polymer fronts
55Quenching limit of bacteria fronts
6 mm wide channel 35 mm wide channel E. coli,
0.1 agar, 100 µl of kanamycin per side, 6.5
hours after inoculation
56Comparison of fronts in Mot and Mot- bacteria
- Switching from Mot to Mot- bacteria decreases
the bacteria diffusivity (Dautocatalyst) by
1700x but nutrient diffusivity (Dreactant) is
unchanged - decreases propagation speed and the
effective Lewis number - Mot- fronts cellular but Mot fronts smooth -
consistent with Lewis number analogy of flames
Mot 5 hr 30 min after inoculation Mot- 50
hr after inoculation 0.1 (left) or 0.05
(right) Agar dyed with a 5 Xylene Cyanol
solution (Petri dish 9 cm diameter)
57Biofilms
- Until recently, most studies of bacteria
conducted in planktonic (free swimming) state,
but most bacteria in nature occur in biofilms
attached to surfaces, e.g. on teeth, clogging in
water and oil pipelines, infections in catheters - Recently many studies of biofilms have been
conducted, but the effects of flow of the
nutrient media have not been systematically
assessed
58Biofilm experiments - laminar flow in tubes
59Biofilms - images
Experiments show an effect of flow velocity or
shear rate on growth rate and upstream spread
60Summary - ME
- Perhaps broadest engineering discipline
- Everybody needs MEs
- Core material permeates all engineering systems
(fluid mechanics, solid mechanics, heat transfer,
control systems, ...)