Title: PRESENTATIONS ME4331 Terry Simon THERMAL SCIENCE LABORATORY
1PRESENTATIONSME4331 Terry SimonTHERMAL SCIENCE
LABORATORY
April 13, 2006
2- OUTLINE
- INTRODUCTION
- PURPOSE OF YOUR PRESENTATION
- OBJECTIVES OF THE WORK TO BE
- PRESENTED
- MAIN OBSERVATIONS A SUMMARY
- DELIVERING YOUR MESSAGE
- OBJECTIVES
- PROCEDURE AND FACILITY
- RESULTS
- CONCLUSIONS
- SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
3- INTRODUCTION
- PURPOSE OF YOUR PRESENTATION
- Remember, you are only introducing at this point.
This will be short, but important. - Consider your audience. What are their
interests? Target your presentation to them. - OBJECTIVES OF THE WORK TO BE PRESENTED
- Remember, in the body you will discuss how you
met the objectives, or you will comment on how
continuation work might meet them. - Relate the objectives to the audience. What will
they want to learn? - MAIN OBSERVATIONS A SUMMARY
- The essence of what you learned. A teaser to get
them interested and attentive to listen for the
details.
4- DELIVERING YOUR MESSAGE
- OBJECTIVES
- PROCEDURE AND FACILITY
- Identify cases studied parameters varied.
- Show a picture or schematic (whichever is
- more clear to understand at a glance).
- Discuss measurement methods and instrumentation.
Show a picture or a schematic (whichever is more
clear) if needed. - RESULTS
- Give the most important results, dont dilute
with minor results. - Give enough description that all understand how
you arrived at these results. - CONCLUSIONS
- What are these results telling?
- What conclusions can be drawn from them.?
5- SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- Repeat the highlights of the presentation. Tell
them what you just told them. - Your objectives.
- How you approached the question.
- What was done
- What was concluded.
- Here is where your main results (only a few main
ones) are clearly presented. - There will undoubtedly be unfinished business or
reflections on how the work may be extended.
Address it here. This should not be a dominant
part of this section a presentation of the most
important results is the most important part.
6- OTHER POINTS TO KEEP IN MIND
- Reference the work and contributions of others.
- Reduce the number of main points per slide to a
few, no more than five or six. You may want to
step through them. - Stay within your allotted time. The audience
will accept a presentation that is a bit too
short, but is not very tolerant of one that is
too long. - Say, This is important to me and I want it to be
important to you! by - Looking at the audience.
- Speaking to the audience slowly, distinctly,
with appropriate volume and with enthusiasm. - Dressing appropriately.
- Avoiding slang and casual language.
7- MORE POINTS TO KEEP IN MIND
- Move a bit. Dont be a statue, but dont be too
busy either. Use hand gestures, but not
excessively. Keep your hands out of your pockets
and dont fiddle with whatever you may be
holding. - Use crib sheets if you must. Though, with
practice, you should not need them except for
some details you wish to be sure to get right. - Decide ahead of time how you will note various
points on the visuals rigid pointer, light
pointer, mouse pointer, etc. - Figure out ahead of time what questions may be
asked, and prepare responses.
8- AND, MOST IMPORTANTLY
- PRACTICE
- PRACTICE,
- PRACTICE
9 10Stirling Engine Aerothermal Experiments
Time
DOE
Temperature
Unsteady temperature measurements within the
regenerator
Radial Location
Computation and visualization of unsteady flows
within the engine expansion space,
NASA
Bulk flow
11High Temperature and Plasma Laboratory
- Selected Current Projects
-
- Arc plasma instabilities and plasma generator
control - plasma jet shear layer
instability diagnostics and control
- experimental
investigation of fluid dynamic interaction
between plasma jet, cold gas - arc-anode attachment instability
- - effect of cold gas
boundary layer - - 3-D time dependent
model of plasma fluid dynamics - plasma cutting torch
optimization - cathode erosion studies - - nozzle design
effectiveness through spectroscopy
12Cutting Torch Cathode Erosion High Speed
Observation, 200 A arc in O2, Hf cathode
Nozzle with Sapphire Window
Lens System
High Speed Video Camera
13Anode Boundary Layer Modeling
Temperature and velocity distributions and
Comparison with photo
14Atmospheric Aerosol Research
- Instrumentation Development
- novel measurements
- commercialization
- Laboratory Research
- Atmospheric Research
- multidisciplinary field studies
- radiative transfer
- nucleation
- gas-to-particle formation
15Engine and particle research in Center for
Diesel Research
- Real world and laboratory emission measurements
- Sensors
- Renewable fuels
- Fundamental studies
Microengine
16Advanced Space Power Source Stirling Convertor
Regenerator Microfabrication
Concepts
Honeycomb
NASA Space Power Initiative
Lenticular
Involute Foil
- Goals
- Microfabricate new Stirling convertor regenerator
- Precisely defined geometrical features that can
be refined to enhance radial heat transfer
reduce axial heat transfer DP - Improve the performance of the Stirling engine
- Technical Challenges
- Identify right concept fab technique
- Fabricate the regenerator with microfab
techniques - Address life reliability, in addition to
performance
17Dynamics Control of Low-Density Jets Low
density jets are inherently unstable, leading to
considerable mixing between the primary jet fluid
and surrounding ambient fluid. Control strategies
are being developed to exploit the stability
characteristics of these flows.
Shear Flow Control Laboratory
Combustion using JP-10 Jet Fuel Research is being
carried out to better understand the turbulent
flame characteristics in a backward-facing dump
combustor proposed for use in a scramjet engine.
Lean premixed-prevaporized JP-10 jet fuel is
introduced upstream of the step and burned
downstream of the step producing a bright blue
flame. In the absence of control the flame is
highly unstable, producing strong oscillations.
Counterflow is applied at the trailing edge of
the step to disrupt the periodic motion, leading
to a stable flame located in the lower portion of
the combustion chamber.
Schlieren Image
Schematic
PIV Image
Stable combustion using counterflow heat
release 100 kW
18 Polymer Heat Exchangers NSF, DOE-NREL
Goals
Develop heat exchangers for charge-air coolers
and radiators Develop collectors heat
exchangers for solar water heating
Woven Tubes
Shaped Tubes
Theoretical and experimental studies of unique
tubular geometries for enhanced heat transfer
19Micro-channels Flow boiling forced convection
Transient temperature response of a micro-channel
plate