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Showing papers by "Jacopo Buongiorno published in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a critical evaluation of the force balance approach in predicting the departure of rapidly growing bubbles from a boiling surface is presented, based on the conclusion that force balance models cannot be either robust or accurate for the purpose of predicting bubble departure.
Abstract: We present a critical evaluation of the force balance approach in predicting the departure of rapidly growing bubbles from a boiling surface. To this end, we conduct separate effect bubble growth experiments in a carefully controlled environment. We use high-speed video to quantify experimentally all the external forces acting on a growing bubble through the profile of the liquid–vapor interface. Our experimental data show that the momentum conservation equation is always rigorously satisfied, as it should, if the various forces are precisely quantified. However, based on our analysis and our observations, we come to the conclusion that force balance models cannot be either robust or accurate for the purpose of predicting bubble departure. They are not robust because the rate of change of the bubble momentum, i.e., the key quantity that force balance models aim at evaluating as the sum of the external forces, is orders of magnitude smaller than each of the force terms in the momentum conservation equation throughout the entire bubble life cycle. Thus, the slightest error on one of the external forces leads to very different predictions for bubble departure. The approach is also not accurate because the analytical expressions used to estimate the external forces are riddled with questionable assumptions (e.g., on the bubble growth rate, added mass coefficient, contact line length, and contact angle) and uncertainties that are, once again, orders of magnitude larger than the rate of change of the bubble momentum itself.

22 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2021-Energies
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a parametric study of the nuclear battery's levelized cost of heat and electricity, suggesting that those cost targets are within reach and that the cost of electricity from nuclear batteries is expected to depend strongly on core power rating, fuel enrichment, fuel burnup, size of the onsite staff, fabrication costs and financing.
Abstract: We introduce the concept of the nuclear battery, a standardized, factory-fabricated, road transportable, plug-and-play micro-reactor. Nuclear batteries have the potential to provide on-demand, carbon-free, economic, resilient, and safe energy for distributed heat and electricity applications in every sector of the economy. The cost targets for nuclear batteries in these markets are 20–50 USD/MWht (6–15 USD/MMBTU) and 70–115 USD/MWhe for heat and electricity, respectively. We present a parametric study of the nuclear battery’s levelized cost of heat and electricity, suggesting that those cost targets are within reach. The cost of heat and electricity from nuclear batteries is expected to depend strongly on core power rating, fuel enrichment, fuel burnup, size of the onsite staff, fabrication costs and financing. Notional examples of cheap and expensive nuclear battery designs are provided.

13 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new virucidal face mask concept driven by the oscillatory flow of human breath was introduced, and the governing heat and mass transport equations were solved to evaluate virus and CO2 transport.
Abstract: While facial coverings reduce the spread of SARS-CoV-2 by viral filtration, masks capable of viral inactivation by heating can provide a complementary method to limit transmission. Inspired by reverse-flow chemical reactors, we introduce a new virucidal face mask concept driven by the oscillatory flow of human breath. The governing heat and mass transport equations are solved to evaluate virus and CO2 transport. Given limits imposed by the kinetics of SARS-CoV-2 thermal inactivation, human breath, safety, and comfort, heated masks may inactivate SARS-CoV-2 to medical-grade sterility. We detail one design, with a volume of 300 ml at 90°C that achieves a 3-log reduction in viral load with minimal impedance within the mask mesh, with partition coefficient around 2. This is the first quantitative analysis of virucidal thermal inactivation within a protective face mask, and addresses a pressing need for new approaches for personal protective equipment during a global pandemic.

12 citations