2,095 research outputs found
Finite element analysis of melting effects on MHD stagnation-point non-Newtonian flow and heat transfer from a stretching/shrinking sheet
A numerical study is presented for boundary layer flow and heat transfer of micropolar (non-Newtonian) fluid from a stretching/shrinking sheet in the presence of melting and viscous heating. In this study the velocity of ambient fluid and stretching/shrinking velocity vary linearly with the distance from the stagnation-point. A uniform magnetic field is applied normal to the sheet and moves with the free stream as encountered in certain magnetic materials processing systems. Using similarity transformations, the governing partial differential equations are transformed into a system of coupled, nonlinear ordinary differential equations. A variational finite element code is implemented to solve the resulting dimensionless boundary value problem. The influence of magnetic body force (M), stretching/shrinking (ε) and melting (Me) parameters on velocity, microrotation, temperature, surface shear stress function (skin-friction) and local Nusselt number are elaborated in detail. Velocity is decreased with a rise in melting parameter, whereas far from the wall microrotation is reduced and furthermore temperatures are depressed. The flow is accelerated, micro-rotation (angular velocity of micro-elements) increased and temperature enhanced with increasing stretching rate (ε > 0) whereas the converse behaviour is observed with increasing shrinking rate (ε < 0). Increasing magnetic parameter is found to both increase temperatures and to accelerate the flow whereas it reduces microrotation near the wall and enhances it further from the wall. Special cases of the present model (with magnetic, dissipative and melting effects negated) are benchmarked with earlier results from the literature and found to be in excellent agreement. Excellent convergence and stability is achieved with the numerical method
Bejan flow visualization of free convection in a Jeffrey fluid from a semi-infinite vertical cylinder : influence of Deborah and Prandtl numbers
This article studies the pattern of heat lines in free convection non-Newtonian flow from a
semi-infinite vertical cylinder via Bejan’s heat function concept. The viscoelastic Jeffrey fluid
model is employed. The time-dependent, coupled, non-linear conservation equations for
momentum and energy (heat) are solved computationally with the unconditionally stable finite
difference Crank-Nicolson method. Extensive graphical results are presented for the influence
of Deborah number (viscoelastic parameter) and Prandtl number (with ranges 0 - 0.8 and 0.68
- 7.2, respectively) on thermal and flow characteristics including time histories of overall skin friction
and heat transfer rate. Lower values of Deborah number indicate that the material acts
in a more fluid-like manner whereas the higher values of Deborah number correspond to the
material showing characteristics more associated with a solid. The solutions indicate that the
time taken for the flow-field variables to achieve the steady-state is increased with higher
values of Deborah number. Boundary flow visualization is presented using heat lines,
isotherms and streamlines. It is observed that as Deborah number increases the intensity of heat
lines increases and they tend to deviate from the hot cylindrical wall. Furthermore, the flow field
variables for the Newtonian fluid case exhibit a significantly different pattern from that
of Jeffrey fluid
Transient analysis of Casson fluid thermo-convection from a vertical cylinder embedded in a porous medium : entropy generation and thermal energy transfer visualization
Thermal transport in porous media has stimulated substantial interest in engineering sciences due to increasing applications in filtration systems, porous bearings, porous layer insulation, biomechanics, geomechanics etc. Motivated by such applications, in this article a numerical investigation of entropy generation effects on the heat and momentum transfer in unsteady laminar incompressible boundary layer flow of a Casson viscoplastic fluid over a uniformly heated vertical cylinder embedded in a porous medium is presented. Darcy’s law is employed to simulate bulk drag effects at low Reynolds number for an isotropic, homogenous porous medium. Heat line visualization is also included. The mathematical model is derived and normalized using appropriate transformation variables. The resulting time-dependent non-linear coupled partial differential conservation equations with associated boundary conditions are solved with an efficient unconditionally stable implicit finite difference Crank Nicolson scheme. The time histories of average values of momentum and heat transport coefficients, entropy generation and Bejan number, as well as the steady-state flow variables are computed for several values of non-dimensional parameters arising in the flow equations. The results indicate that entropy generation parameter and Bejan number are both elevated with increasing values of Casson fluid parameter, Darcy number, group parameter and Grashof number. To analyze the heat transfer process in a two-dimensional domain, plotting heat lines provides an excellent approach in addition to streamlines and isotherms. The dimensionless heat function values are shown to correlate closely with the overall rate of heat transfer. Bejan’s heat flow visualization implies that the heat function contours are compact in the neighbourhood of the leading edge of the boundary layer on the hot cylindrical wall. It is observed that as the Darcy number increases, the deviations of heat lines from the hot wall are reduced. Furthermore the deviations of flow variables from the hot wall for a Casson fluid are significant compared with those computed for a Newtonian fluid and this has important implications in industrial thermal materials processing operations
Unsteady free convective heat transfer in third-grade fluid flow from an isothermal vertical plate : a thermodynamic analysis
The current study investigates theoretically and numerically the entropy generation in time-dependent free-convective third-grade viscoelastic fluid convection flow from a vertical plate. The non-dimensional conservation equations for mass, momentum, and energy are solved using a Crank-Nicolson finite difference method with suitable boundary conditions. Expressions for known values of flow-variables coefficients are also derived for the wall heat transfer and skin friction and numerically evaluated. The effect of Grashof number, Prandtl number, group parameter (product of dimensionless temperature difference and Brinkman number) and third-grade parameter on entropy heat generation is analyzed and shown graphically. Bejan line distributions are also presented for the influence of several control parameters. The computations reveal that with increasing third-grade parameter the entropy generation decreases and Bejan number increases. Also, the comparison graph shows that contour lines for third-grade fluid vary considerably from the Newtonian fluid. The study is relevant to non-Newtonian thermal materials processing systems
The clinical features of the piriformis syndrome: a systematic review
Piriformis syndrome, sciatica caused by compression of the sciatic nerve by the piriformis muscle, has been described for over 70 years; yet, it remains controversial. The literature consists mainly of case series and narrative reviews. The objectives of the study were: first, to make the best use of existing evidence to estimate the frequencies of clinical features in patients reported to have PS; second, to identify future research questions. A systematic review was conducted of any study type that reported extractable data relevant to diagnosis. The search included all studies up to 1 March 2008 in four databases: AMED, CINAHL, Embase and Medline. Screening, data extraction and analysis were all performed independently by two reviewers. A total of 55 studies were included: 51 individual and 3 aggregated data studies, and 1 combined study. The most common features found were: buttock pain, external tenderness over the greater sciatic notch, aggravation of the pain through sitting and augmentation of the pain with manoeuvres that increase piriformis muscle tension. Future research could start with comparing the frequencies of these features in sciatica patients with and without disc herniation or spinal stenosis
Numerical study of nonlinear heat transfer from a wavy surface to a high permeability medium with pseudo-spectral and smoothed particle methods
Motivated by petro-chemical geological systems, we consider the natural convection boundary layer flow from a vertical isothermal wavy surface adjacent to a saturated non-Darcian high permeability porous medium. High permeability is considered to represent geologically sparsely packed porous media. Both Darcian drag and Forchheimer inertial drag terms are included in the velocity boundary layer equation. A high permeability medium is considered. We employ a sinusoidal relation for the wavy surface. Using a set of transformations, the momentum and heat conservation equations are converted from an (x, y) coordinate system to an (x,η) dimensionless system. The two-point boundary value problem is then solved numerically with a pseudo-spectral method based on combining the Bellman–Kalaba quasi linearization method with the Chebyschev spectral collocation technique (SQLM). The SQLM computations are demonstrated to achieve excellent correlation with smoothed particle hydrodynamic (SPH) Lagrangian solutions. We study the effect of Darcy number (Da), Forchheimer number (Fs), amplitude wavelength (A) and Prandtl number (Pr) on the velocity and temperature distributions in the regime. Local Nusselt number is also computed for selected cases. The study finds important applications in petroleum engineering and also energy systems exploiting porous media and undulating (wavy) surface geometry. The SQLM algorithm is shown to be exceptionally robust and achieves fast convergence and excellent accuracy in nonlinear heat transfer simulations
Transcription of toll-like receptors 2, 3, 4 and 9, FoxP3 and Th17 cytokines in a susceptible experimental model of canine Leishmania infantum infection
Canine leishmaniosis (CanL) due to Leishmania infantum is a chronic zoonotic systemic disease resulting from complex interactions between protozoa and the canine immune system. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are essential components of the innate immune system and facilitate the early detection of many infections. However, the role of TLRs in CanL remains unknown and information describing TLR transcription during infection is extremely scarce. The aim of this research project was to investigate the impact of L. infantum infection on canine TLR transcription using a susceptible model. The objectives of this study were to evaluate transcription of TLRs 2, 3, 4 and 9 by means of quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) in skin, spleen, lymph node and liver in the presence or absence of experimental L. infantum infection in Beagle dogs. These findings were compared with clinical and serological data, parasite densities in infected tissues and transcription of IL-17, IL-22 and FoxP3 in different tissues in non-infected dogs (n = 10), and at six months (n = 24) and 15 months (n = 7) post infection. Results revealed significant down regulation of transcription with disease progression in lymph node samples for TLR3, TLR4, TLR9, IL-17, IL-22 and FoxP3. In spleen samples, significant down regulation of transcription was seen in TLR4 and IL-22 when both infected groups were compared with controls. In liver samples, down regulation of transcription was evident with disease progression for IL-22. In the skin, upregulation was seen only for TLR9 and FoxP3 in the early stages of infection. Subtle changes or down regulation in TLR transcription, Th17 cytokines and FoxP3 are indicative of the silent establishment of infection that Leishmania is renowned for. These observations provide new insights about TLR transcription, Th17 cytokines and Foxp3 in the liver, spleen, lymph node and skin in CanL and highlight possible markers of disease susceptibility in this model
Significant sequelae after bacterial meningitis in Niger: a cohort study
Beside high mortality, acute bacterial meningitis may lead to a high frequency of neuropsychological sequelae. The Sahelian countries belonging to the meningitis belt experience approximately 50% of the meningitis cases occurring in the world. Studies in Africa have shown that N. meningitidis could cause hearing loss in up to 30% of the cases, exceeding sometimes measles. The situation is similar in Niger which experiences yearly meningitis epidemics and where rehabilitation wards are rare and hearing aids remain unaffordable. The aim of this study was to estimate the frequency of neuropsychological sequelae after acute bacterial meningitis in four of the eight regions of Niger
Novel highly emissive non proteinogenic amino acids : synthesis of 1,3,4-thiadiazolyl asparagines and evaluation as fluorimetric chemosensors for biologically relevant transition metal cations
Highly emissive heterocyclic asparagine derivatives bearing a 1,3,4-thiadiazolyl unit at the side chain, functionalised with electron donor or acceptor groups, were synthesised and evaluated as amino acid based fluorimetric chemosensors for metal cations such as Cu2+, Zn2+, Co2+ and Ni2+. The results suggest that there is a strong interaction through the donor heteroatoms at the side chain of the various asparagine derivatives, with high sensitivity towards Cu2+ in a ligand-metal complex with 1:2 stoichiometry. Association constants and detection limits for Cu2+ were calculated. The photophysical and metal ion sensing properties of these asparagine derivatives confirm their potential as fluorimetric chemosensors and suggest that they can be suitable for incorporation into chemosensory peptidic frameworks.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) - PTDC/QUI/66250/2006 (FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-007428
Current challenges in software solutions for mass spectrometry-based quantitative proteomics
This work was in part supported by the PRIME-XS project, grant agreement number 262067, funded by the European Union seventh Framework Programme; The Netherlands Proteomics Centre, embedded in The Netherlands Genomics Initiative; The Netherlands Bioinformatics Centre; and the Centre for Biomedical Genetics (to S.C., B.B. and A.J.R.H); by NIH grants NCRR RR001614 and RR019934 (to the UCSF Mass Spectrometry Facility, director: A.L. Burlingame, P.B.); and by grants from the MRC, CR-UK, BBSRC and Barts and the London Charity (to P.C.
- …
