Mechanical Engineering / Makina Mühendisliği

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/4129

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  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 83
    Citation - Scopus: 95
    Canopy-To Liquid Cooling for the Thermal Management of Lithium-Ion Batteries, a Constructal Approach
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2022) Güngör, Şahin; Çetkin, Erdal; Lorente, Sylvie
    With the growing interest on electric vehicles comes the question of the thermal management of their battery pack. In this work, we propose a thermally efficient solution consisting in inserting between the cells a liquid cooling system based on constructal canopy-to-canopy architectures. In such systems, the cooling fluid is driven from a trunk channel to perpendicular branches that make the tree canopy. An opposite tree collects the liquid in such a way that the two trees match canopy-to-canopy. The configuration of the cooling solution is predicted following the constructal methodology, leading to the choice of the hydraulic diameter ratios. We show that such configurations allow extracting most of the non-uniformly generated heat by the battery cell during the discharging phase, while using a small mass flow rate.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 9
    Citation - Scopus: 13
    Local Heat Transfer Control Using Liquid Dielectrophoresis at Graphene/Water Interfaces
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2021) Yenigün, Onur; Barışık, Murat
    Graphene-based materials are considered for the solution of the thermal management problem of current and next generation micro/nano-electronics with high heat generation densities. However, the hydrophobic nature of few-layer graphene makes passing heat to a fluid very challenging. We introduced an active and local manipulation of heat transfer between graphene and water using an applied, non-uniform electric field. When water undergoes electric field induced orientation polarization and liquid dielectrophoresis, a substantial increase in heat transfer develops due to a decrease in interfacial thermal resistance and increase in thermal conductivity. By using two locally embedded pin and plate electrodes of different sizes, we demonstrated a two-dimensional heat transfer control between two parallel few-layer graphene slabs. We obtained local heat transfer increase up to nine times at pin electrode region with an ultra-low Kapitza resistance through the studied non-uniform electric field strength range creating highly-ordered compressed water in the experimentally measured density limits. With this technique, heat can be (i) distributed from a smaller location to a larger section and/or (ii) collected to a smaller section from a larger region. Current results are important for hot spot cooling and/or heat focusing applications. © 2020
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 23
    Citation - Scopus: 24
    Determination of the Material Model and Damage Parameters of a Carbon Fiber Reinforced Laminated Epoxy Composite for High Strain Rate Planar Compression
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2021) Shi, C.; Guo, B.; Sarıkaya, Mustafa; Çelik, Muhammet; Chen, P.; Güden, Mustafa
    The progressive failure of a 0°/90° laminated carbon fiber reinforced epoxy composite was modeled in LS-DYNA using the MAT_162 material model, including the strain rate, damage progression and anisotropy effects. In addition to conventional standard and non-standard tests, double-shear and Brazilian tests were applied to determine the through-thickness shear modulus and the through-thickness tensile strength of the composite, respectively. The modulus reduction and strain softening for shear and delamination parameters were calibrated by low velocity drop-weight impact tests. The rate sensitivities of the modulus and strength of in-plane and through-thickness direction were determined by the compression tests at quasi-static and high strain rates. The fidelity of the determined model parameters was finally verified in the in-plane and through-thickness direction by the 3D numerical models of the Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar compression tests. The numerical bar stresses and damage progressions modes showed acceptable correlations with those of the experiments in both directions. The composite failed both numerically and experimentally by the fiber buckling induced fiber-matrix axial splitting in the in-plane and the matrix shear fracture in the through-thickness direction. © 2020
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 54
    Citation - Scopus: 58
    Sintering and Microstructural Investigation of Gamma–alpha Alumina Powders
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2014) Yalamaç, Emre; Trapani, Antonio; Akkurt, Sedat
    Sintering behaviors of commercially available alumina powders were investigated using constant-heating rate dilatometric experiments. Each powder had different proportion of alpha/gamma alumina. Densification behaviors of powders were studied up to 1600 °C with three different heating rates of 1, 3.3 and 6.6 °C/min. Compacts of different gamma content alumina powders exhibited systematic anomalous second peaks in the densification rate curves at certain heating rates and temperatures. At 3.3 °C/min heating rate experiments, densification curves of 10% gamma phase alumina powder compacts reached a plateau after 1450 °C, and did not increase any further at higher temperatures. This phenomenon was double checked to understand powder behavior during sintering. 10% gamma phase alumina powder compacts showed the highest density for each heating rate. It reached 94% theoretical density with 1 °C/min heating rate. But 20% gamma phase alumina powder compacts had the finest grain size of about 1.40 ?m. Final density and porosity of compacts were also tested by image analysis and the results were coherent with Archimedes results. © 2014 Karabuk University
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 171
    Characteristics of Brick Used as Aggregate in Historic Brick-Lime Mortars and Plasters
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2006) Böke, Hasan; Akkurt, Sedat; İpekoğlu, Başak; Uğurlu, Elif
    Mortars and plasters composed of a mixture of brick powder and lime have been used since ancient times due to their hydraulic properties. In this study, raw material compositions, basic physical, mineralogical, microstructural and hydraulic properties of some historic Ottoman Bath brick-lime mortars and plasters were determined by XRD, SEM-EDS, AFM, TGA and chemical analyses. The mineralogical and chemical compositions, microstructures, morphologies and pozzolanicities of the brick powders and fragments used as aggregates in the mortars and plasters were examined to find out the relationship between hydraulic properties of the mortars and the bricks. The characteristics of bricks used in the bath domes were also determined to investigate whether the brick aggregates used in mortar and plasters were prepared from these bricks. The results indicated that the mortars and plasters were hydraulic owing to the presence of crushed brick powders that have good pozzolanicity. The brick powders bad high pozzolanicity because they contained high amounts of calcium-poor clay minerals in their raw materials that were fired at low temperatures. On the other hand, bricks used in the domes had poor pozzolanicity with different mineralogical and chemical compositions from bricks used in mortars and plasters. Based on the results of the analysis, it was thought that the bricks manufactured with high amounts of clays were consciously chosen in the preparation of hydraulic mortars and plasters. (C) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 31
    Citation - Scopus: 37
    Kinematic Design of a Non-Parasitic 2r1t Parallel Mechanism With Remote Center of Motion To Be Used in Minimally Invasive Surgery Applications
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2020) Yaşır, Abdullah; Kiper, Gökhan; Dede, Mehmet İsmet Can
    In minimally invasive surgery applications, the use of robotic manipulators is becoming more and more common to enhance the precision of the operations and post-operative processes. Such operations are often performed through an incision port (a pivot point) on the patient's body. Since the end-effector (the handled surgical tool) move about the pivot point, the manipulator has to move about a remote center of motion. In this study, a 3-degrees-of-freedom parallel mechanism with 2R1T (R: rotation, T: translation) remote center of motion capability is presented for minimally invasive surgery applications. First, its kinematic structure is introduced. Then, its kinematic analysis is carried out by using a simplified kinematic model which consists of three intersecting planes. Then the dimensional design is done for the desired workspace and a simulation test is carried out to verify the kinematic formulations. Finally, the prototype of the final design is presented.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 25
    Citation - Scopus: 26
    Lowering the Sintering Temperature of Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Electrolytes by Infiltration
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2019) Sındıraç, Can; Çakırlar, Seda; Büyükaksoy, Aligül; Akkurt, Sedat
    A dense electrolyte with a relative density of over 95% is vital to prevent gas leakage and thus the achievement of high open circuit voltage in solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs). The densification process of ceria based electrolyte requires high temperatures heat treatment (i.e. 1400-1500 degrees C). Thus, the minimum co-sintering temperatures of the anode-electrode bilayers are fixed at these values, resulting in coarse anode microstructures and consequently poor performance. The main purpose of this study is to densify gadolinia doped ceria (GDC), a common SOFC electrolyte, at temperatures lower than 1400 degrees C. By this aim, an approach involving the infiltration of polymeric precursors into porous electrolyte scaffolds, a method commonly used for composite SOFC electrodes, is proposed. By infiltrating polymeric precursors of GDC into porous GDC scaffolds, a reduction in the sintering temperature by at least 200 degrees C is achieved with no additives that might affect the electrical properties. Energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy line scan analyses performed on porous GDC scaffolds infiltrated by a marker solution (polymeric FeOx precursor in this case) reveals a homogeneous infiltrated phase distribution, demonstrating the effectiveness of polymeric precursors.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 23
    Citation - Scopus: 24
    Constructal Branched Micromixers With Enhanced Mixing Efficiency: Slender Design, Sphere Mixing Chamber and Obstacles
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2019) Çetkin, Erdal; Miguel, Antonio F.
    Here we uncover the passive micromixer designs with the maximum mixing efficiency under a lesser flow impedance. Three different designs of micromixers were considered for volume constrained systems: branched systems of ducts, branching ducts with sphere mixing chamber and branching ducts with obstacles. The best performing designs, with maximum mixing efficiency and minimum flow impedance, are uncovered numerically by considering three degrees of freedom (ratios between diameters, between lengths, and between length and diameter) under total volume constraint. The mixing efficiency, the flow impedance and the mixer performance (or mixer quality) for all the designs are determined based on numerical results. The results uncover that the branched micromixer should have long mother ducts with larger diameter than daughter ducts. Our results also show that branching ducts with sphere mixing chambers and obstacles also enhance the mixing efficiency but with an additional penalty on flow impedance. Besides, systems with a sphere mixing chamber insertion in the junction between mother and daughter ducts have greater mixing efficiency than systems with embedded obstacles into the mother channel. However, for a given flow impedance, the mixing efficiency is greater for branched systems of ducts than for branching ducts with sphere mixing chamber and with obstacles. For mixer systems built in a space with limited size, branching ducts with sphere mixing chamber may be a good option because they require less space than the other systems. Here new analytical models are also proposed to predict the mixing efficiency and mixer performance based on numerical results. In summary, this paper provides important insights for the designers of micromixer based on Constructal law. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 21
    Citation - Scopus: 24
    Effect of Nano-Film Thickness on Thermal Resistance at Water/Silicon Interface
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2019) Yenigün, Onur; Barışık, Murat
    Parallel to the developments in micro/nano manufacturing techniques, component sizes in micro/nano electro mechanical systems have been decreasing to nanometer scales. Decrease in lengths in heat transfer direction below the heat carrier phonon length scales reduces thermal conduction in semiconductors. This study shows that such altered phonon spectrums with the decrease of size also reduce the heat transfer at the solid/liquid interfaces and can be correlated with the thermal conductivity of the slab. Using Molecular Dynamics (MD), we measured heat transfer between water and silicon of different thickness between 5 nm and 60 nm. Silicon slabs exhibit a linear temperature profile through the bulk where thermal conductivities measured based on Fourier law decreased by the decreasing slab thickness. We applied a semi-theoretical formulism on variation of conductivity by slab thickness. At the interface of these slabs and water, heat passage is disturbed due to the phonon mismatch of dissimilar materials, which is mostly considered as solid/liquid couple interface properties by the earlier literature. Resistance for phonon passage characterized as Kapitza length (L-K) is measured for different slab thicknesses at different surface wetting conditions varying between hydrophilic to hydrophobic. Increasing surface wetting decreases the L-K while at a certain wetting, decreasing the slab thickness increases the L-K. Once the L-K of different size slabs normalized by its bulk value (assumed to be the L-K of the thickest slab at the corresponding wetting), L-K variation by silicon thickness shows a universal behavior independent of surface wetting. A mathematical model describing the exponential increase of L-K by decreasing thickness was developed and validated by an earlier model. We further developed a correlation between the corresponding changes of L-K and conductivity with respective to their bulk values by analytically combining two models as (L-K/L-K-(Bulk)) = exp (3.94(k(Bulk) - k)/(k x k(Bulk))), using which L-K can be predicted from available thermal conductivities of a certain material. Results are crucial for thermal management of current and future electronics. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 11
    Citation - Scopus: 12
    Electrical Properties of Gadolinia Doped Ceria Electrolytes Fabricated by Infiltration Aided Sintering
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2019) Sındıraç, Can; Büyükaksoy, Aligül; Akkurt, Sedat
    Common solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) electrolyte materials (e.g., gadolinia doped ceria - GDC) demand temperatures exceeding 1400 degrees C for densification by conventional solid state sintering. It is very desirable to reduce the densification of the SOFC electroltytes to i) avoid microstructural coarsening of the composite anode layers, which are co-sintered with the electolyte layer in the anode supported SOFC fabrication scheme and ii) reduce energy consumption during SOFC manufacturing. We have recently demostrated a novel infiltration-aided sintering route to densify GDC ceramics at 1200 degrees C. In the present work, we present the electrical properties of GDC ceramics fabricated thusly. Comparison of high density (>= 95%) samples fabricated by conventional or infiltration-aided sintering reveal that at 700 degrees C, similar total electrical conductivities are obtained, while at 300 degrees C, specific grain boundary resistivity is smaller in the latter. Bulk (grain) conductivity is higher in porous GDC ceramics (relative density <= 90%) fabricated by infiltration-aided sintering than the conventionally sintered ones with similar porosities. Finally, open circuit voltage of 0.84 V at 700 degrees C, obtained under dilute hydrogen and stagnant air conditions suggests that GDC ceramics densified by infiltration-aided sintering are suitable for use as SOFC electrolytes.