Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Article Citation - WoS: 20Citation - Scopus: 17Optimizing Thermal Comfort in Physical Exercise Spaces: a Study of Spatial and Thermal Factors(Elsevier, 2024) Avcı, Ali Berkay; Balcı, Görkem Aybars; Başaran, TahsinFitness centers have become famous for maintaining a healthy lifestyle. They require different thermal comfort conditions and higher fresh air supply rates than other indoor spaces. However, even well-designed centers may cause discomfort due to factors such as design decisions, ventilation, overheating, and overcrowding. The standards for fitness centers do not consider these specific requirements sufficiently, so this study focuses on understanding the thermal comfort requirements during physical exercise and evaluating spatial and thermal factors affecting the thermal environment around the body. The study investigated the ceiling height, lateral and frontal distances between machines, and vent locations as spatial factors and inlet temperature and air velocity as thermal factors. A thirty-minute moderate-intensity constant work rate exercise test was conducted in a controlled climatic chamber using a cycle ergometer with six healthy male participants. The experiment conditions were simulated in CFD software using the collected data. Once a validated simulation model was provided, computational models for different environmental and spatial scenarios for the five-person cycling class were generated. Using Taguchi L9 (34) orthogonal arrays method, nine spatial scenarios were simulated with three different thermal operations each. Optimal factor levels were determined by using thermal comfort conditions (based on predicted mean vote) around the body's thermal plume. The results showed that a ceiling height of 5 m, lateral and frontal distances of 1 m and 0.5 m between machines, and Type 2 (two inlets mounted on the ceiling) ventilation strategy were optimal for achieving better thermal comfort values in a thermal condition of 18 °C and 0.2 m·s−1. The study found that increasing the ceiling height and using cross-positioned vents that project air vertically from the ceiling improved the comfort conditions significantly. It is expected that these criteria, which were determined, compared with the standards and detailed, will contribute to the production processes of comfortable exercise spaces.Article Citation - WoS: 4Citation - Scopus: 5Numerical Study of Fluid Flow and Mixing in the Argon Oxygen Decarburization (aod) Process(Iron and Steel Institute of Japan, 2023) Cheng, Zhongfu; Wang, Yannan; Dutta, Abhishek; Blanpain, Bart; Guo, Muxing; Malfliet, AnneliesA three-dimensional (3D) model has been developed based on the Eulerian multiphase flow approach to investigate the fluid flow behavior and mixing efficiency in the multi-tuyere AOD process. The interphase forces, including drag force, lift force, virtual force, turbulent dispersion force, and wall lubrication force, were incorporated into this model. The model was used to simulate six-tuyere and seven-tuyere AOD processes. The phenomena of multi-jet penetration, bubble plume merging, 3D turbulent flow and mixing characteristics were considered. The results indicate that the bubble plume merging occurs in the upper part of the liquid bath, forming a typical plume cluster. The predicted penetration length for a single tuyere jet agrees well with the previous work. For the multi-jet system, the side jets penetrate deeper than the inside ones. The six-tuyere AOD has a good flow condition in the center of the liquid bath, while the seven-tuyere AOD has a better flow pattern in the sidewall region and the lower bath. Overall, the seven-tuyere AOD performs better in mixing efficiency than the six-tuyere AOD under the same gas flow rate. These findings increase the understanding of the AOD process, allowing further optimization of process parameters. This model can be further extended to incorporate the thermochemical reactions into the modeling of the AOD reactor.
