Producing a localized compression of gas between a concave surface and an impacting jet that is formed by using a shockwave to collapse a gas pocket
10265674 ยท 2019-04-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01J19/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G21B3/006
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
There is provided a method of producing a localized concentration of energy. The method includes creating at least one shockwave propagating through a non-gaseous medium so as to be incident upon a pocket of gas within the medium wherein the pocket of gas is attached to a non-planar surface shaped to concentrate the intensity of the shockwave which is incident upon the pocket of gas.
Claims
1. A method of producing a localised compression of gas, comprising: providing a non-gaseous medium having therein a pocket of gas, wherein the pocket of gas is attached to a bottom or centre point of a concave surface, wherein the concave surface is shaped to concentrate intensity of a shockwave incident upon the pocket of gas, creating at least one shockwave propagating through the non-gaseous medium so as to be incident upon the pocket of gas, wherein the at least one shockwave causes the pocket of gas to collapse, wherein the collapse of the pocket of gas causes a jet of the non-gaseous medium to form that traverses the pocket of gas towards and impacts against the concave surface, and wherein the concave surface is arranged to receive the jet impact such that at least some of the gas from the original pocket of gas is trapped by the impacting jet against the concave surface, wherein the gas trapped by the impacting jet against the concave surface is compressed, wherein the compression is enhanced by the at least one shockwave.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the surface comprises a plurality of discrete portions.
3. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the discrete portions are piecewise polynomial.
4. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the surface has a depth greater than its width.
5. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the surface comprises a plurality of concave portions.
6. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the concave surface has a plurality of gas pockets attached thereto.
7. A method as claimed in claim 1, comprising using an explosive device to create the shockwave with a pressure of between 0.1 GPa and 50 GPa.
8. A method as claimed in claim 1, comprising using an explosive device to apply one or more shockwaves to a static volume of non-gaseous medium to create the at least one shockwave propagating through the non-gaseous medium.
9. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the gas pocket is formed with the use of a pre-manufactured membrane that defines the boundary between the gas pocket and the non-gaseous medium.
10. A method as claimed in claim 9, wherein the membrane is frangible and is arranged to break upon impact from the shockwave.
11. A method as claimed in claim 9, wherein the prefabricated membrane includes a line or region of weakness.
12. An apparatus for producing a localised compression of gas comprising: a non-gaseous medium having therein a pocket of gas, wherein the pocket of gas is attached to a bottom or centre point of a concave surface; and means for creating at least one shockwave propagating through said medium so as to be incident upon said pocket of gas, wherein the at least one shockwave causes the pocket of gas to collapse, wherein the collapse of the pocket of gas causes a jet of the non-gaseous medium to form that traverses the pocket of gas towards and impacts against the concave surface, and wherein said concave surface is shaped to concentrate the intensity of the shockwave which is incident upon the pocket of gas, wherein the concave surface is arranged to receive the jet impact such that at least some of the gas from the original pocket of gas is trapped by the impacting jet against the concave surface, wherein the gas trapped by the impacting jet against the concave surface is compressed, wherein the compression is enhanced by the at least one shockwave.
13. An apparatus as claimed in claim 12, wherein the non-gaseous medium comprises a static volume of non-gaseous medium and the arrangement comprises an explosive device for applying one or more shockwaves to the static volume of non-gaseous medium to create the at least one shockwave propagating through the non-gaseous medium.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Certain embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(8) In the case of the second embodiment in
(9) In operation a shockwave 10 is created from an explosion, for instance with a pressure of 5 GPa, within the gel medium 8. This is represented in both
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(18) Although specific examples have been given, it will be appreciated that there are a large number of parameters that influence the actual results achieved, for example liquid or gel medium density, ambient pressure and temperature, composition of the gas and of the liquid or gel, impact angle of the shockwave, target surface shape and micro-structure of the target surface.
(19) In each of the embodiments described above, the diagrams shown are a vertical cross-section through a three-dimensional volume of gas and target surface and hence they depict embodiments that are rotationally symmetric. However, this is not essential to the invention. In particular the surface could comprise discrete surface portions in the rotational direction either instead of, or as well as in the vertical cross-section shown. In the latter case the target surface would be multi-facetted. Each facet could give rise to separate but converging shockwaves.
(20) In all of the embodiments described, the apparatus can be used by creating a shockwave in the medium which is incident upon a volume of gas containing deuterated water vapor.
(21) In numerical modeling of the experiment, the techniques described herein give rise to a peak pressure of 20 GPa which is sufficient to cause temperatures inside the collapsed volume of gas in excess of 110.sup.6 Kelvin which potentially may be sufficient for a nuclear fusion reaction of the deuterium atoms. In some non-limiting examples the resulting neutrons could be used in other processes, or could be absorbed by a neutron absorber for conversion of the kinetic energy of the neutrons to thermal energy and thus conventional thermodynamic energy generation.