Ke Nguyen
University of Tennessee
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ke Nguyen.
Chaos | 1997
Visarath In; Mark L. Spano; Joseph D. Neff; William L. Ditto; C. Stuart Daw; K. Dean Edwards; Ke Nguyen
The dynamics of a thermal pulse combustor model are examined. It is found that, as a parameter related to the fuel flow rate is varied, the combustor will undergo a transition from periodic pulsing to chaotic pulsing to a chaotic transient leading to flameout. Results from the numerical model are compared to those obtained from a laboratory-scale thermal pulse combustor. Finally the technique of maintenance (or anticontrol) of chaos is successfully applied to the model, with the result that the operation of the combustor can be continued well into the flameout regime. (c) 1997 American Institute of Physics.
The Chemical Engineering Journal and The Biochemical Engineering Journal | 1996
Ke Nguyen; C.S. Daw; P. Chakka; M. Cheng; D.D. Bruns; Charles E. A. Finney; M.B. Kennell
Abstract It has been suggested that rising bubbles in dense fluids resemble an inverted dripping faucet and that they undergo analogues period-doubling bifurcations to chaos. We present experimental results that demonstrate that this analogy is weak because the dominant source of instability in the bubble train is inherently different — mutual interactions between spatially separated bubbles as opposed to nozzle dynamics. Unlike the dripping faucet, the initial instability in a bubble train develops at a location far from the injection nozzle and progresses toward the nozzle with increasing gas flow. From qualitative and rigorous quantitative observations, we conclude that rising-bubble dynamics are best described as ‘small-box spatio-temporal chaos’ with a flow instability. Such dynamics can superficially appear to be simple temporal chaos when considering spatially localized measurements. We show similarity between our experimental results and a bubble-interaction model that accounts for drag and coalescence effects without considering any nozzle dynamics.
Presented at the SAE 2013 World Congress and Exhibition, 16-18 April 2013, Detroit, Michigan; Related Information: Posted with permission | 2013
Aaron Williams; Jonathan Burton; Robert L. McCormick; Todd J. Toops; Andrew A. Wereszczak; Ethan E Fox; Michael J. Lance; Giovanni Cavataio; Douglas Allen Dobson; Jim Warner; Rasto Brezny; Ke Nguyen; D. William Brookshear
Alkali and alkaline earth metal impurities found in diesel fuels are potential poisons for diesel exhaust catalysts. A set of diesel engine production exhaust systems was aged to 150,000 miles. These exhaust systems included a diesel oxidation catalyst, selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalyst, and diesel particulate filter (DPF). Four separate exhaust systems were aged, each with a different fuel: ultralow sulfur diesel containing no measureable metals, B20 (a common biodiesel blend) containing sodium, B20 containing potassium, and B20 containing calcium, which were selected to simulate the maximum allowable levels in B100 according to ASTM D6751. Analysis included Federal Test Procedure emissions testing, bench-flow reactor testing of catalyst cores, electron probe microanalysis (EPMA), and measurement of thermo-mechanical properties of the DPFs. EPMA imaging found that the sodium and potassium penetrated into the washcoat, while calcium remained on the surface. Bench-flow reactor experiments were used to measure the standard nitrogen oxide (NOx) conversion, ammonia storage, and ammonia oxidation for each of the aged SCR catalysts. Vehicle emissions tests were conducted with each of the aged catalyst systems using a chassis dynamometer. The vehicle successfully passed the 0.2 gram/mile NOx emission standard with each of the four aged exhaust systems.
Tribology Transactions | 2015
William F. Rohr; Ke Nguyen; Bruce G. Bunting; Jun Qu
The feasibility of using a motored single-cylinder 517 cc diesel engine to observe small frictional differences between oil formulations is investigated. Friction mean effective pressure (FMEP) is measured and compared for an SAE 10W-30 and an SAE 5W-20 oil in three stages of production: base oil, commercial oil without a friction and wear reducing additive, and fully formulated commercial oil. In addition, a commercial SAE 5W-30 engine oil is investigated. Friction mean effective pressure is plotted versus oil dynamic viscosity to compare the lubricant FMEP at a given viscosity. Linear regressions and average friction mean effective pressure are used as a secondary means of comparing FMEP for the various oil formulations. Differences between the oils are observed with the base oil having higher friction at a given viscosity but a lower average FMEP due to the temperature distribution of the test and lower viscosities reached by the base oil. The commercial oil is shown to have both a higher FMEP at a given viscosity and a higher average FMEP than the commercial oil without a friction and wear reducing additive. The increase in friction for the oil without a friction and wear reduction additive indicates that the operational regime of the engine may be out of the bounds of the optimal regime for the additive or that the additive is more optimized for wear reduction. Results show that it is feasible to observe small differences in FMEP between lubricating oil formulations using a small, single-cylinder motored engine.
Physical Review Letters | 1995
C. Stuart Daw; Charles E. A. Finney; M. Vasudevan; Nick A. van Goor; Ke Nguyen; Duane D. Bruns; Eric J. Kostelich; Celso Grebogi; Edward Ott; James A. Yorke
Catalysis Today | 2007
Todd J. Toops; Bruce G. Bunting; Ke Nguyen; Ajit Gopinath
Archive | 2002
Michael E. Muhle; Ke Nguyen; Charles E. A. Finney; Stuart Daw
Catalysis Today | 2010
Todd J. Toops; Ke Nguyen; Adam L. Foster; Bruce G. Bunting; Nathan Ottinger; Josh A. Pihl; Edward W. Hagaman; Jian Jiao
Catalysis Today | 2015
D. William Brookshear; Jeonggil Nam; Ke Nguyen; Todd J. Toops; Andrew J. Binder
Applied Catalysis B-environmental | 2011
Nathan Ottinger; Todd J. Toops; Ke Nguyen; Bruce G. Bunting; Janet E Howe