μFluids@Home

μFluids@Home is a computer simulation of two-phase flow behavior in microgravity and microfluidics[1] problems at Purdue University, using the Surface Evolver program.

About

The project's purpose is to develop better methods for the management of liquid rocket propellants in microgravity,[2][3] and to investigate two-phase flow in microelectromechanical systems, taking into account factors like surface tension. Systems can then be designed that use electrowetting, channel geometry, and hydrophobic or hydrophilic coatings to allow the smooth passage of fluids. Such systems would include compact medical devices, biosensors,[4] and fuel cells, to name a few.

Computing platform

It uses the BOINC distributed computing platform.

Application notes

  • There is no screen saver.
  • Work unit CPU times are generally less than 20 hours.
  • Work units average in size around 500 kB.
  • You have to run many work units to get levels of credit comparable to SETI@Home or Climateprediction.net distributed programs.
gollark: The osmarks.tk file dump only generally has random binary files and text, not markdown.
gollark: That is how the offline mode works.
gollark: Each copy of my site which is uploaded also gets a random build ID, so the caching system can use that.
gollark: I don't. It's V E R S I O N C O N T R O L L E D ish.
gollark: I don't do live editing of it on my server anyway, so it wouldn't make much sense to have it be easier to, well, edit stuff on there directly.

References

  1. "Purdue engineers develop quick, inexpensive method to prototype microchips". News.uns.purdue.edu. 2004-01-07. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  2. "Engineers rescue aging satellites, saving millions". News.uns.purdue.edu. 2007-09-05. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  3. "Research focuses on fuel injection in rockets". News.uns.purdue.edu. 2009-07-16. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  4. "Innovation could make lab-on-a-chip devices easier to use, cheaper to make". News.uns.purdue.edu. 2009-04-21. Retrieved 2011-02-20.


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