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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Two-fluid modelling of heterogeneous coarse particle slurry flows

Krampa, Franklin Norvisi 13 February 2009
In this dissertation, an experimental and numerical study of dense coarse solids-liquid flows has been performed. The experimental work mainly involved pressure drop measurements in a vertical flow loop. A limited number of measurements of solids velocity profiles were also obtained in the upward flow section of the flow loop. The numerical work involved simulations of coarse particles-in-water flows in vertical and horizontal pipes. The vertical flow simulations were performed using the commercial CFD software, ANSYS CFX-4.4, while ANSYS CFX-10 was used to simulate the flows in the horizontal pipes. The simulations were performed to investigate the applicability of current physically-based models to very dense coarse-particle flows.<p> In the experimental study, measurements of pressure drop and local solids velocity profiles were obtained. The experiments were conducted in a 53 mm diameter vertical flow loop using glass beads of 0.5 mm and 2.0 mm diameter solids for concentration up to 45%. The liquid phase was water. The measured pressure drop exhibited the expected dependence on bulk velocity and solids mean concentration. The wall shear stress was determined by subtracting the gravitational contribution from the measured pressure drop. For flow with the 0.5 mm particles at high bulk velocities, the values of the wall shear stress were essentially similar for each concentration in the upward flow sections but more variation, indicating the effect of concentration, was noted in the downward flow section. At lower bulk velocities, the wall shear stresses with the 0.5 mm glass beads-water flow showed a dependence on concentration in both test sections. This was attributed to an increase in the slip velocity. For the large particle (2.0 mm glass beads), similar observations were made but the effect of concentration was much less in the upward test section. In the downward test section, the wall shear stress for the flow of the 2.0 mm glass beads increased by almost a constant value for the bulk velocities investigated. The solids velocity profiles showed that the solids velocity gradient is large close to the wall. In addition, the solids velocity profiles indicated that the slip velocity increased at lower velocities due to increase in the bulk concentration in the upward flow section.<p> For the vertical flow simulations, different physical models based on the kinetic theory of granular flows were programmed and implemented in ANSYS CFX-4.4. These models, referred to as the kf-ef-ks-es, kf-ef-ks-es-Ts and kf-ef-ks-kfs models, were investigated by focusing on the closure laws for the solids-phase stress. The treatment of the granular temperature Ts depends on whether small- or large-scale fluctuating motion of the particles is considered. The models were implemented via user-Fortran routines. The predicted results were compared with available experimental results. The predicted solids-phase velocity profiles matched the measured data quite well close to the pipe wall but over-predicted it in the core region. The solids concentration, on the other hand, was significantly under-predicted for concentrations higher than 10%. Variations in the predictions of the phasic turbulent kinetic energy and the eddy viscosity were noted; the effect of solids concentration on them was mixed. A general conclusion drawn from the work is that a more accurate model is required for accurate and consistent prediction of coarse particle flows at high concentrations (less than 10%). In a related study, attention was given to wall boundary conditions again focusing on the effect of the solids-phase models at the wall. Comparison between numerical predictions, using some of the existing wall boundary condition models for the solids phase in particulate flows, with experimental results indicated that the physical understanding of the influence of the fluid and solids-phase on each other and their effect on frictional head loss is far from complete. The models investigated failed to reproduce the experimental results. At high solids concentration, it was apparent from the present study that the no-slip and free-slip wall boundary conditions are not appropriate for liquid-solid flows.<p> For the horizontal flow case, three-dimensional simulations were performed with a focus on the velocity and concentration distributions. Medium and coarse sand-in-water flows in three pipe diameters were considered to investigate the default solids stress models in ANSYS CFX-10. Simulations were performed for three cases by considering: 1) no additional solids-phase stress, i.e. no model for Ts; 2) a zero equation, and 3) an algebraic equilibrium model for the granular temperature. The model predictions were compared to experimental results. The effect of particle size, solids-phase concentration, and pipe diameter was explored using the algebraic equilibrium model. All the cases for the models considered exhibited the characteristic features of horizontal coarse particle slurry flows. The zero equation and the algebraic equilibrium model for the granular temperature produced similar results that were not significantly different from the prediction obtained when no solids-phase stress was considered. The comparison with experimental results was mixed. Locally, the measured solids-phase velocity distributions were over-predicted, whereas the solids concentration was reasonably reproduced in the core of all the pipes. The concentration at the bottom and top walls were over-, and under-predicted, respectively. This was attributed to the inappropriate phasic wall boundary condition models available.
2

Two-fluid modelling of heterogeneous coarse particle slurry flows

Krampa, Franklin Norvisi 13 February 2009 (has links)
In this dissertation, an experimental and numerical study of dense coarse solids-liquid flows has been performed. The experimental work mainly involved pressure drop measurements in a vertical flow loop. A limited number of measurements of solids velocity profiles were also obtained in the upward flow section of the flow loop. The numerical work involved simulations of coarse particles-in-water flows in vertical and horizontal pipes. The vertical flow simulations were performed using the commercial CFD software, ANSYS CFX-4.4, while ANSYS CFX-10 was used to simulate the flows in the horizontal pipes. The simulations were performed to investigate the applicability of current physically-based models to very dense coarse-particle flows.<p> In the experimental study, measurements of pressure drop and local solids velocity profiles were obtained. The experiments were conducted in a 53 mm diameter vertical flow loop using glass beads of 0.5 mm and 2.0 mm diameter solids for concentration up to 45%. The liquid phase was water. The measured pressure drop exhibited the expected dependence on bulk velocity and solids mean concentration. The wall shear stress was determined by subtracting the gravitational contribution from the measured pressure drop. For flow with the 0.5 mm particles at high bulk velocities, the values of the wall shear stress were essentially similar for each concentration in the upward flow sections but more variation, indicating the effect of concentration, was noted in the downward flow section. At lower bulk velocities, the wall shear stresses with the 0.5 mm glass beads-water flow showed a dependence on concentration in both test sections. This was attributed to an increase in the slip velocity. For the large particle (2.0 mm glass beads), similar observations were made but the effect of concentration was much less in the upward test section. In the downward test section, the wall shear stress for the flow of the 2.0 mm glass beads increased by almost a constant value for the bulk velocities investigated. The solids velocity profiles showed that the solids velocity gradient is large close to the wall. In addition, the solids velocity profiles indicated that the slip velocity increased at lower velocities due to increase in the bulk concentration in the upward flow section.<p> For the vertical flow simulations, different physical models based on the kinetic theory of granular flows were programmed and implemented in ANSYS CFX-4.4. These models, referred to as the kf-ef-ks-es, kf-ef-ks-es-Ts and kf-ef-ks-kfs models, were investigated by focusing on the closure laws for the solids-phase stress. The treatment of the granular temperature Ts depends on whether small- or large-scale fluctuating motion of the particles is considered. The models were implemented via user-Fortran routines. The predicted results were compared with available experimental results. The predicted solids-phase velocity profiles matched the measured data quite well close to the pipe wall but over-predicted it in the core region. The solids concentration, on the other hand, was significantly under-predicted for concentrations higher than 10%. Variations in the predictions of the phasic turbulent kinetic energy and the eddy viscosity were noted; the effect of solids concentration on them was mixed. A general conclusion drawn from the work is that a more accurate model is required for accurate and consistent prediction of coarse particle flows at high concentrations (less than 10%). In a related study, attention was given to wall boundary conditions again focusing on the effect of the solids-phase models at the wall. Comparison between numerical predictions, using some of the existing wall boundary condition models for the solids phase in particulate flows, with experimental results indicated that the physical understanding of the influence of the fluid and solids-phase on each other and their effect on frictional head loss is far from complete. The models investigated failed to reproduce the experimental results. At high solids concentration, it was apparent from the present study that the no-slip and free-slip wall boundary conditions are not appropriate for liquid-solid flows.<p> For the horizontal flow case, three-dimensional simulations were performed with a focus on the velocity and concentration distributions. Medium and coarse sand-in-water flows in three pipe diameters were considered to investigate the default solids stress models in ANSYS CFX-10. Simulations were performed for three cases by considering: 1) no additional solids-phase stress, i.e. no model for Ts; 2) a zero equation, and 3) an algebraic equilibrium model for the granular temperature. The model predictions were compared to experimental results. The effect of particle size, solids-phase concentration, and pipe diameter was explored using the algebraic equilibrium model. All the cases for the models considered exhibited the characteristic features of horizontal coarse particle slurry flows. The zero equation and the algebraic equilibrium model for the granular temperature produced similar results that were not significantly different from the prediction obtained when no solids-phase stress was considered. The comparison with experimental results was mixed. Locally, the measured solids-phase velocity distributions were over-predicted, whereas the solids concentration was reasonably reproduced in the core of all the pipes. The concentration at the bottom and top walls were over-, and under-predicted, respectively. This was attributed to the inappropriate phasic wall boundary condition models available.
3

Structure preserving and fast spectral methods for kinetic equations

Xiaodong Huang (11768345) 03 December 2021 (has links)
This dissertation consists of three research projects of kinetic models: a structure preserving scheme for Poisson-Nernst-Planck equations and two efficient spectral methods for multi-dimensional Boltzmann equation.<br><br>The Poisson-Nernst-Planck (PNP) equations is widely used to describe the dynamics of ion transport in ion channels. We introduce a structure-preserving semi-implicit finite difference scheme for the PNP equations in a bounded domain. A general boundary condition for the Poisson equation is considered. The fully discrete scheme is shown to satisfy the following properties: mass conservation, unconditional positivity, and energy dissipation (hence preserving the steady-state). <br><br>Numerical approximation of the Boltzmann equation presents a challenging problem due to its high-dimensional, nonlinear, and nonlocal collision operator. Among the deterministic methods, the Fourier-Galerkin spectral method stands out for its relative high accuracy and possibility of being accelerated by the fast Fourier transform. In this dissertation, we studied the state of the art in the fast Fourier method and discussed its limitation. Next, we proposed a new approach to implement the Fourier method, which can resolve those issues. <br><br>However, the Fourier method requires a domain truncation which is unphysical since the collision operator is defined in whole space R^d . In the last part of this dissertation, we introduce a Petrov-Galerkin spectral method for the Boltzmann equation in the unbounded domain. The basis functions (both test and trial functions) are carefully chosen mapped Chebyshev functions to obtain desired convergence and conservation properties. Furthermore, thanks to the close relationship of the Chebyshev functions and the Fourier cosine series, we can construct a fast algorithm with the help of the non-uniform fast Fourier transform (NUFFT).<br>
4

Direct Simulation Monte Carlo and Granular Gases

Andrew Hong (12619576) 28 July 2022 (has links)
<p>Granular systems are ensembles of inelastic particles which dissipate energy during collisions. Granular systems serve as excellent models for a wide variety of materials such as sand, soils, corn, and powder. A rather remarkable property of granular systems is when excited, whether due to an interstitial fluid or via the boundaries, the granular particlesdisplay fluid-like behavior. As a result, there has been decades of granular research with the overarching goal of formulating a general granular hydrodynamic theory.</p> <p>However, the granular hydrodynamic theory is limited, and the underlying transport coefficients often require modifications which are based on empirical observations, and assuch, are system-specific. It is ideally better to devise a general theory which minimizes the information needed about the systema priori. The main thrust of the work undertaken shown here strives to develop such a model by using kinetic theory as the basis. More specifically, I investigate granular gases via the direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) methodand modify the governing equations. In this thesis, two idealized cases of granular gases areconsidered: the homogeneous cooling state and a boundary-heated gas (or the pure conduc-tion case). In the former, the effects of polydispersity are probed. In the latter, the evolutionof the local hydrodynamics due to strong rarefaction effects are divulged. Additionally, amodified, more generalized constitutive relation for the heat flux is proposed and comparedwith DSMC results. Extensions of the DSMC method for dense granular gases and granulargases composed of non-spherical particles are also discussed.</p>
5

Modélisation eulérienne de la vidange d'un silo et de l'expansion du panache / Eulerian simulation of dust emission by powder discharge and jet expansion

Audard, François 20 December 2016 (has links)
De nombreux procédés industriels nécessitent la manipulation de matériaux sous forme pulvérulente. L’émission de poussières générée par leur manipulation peut s’avérer dangereuse pour la santé des travailleurs ou bien causer un risque d’explosion. Afin de mieux comprendre les mécanismes de dispersion des poussières, le cas de la décharge d’un silo est étudié par simulation numérique avec une approche Euler-Euler. Deux configurations ont été étudiées au cours de cette thèse. La première, sans silo, a permis d’étudier l’influence de perturbations de vitesses imposées à l’entrée de la chambre de dispersion en lieu et place du silo. Cette étude a révélé que ces perturbations peuvent influencer l’élargissement du panache de poudre. Seules les perturbations avec une corrélation temporelle ont généré une ouverture importante du jet tombant semblable à celle relevée expérimentalement. Dans la deuxième configuration, le silo et la chambre de dispersion sont représentés afin d’étudier le couplage entre la dispersion du jet et l’écoulement dans le silo. L’une des difficultés de ces simulations est de prédire les différents régimes d’écoulements granulaires, allant de l’état quasi-statique dans le silo au régime très dilué lors de la dispersion du jet tombant, en passant par le régime collisionnel à la sortie du silo. La théorie cinétique permet de modéliser le régime dilué et collisionnel. En revanche pour la partie quasi-statique un modèle semi-empirique a été utilisé, implémenté et validé sur différentes configurations. La seconde étude a montré l’importance du rapport entre le diamètre de l’orifice et le diamètre des particules sur la structure du jet. En effet, lorsque ce paramètre est faible, le coeur du jet se contracte immédiatement après la sortie du silo puis s’ouvre en aval. Pour des valeurs grandes, l’ouverture du jet est négligeable. Cependant, il semblerait que l’angle du silo modifie le comportement de l’écoulement, ce qui nécessitera des études supplémentaires. / A wide range of industrial processes requires the handling of granular material in a pulverulent form. The subsequent dust emissions due to these processes can be harmful to the health of workers or hazardous explosion risks. In order to understand dust dispersion mechanisms, a case of a free falling granular jet discharged from a silo is studied by numerical simulations using an Euler-Euler approach. Two types of numerical simulation are conducted. First, the influence of velocity fluctuations at the inlet chamber is studied on the plume behavior, instead of the silo. This study reveals that fluctuations are enable to reproduce the jet expansion. It is established that only fluctuations with temporal correlation generate a large jet opening similar to the experiment. The second type of setup shows the coupling between the silo and the chamber. One of the major challenges is the ability to predict the different flow regimes going from quasi-static regime inside the silo, to the very dilute regime in the dust spread and include the collisional regime occurs through the silo. Kinetic theory allows modeling of the dilute and collisional regime. By contrast, frictional models have been used, implemented and validated in different cases. The second study highlights the key role of the ratio defined by the orifice diameter on the particle diameter. Indeed, when this parameter is small, the jet powder core contracts immediately after the exit of the silo dump plane and expands downstream. For high values, the granular jet does not exhibit dispersion anymore. This study suggests that the silo half-angle has an impact on the flow field which justifies the need for further investigations.
6

Development of CFD models applied to fluidized beds for waste gasification / Développement de modèles CFD appliqués à des lits fluidisés pour la gazéification des déchets

Tricomi, Leonardo January 2017 (has links)
Abstract: The thesis work is part of a project that aims to develop a reliable CFD model to investigate the fluid-dynamics of a fluidized bubbling bed during gasification of refuse derived fuel (RDF) from sorted municipal solid waste (MSW). Gasification is a thermochemical process that converts carbon-containing materials into syngas. In this specific context scaling up is challenging because it implies dealing with a complex chemistry combined to heat and mass transfer phenomena in a multi-phase fluid environment. CFD modeling could represent a potential tool to predict the impact of the reactor configuration and operating conditions on gas yield, composition and potential contaminants. Validation of CFD simulations for such systems has been so far possible using different sophisticated experimental tools, allowing to link the model with experimental data. However, such high tech equipment may not always be available, especially at industrial scale. Hence, this work focuses on investigating the accuracy and numerical sensitivity of two different CFD models employed in the characterization of dense solid-particle flows in bubbling fluidized beds. The key parameter adopted to describe and quantify the dynamic behavior of this multiphase system is the power spectral density (PSD) distribution of pressure fluctuations. This PSD function was used to assess the accuracy of CFD models using one set of operating condition. The same type of analysis, extended to a wider range of operating conditions, may lead to a robust validation of the numerical models presented in this work. In spite of his measurement simplicity, pressure drop data present a strong connection with the bed fluid-dynamics and its interpretation could help to improve the fluidized bed technologies very fast, pushing CFD models closer to applications. / Résumé : Le but de ce projet est de développer un modèle CFD fiable pour étudier la dynamique des fluides d'un lit fluidisé en régime bullant pendant la gazéification de combustibles solides de récupération (CSR) triés à partir de déchets solides municipaux (DSM). La gazéification est un processus thermochimique qui convertit les matériaux contenant du carbone en gaz de synthèse. La mise à l'échelle est difficile dans ce cas car elle implique une chimie complexe combinée aux phénomènes de transfert de chaleur et de masse dans un environnement fluide multiphasique. La modélisation CFD représente un outil potentiel pour prédire l'impact de la configuration du réacteur et des conditions de fonctionnement sur le rendement, la composition et les contaminants potentiels du gaz. La validation des simulations CFD pour de tels systèmes a été jusqu'à présent possible grâce à l’utilisation de différents outils expérimentaux sophistiqués, permettant de lier le modèle aux données expérimentales. Toutefois, un tel équipement de pointe n’est pas toujours disponible, en particulier à l'échelle industrielle. Par conséquent, ce travail se concentre sur l'étude de la précision et de la sensibilité numérique de deux modèles CFD différents, utilisés dans la caractérisation des flux de particules solides denses dans les lits fluidisés bouillonnants. Le paramètre clé adopté pour décrire et quantifier le comportement dynamique de ce système multiphase est la distribution de la densité spectrale de puissance (DSP) des fluctuations de pression. La fonction DSP a été utilisée pour évaluer la précision des modèles CFD en utilisant un ensemble de conditions de fonctionnement. Le même type d'analyse, étendu à une plus large gamme de conditions de fonctionnement, peut conduire à une validation robuste des modèles numériques présentés dans ce travail. En dépit de sa simplicité de mesure, les données de chute de pression présentent une importante corrélation avec les lits fluidisés, de plus, leur interprétation pourrait aider à améliorer ces technologies très rapidement, poussant les modèles CFD plus près des applications.

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