Simulation of dendritic remelting and fragmentation using coupled cellular automaton and Eulerian multiphase model

2020 ◽  
Vol 180 ◽  
pp. 109714
Author(s):  
Neng Ren ◽  
Jun Li ◽  
Nenchev Bogdan ◽  
Mingxu Xia ◽  
Jianguo Li
2014 ◽  
Vol 955-959 ◽  
pp. 2425-2429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun Fei Li ◽  
Jian Guo Yang ◽  
Yan Yan Wang ◽  
Xiao Guo Wang

The purpose of this study is to construct a turbulent aggregation device which has specific performance for fine particle aggregation in flue gas. The device consists of two cylindrical pipes and an array of vanes. The pipes extending fully and normal to the gas stream induce large scale turbulence in the form of vortices, while the vanes downstream a certain distance from the pipes induce small one. The process of turbulent aggregation was numerically simulated by coupling the Eulerian multiphase model and population balance model together with a proposed aggregation kernel function taking the size and inertia of particles into account, and based on data of particles’ size distribution measured from the flue of one power plant. The results show that the large scale turbulence generated by pipes favours the aggregation of smaller particles (smaller than 1μm) notably, while the small scale turbulence benefits the aggregation of bigger particles (larger than 1μm) notably and enhances the uniformity of particle size distribution among different particle groups.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2130 (1) ◽  
pp. 012025
Author(s):  
P Mirek

Abstract The paper presents the results of operational measurements of the suspension density distribution in the 966 MWth supercritical Circulating Fluidized Bed boiler. The tests were carried out for four different unit thermal loads, i.e. 40, 60, 80, and 100% MCR. The conducted operational measurements showed that the suspension density distribution of the particulate material in the combustion chamber of the CFB boiler has the form of an exponential curve with maximum values occurring in the bottom part of the furnace. On the basis of the operational data, an attempt was made to reflect the suspension density distribution in the combustion chamber of the boiler using the ANSYS CFD software. The calculations were carried out using the Eulerian multiphase model in an unsteady state condition. As revealed by the simulations, the Eulerian multiphase model allows for a quantitative representation of the suspension density distribution of the granular material only for the maximum boiler load. For other thermal loads, quantitative representation of experimental distributions of suspension density using the Eulerian method is possible except for the dense region.


Author(s):  
Andrey A. Troshko ◽  
Ajey Y. Walavalkar

Computational Fluid Dynamics in conjunction with an Eulerian multiphase model of heat transfer in a Pebble Bed Modular Reactor (PBMR) was validated against experimental data obtained in a test rig. The cooling gas and packed fuel pebbles constituted two phases. The velocity of pebble phase was fixed to zero and a drag law accounting for a packed bed condition was used. The density of the gas phase varied with temperature. Volume averaged effective thermal conductivities accounting for radiation and packed spheres geometry were used for both phases. Model predictions compared favorably with the experiment for two gases — helium and nitrogen and two power levels. It was found that accounting for increased affective porosity close to walls results in more realistic velocity field prediction.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1041 ◽  
pp. 265-268
Author(s):  
Peter Juráš

This paper deals with measurements of wind-driven rain intensity in Meteorological garden of Slovak hydrometeorological institute and subsequent modelling of free standing wind-driven rain gauge in OpenFoam CFD simulation tool using Eulerian multiphase model instead of common used Langrangian particle tracking model.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Lieu ◽  
Alexander Prechtel ◽  
Nadja Ray ◽  
Raphael Schulz

<p>A novel, comprehensive modeling approach extending (Ray et al., 2017, Rupp et al., 2018, Rupp et al., 2019) is used to study the interplay between biogeochemical processes in the rhizosphere. Understanding these local interactions is crucial for the habitat as they influence processes in the root-soil system such as the water and nutrient uptake by the roots. The mechanistic model explicitly represents the pore structure and allows for dynamic structural organization of the rhizosphere at the single root scale.</p><p>At this microscale, the movement of interacting entities - nutrients, bacteria and possibly charged chemicals - in the fluid is described by means of the diffusion and Nernst-Planck equations with a Henry transmission condition at the liquid/gas interfaces. A biomass phase can develop from agglomerations of bacteria and stabilising sticky agents may grow or decay at the solid surfaces. To take into account specific properties of the rhizosphere, root cells and an explicit phase of exudated mucilage as well as root hairs are included. In addition to solving the continuous partial differential equations, a discrete cellular automaton method (Tang and Valocchi 2013, Ray et al. 2017, Rupp et al., 2019) is used, enabling structural changes in the solid and mucilage phases at each time step. The partial differential equations are discretised with a local discontinuous Galerkin method which is able to handle discontinuities induced by the evolving geometry.</p><p>The microscale model is not amenable to large scale computations because of its high complexity. Upscaling techniques enable the incorporation of information from the rhizosphere scale to the macroscale. We apply these techniques to dynamically evolving microstructures taking the spatiotemporal evolution of the rhizosphere into account. Although the setting is periodic, the underlying geometries can be arbitrarily complex. The resulting hydraulic properties (e.g. diffusion coefficient, permeability) are an important input for existing root-water uptake models, involving e.g., the effect of mucilage.</p><p>In this study, we use two- and three-dimensional CT scans of maize root, and show how mucilage concentration as well as its distribution in the pore space result in changes of macroscopic soil hydraulic properties. The access of nutrients in small pores for the root is assessed in simulation studies and its effect on effective diffusivity is evaluated.</p><p>N. Ray, A. Rupp and A. Prechtel (2017): Discrete-continuum multiscale model for transport, biomass development and solid restructuring in porous media. Advances in Water Resources 107, 393-404.</p><p>A. Rupp and K. Totsche and A. Prechtel and N. Ray (2018): Discrete-continuum multiphase model for structure formation in soils including electrostatic effects. Frontiers in Environmental Science, 6, 96.</p><p>A. Rupp, T. Guhra, A. Meier, A. Prechtel, T. Ritschel, N. Ray, K.U. Totsche (2019): Application of a cellular automaton method to model the structure formation in soils under saturated conditions: A mechanistic approach. Frontiers in Environmental Science 7, 170.</p><p>Y. Tang and A.J. Valocchi (2013): An improved cellular automaton method to model multispecies biofilms. Water Research 47 (15), 5729-5742.</p>


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