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Yutaka Tsuji

Bio: Yutaka Tsuji is an academic researcher from Osaka University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Particle & Two-phase flow. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 101 publications receiving 7200 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, Cundall's Distinct Element Method (P.A.Cundall and O.L. Strack, 1979) is used to model contact forces between particles.

2,015 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, Lagrangian-type numerical simulation was carried out on plug flow of cohesionless, spherical particles conveyed in a horizontal pipe and the motion of individual particles contacting each other was calculated using the equations of motion and a modified Cundall model.

1,608 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured air and solid-particle velocities in a vertical pipe two-phase flow by the use of a laser-Doppler velocimeter (LDV) and found that the smaller the particle size, the flatter the mean air velocity distribution for the same mass flow ratio of solids to air.
Abstract: Measurements of air and solid-particle velocities were made in a vertical pipe two-phase flow by the use of a laser-Doppler velocimeter (LDV). Five kinds of plastic particles, diameters of which ranged from about 3 mm to 200 μm, were transported in a vertical pipe of 30 mm inner diameter. It was found that, the smaller the particle size, the flatter was the mean air velocity distribution for the same mass flow ratio of solids to air. Large particles increased air turbulence throughout the pipe section, while small particles reduced it. Both effects of promotion and suppression of turbulence were observed at the same time in the presence of particles of medium size, that is, the turbulence was increased around the pipe centre and reduced near the wall. The frequency spectrum of air turbulence normalized by the turbulence intensity was not changed by the large particles. In the presence of the small particles, the higher-frequency parts of the spectrum increased.

573 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a laser-Doppler velocimeter (LDV) was used to measure air and solid velocities in an air-solid two-phase flow in a horizontal pipe.
Abstract: Measurements of air and solid velocities were made in an air-solid two-phase flow in a horizontal pipe by the use of a laser-Doppler velocimeter (LDV). The pipe was 30 mm inner diameter, and two kinds of plastic particles, 0.2 and 3.4 mm in diameter, were conveyed in addition to fine particles (ammonium chloride) for air-flow detection. The air velocities averaged over the pipe cross section ranged from 6 to 20m/s and the solid-to-air mass-flow ratio was up to 6. Simultaneous measurements of both air and 0.2 mm particle velocities were found possible by setting threshold values against the pedestal and Doppler components of the photomultiplier signal. As the loading ratio increased and the air velocity decreased, mean-velocity distributions of both phases increased asymmetrical tendency. I n the presence of 0.2mm particles, a flattening of the velocity profile was remarkable. The effects of the solid particles on air-flow turbulence varied greatly with particle size. That is, 3.4 mm particles increased the turbulence markedly, while 0-2 mm ones reduced it. The probability-density function of the air flow deviated from the normal distribution (Gaussian) in the presence of particles. Finally, the frequency spectra of air-flow turbulence were obtained in the presence of 0.2 mm particles by using a fast Fourier transform (FFT). As a result, it was found that t,he higher-frequency components increased with increasing loading ratio.

348 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of inter-particle collisions on the two-phase flow field was investigated and the shape and scale of particle concentrations calculated considering interparticle collision were in good agreement with experimental observations.
Abstract: The interaction between a turbulent gas flow and particle motion was investigated by numerical simulations of gas–particle turbulent downward flow in a vertical channel. In particular the effect of inter-particle collision on the two-phase flow field was investigated. The gas flow field was obtained by large-eddy simulation (LES). Particles were treated by a Lagrangian method, with inter-particle collisions calculated by a deterministic method. The spatial resolution for LES of gas–solid two-phase turbulent flow was examined and relations between grid resolution and Stokes number are presented. Profiles of particle mean velocity, particle wall-normal fluctuation velocity and number density are flattened as a result of inter-particle collisions and these results are in good agreement with experimental measurements. Calculated turbulence attenuation by particles agrees well with experimental measurements for small Stokes numbers, but not for large Stokes number particle. The shape and scale of particle concentrations calculated considering inter-particle collision are in good agreement with experimental observations.

346 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, Cundall's Distinct Element Method (P.A.Cundall and O.L. Strack, 1979) is used to model contact forces between particles.

2,015 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A quantitative comparison between data coming from different experiments in the same geometry identifies the robust features in each case and a transverse analysis of the data across the different configurations allows to identify the relevant dimensionless parameters, the different flow regimes and to propose simple interpretations.
Abstract: The behaviour of dense assemblies of dry grains submitted to continuous shear deformation has been the subject of many experiments and discrete particle simulations. This paper is a collective work carried out among the French research group Groupement de Recherche Milieux Divises (GDR MiDi). It proceeds from the collection of results on steady uniform granular flows obtained by different groups in six different geometries both in experiments and numerical works. The goal is to achieve a coherent presentation of the relevant quantities to be measured i.e. flowing thresholds, kinematic profiles, effective friction, etc. First, a quantitative comparison between data coming from different experiments in the same geometry identifies the robust features in each case. Second, a transverse analysis of the data across the different configurations, allows us to identify the relevant dimensionless parameters, the different flow regimes and to propose simple interpretations. The present work, more than a simple juxtaposition of results, demonstrates the richness of granular flows and underlines the open problem of defining a single rheology.

1,664 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper reviews the work in this area with special reference to the discrete element method and associated theoretical developments, and covers three important aspects: models for the calculation of the particle–particle and particle–fluid interaction forces, coupling of discrete elements method with computational fluid dynamics to describe particle-fluid flow, and the theories for linking discrete to continuum modelling.

1,563 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the current state-of-the-art experimental and computational techniques for turbulent dispersed multiphase flows, their strengths and limitations, and opportunities for the future can be found in this paper.
Abstract: Turbulent dispersed multiphase flows are common in many engineering and environmental applications. The stochastic nature of both the carrier-phase turbulence and the dispersed-phase distribution makes the problem of turbulent dispersed multiphase flow far more complex than its single-phase counterpart. In this article we first review the current state-of-the-art experimental and computational techniques for turbulent dispersed multiphase flows, their strengths and limitations, and opportunities for the future. The review then focuses on three important aspects of turbulent dispersed multiphase flows: the preferential concentration of particles, droplets, and bubbles; the effect of turbulence on the coupling between the dispersed and carrier phases; and modulation of carrier-phase turbulence due to the presence of particles and bubbles.

1,401 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Zhu et al. as discussed by the authors provided a summary of the studies based on discrete particle simulation in the past two decades or so, with emphasis on the microdynamics including packing/flow structure and particle-particle, particle-fluid and particle wall interaction forces.

1,253 citations