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Kinetic theories for granular flow: inelastic particles in Couette flow and slightly inelastic particles in a general flowfield

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors studied the flow of an idealized granular material consisting of uniform smooth, but nelastic, spherical particles using statistical methods analogous to those used in the kinetic theory of gases.
Abstract
The flow of an idealized granular material consisting of uniform smooth, but nelastic, spherical particles is studied using statistical methods analogous to those used in the kinetic theory of gases. Two theories are developed: one for the Couette flow of particles having arbitrary coefficients of restitution (inelastic particles) and a second for the general flow of particles with coefficients of restitution near 1 (slightly inelastic particles). The study of inelastic particles in Couette flow follows the method of Savage & Jeffrey (1981) and uses an ad hoc distribution function to describe the collisions between particles. The results of this first analysis are compared with other theories of granular flow, with the Chapman-Enskog dense-gas theory, and with experiments. The theory agrees moderately well with experimental data and it is found that the asymptotic analysis of Jenkins & Savage (1983), which was developed for slightly inelastic particles, surprisingly gives results similar to the first theory even for highly inelastic particles. Therefore the ‘nearly elastic’ approximation is pursued as a second theory using an approach that is closer to the established methods of Chapman-Enskog gas theory. The new approach which determines the collisional distribution functions by a rational approximation scheme, is applicable to general flowfields, not just simple shear. It incorporates kinetic as well as collisional contributions to the constitutive equations for stress and energy flux and is thus appropriate for dilute as well as dense concentrations of solids. When the collisional contributions are dominant, it predicts stresses similar to the first analysis for the simple shear case.

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CFD modeling of bubbling fluidized beds using OpenFOAM®: Model validation and comparison of TVD differencing schemes

TL;DR: The effect of total variation diminishing (TVD) convection schemes is investigated by simulating two bubbling fluidized beds and results give reasonable agreement with the experimental data in the literature.
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Effect of nanoparticles size on thermal performance of nanofluid in a trapezoidal microchannel-heat-sink

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors dealt with spherical nanoparticles size effects on thermal performance and pressure drop of a nanofluid in a trapezoidal microchannel heat-sink (MCHS).
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Granular Flow and Heat-Transfer Study in a Near-Blackbody Enclosed Particle Receiver

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on simulation and analysis of granular flow patterns and the resulting convective and conductive heat transfer to the particulate phase and compare the results with an in-situ particle flow test.
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Fluidized beds modeling: Validation of 2D and 3D simulations against experiments

TL;DR: Taghipour et al. as discussed by the authors investigated the effect of model dimensionality (2D and 3D), the impact of the flow regimes (laminar & turbulent), the choice of the model parameters (specularity coefficient responsible for particle-wall interaction and restitution coefficient characterizing particle-particle interaction), mesh resolution, and gas-solid drag sub-models (Syamlal-O'Brien and Gidaspow).
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Numerical modelling of granular flows: a reality check

TL;DR: This paper focuses on two widely used forms of granular flow, for which discrete particle simulations are shown to provide a full, quantitative replication of the behaviours of real industrial and experimental systems.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Equation of State for Nonattracting Rigid Spheres

TL;DR: In this paper, a new equation of state for rigid spheres has been developed from an analysis of the reduced virial series, which possesses superior ability to describe rigid-sphere behavior compared with existing equations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experiments on a Gravity-Free Dispersion of Large Solid Spheres in a Newtonian Fluid under Shear

TL;DR: In this article, a large number of spherical grains of diameter D = 0.13 cm were sheared in Newtonian fluids of varying viscosity (water and a glycerine-water-alcohol mixture) in the annular space between two concentric drums.
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