The session will focus on the advancement of chemical engineers ability to understand, predict, design, and thus optimize particulate systems. Advances in experimental methods, numerical simulations and granular theories have the potential to improve nucleation and aggregation/agglomeration/coalescence dynamics in particulate systems (including solid/liquid and solid/gas) and thus control size and topography (e.g., fractal dimension) of products. Increasing computational power and new numerical/analytical techniques from Applied Mechanics have allowed for increasingly complex particulate systems to be modeled and have set the stage for future work in such diverse areas as mixing/segregation, granulation, fluidization, and pneumatic conveying, to name but a few.
08:30 AM
Jorg Theuerkauf, Kaustubh S. Mujumdar
08:48 AM
Brenda Remy, Johannes G. Khinast, Benjamin J. Glasser
09:06 AM
Ajit Mujumdar, Masayuki Horio, Toshio Maetani, Naomichi Nakamura
09:24 AM
Jin Sun, Lee R. Aarons, Sankaran Sundaresan
09:42 AM
Isabel Figueroa, Joseph McCarthy
10:00 AM
Suman K. Hajra, Deliang Shi, Watson L. Vargas, J. J. McCarthy
10:18 AM
Maria Tommassone, Charles Radeke, Arthur W. Chester
10:36 AM
Guoxian Xiao, Delong Xu, S. Ding