2018 AIChE Annual Meeting
(189al) Agglomerate Formation with Polydisperse Primary Particles in the Transition Regime
Authors
Here, an Event-Driven (ED) model for agglomeration of polydisperse PPs is employed to investigate the evolution of agglomerate structure and size distribution from free molecular to transition regime. The broad agglomerate size distributions formed in the free molecular regime narrow by coagulation in the transition regime, attaining their quasi-Self-Preserving Size Distribution (SPSD) with gyration- and mobility-based geometric standard deviations of 1.62 ± 0.03 and 1.48 ± 0.03, respectively, regardless of PP polydispersity. Agglomeration results in a self-preserving scaling law between the mobility diameter, dm, and the number of constituent PPs within an agglomerate, np. The ED-derived quasi-SPSD of the agglomerate dm and its self-preserving scaling to np are in excellent agreement with mass-mobility measurements of soot and zirconia agglomerates and can be interfaced with method of moments or population balance models to assist the design of aerosol flame reactors and combustion engines.
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