The session will focus on approaches to understand, predict, design, model and thus optimize specific particulate system applications. Advances in numerical simulations and granular theories have the potential to improve dynamics in particulate systems (including solid/solid, solid/liquid and solid/gas). 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, heat transfer, and pneumatic conveying, to name but a few. Contributions in this session are concerned discrete systems using non-spherical and/or irregular particles, such as fibers, tablets, or agglomerates, and also continuous systems using finite element methods.
03:30 PM
Yidong Xia, Nepu Saha, Jordan Klinger, Yingqian Lin, Kunyu Yang, Wencheng Jin
03:48 PM
Aaron Wiggin, Kit Windows-Yule, Thomas Abadie, Shirley Fong, Phil Monks
04:06 PM
Andrey Filippov, Sabrina C. DePiero, Alec S. Cielinski, Jason Ortega, Margaret L. Soifer
04:24 PM
Yuxing Wang, Yueming Wang, Minmin Zhou, Lunbo Duan
04:42 PM
05:00 PM
Ahmadreza Haghnegahdar, Kringan Saha
05:18 PM