Fluidization XVI
Plenary Talk: Recent Advances in the Multi-Scale Simulation of Mass, Momentum and Heat Transfer in Dense Gas-Particle Flows
Author
Due to the inherent complexity of dense gas-particle flows a multi-scale modeling approach is used in which both fluid-particle and particle-particle interactions can be properly accounted for. The idea is essentially that fundamental models accounting for the relevant details of both fluid-particle (DNS) and particle-particle (DEM) interaction, are used to quantify the complex phase interactions in terms of closures. These closures are required in continuum models (i.e. the two-fluid model (TFM) or multi-fluid model (MFM)) based on the Kinetic Theory of Granular Flow (KTGF) suited to compute the flow structures on a much larger (industrial) scale. In this presentation recent advances in the multi-scale modelling of dense gas-particle flows will be highlighted with emphasis on coupled mass, momentum and heat transfer. In addition, areas which need substantial further attention will be briefly discussed including the challenges for non-invasive monitoring of such complex flows.