Monday, August 20 |
07:30 - 08:45 |
Breakfast (Restaurant at your assigned hotel) |
08:45 - 09:00 |
Introduction and Welcome (Conference Room San Felipe) |
09:00 - 10:00 |
Rodney Fox: Modeling polydisperse multiphase flows using quadrature-based moment methods (Plenary talk) ↓ Quadrature-based moment methods (QBMM) are employed to solve generalized population balance equations (GPBE) and are especially useful for poly-disperse multiphase flows. Starting from a closed GPBE, the unclosed moment equations are formulated and closed using QBMM. The accuracy of the closure is controlled by the order of the moments used in QBMM. For example, poly-disperse gas–particle flows can be described by a GPBE for the particle-phase mass-velocity number distribution function (NDF). In practice, the choice of the moments used in the closure is crucial. For particles with a continuous distribution of masses (e.g., same material with different diameters), the mean velocity and granular temperature of each size can be different. Thus, in addition to size moments, the velocity moments conditioned on size are needed to approximate the NDF. Here, the particle-phase model found from the GPBE with the Boltzmann–Enskog collision operator will be used to explain the methodology.
Once the moment equations have been formulated, the numerical algorithms used to solve them must be consistent with the underlying GBPE. For example, the numerical methods employed to solve the spatial advection terms and the source terms must guarantee that the transported moments remain realizable (i.e., they must correspond to a NDF). This can be accomplished with kinetic-based, finite-volume methods. With QBMM, the NDF is represented by a finite set of weighted delta functions, corresponding to discrete velocities and sizes, that agree with the transported moments. Thus, it is often convenient to develop algorithms in terms of the quadrature variables in place of the moments. Employing applications from poly-disperse gas–particle flows, several examples of the numerical issues arising with QBMM will be discussed, along with some open issues related to the numerical algorithms. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:00 - 10:30 |
Mahdi Esmaily: Particle clustering in multidimensional isotropic flows revisited from a new perspective ↓ Heavy inertial particles in spatially and temporally flows can form clusters if their relaxation time is in the order of the dissipation time scale of the flow. This regime, identified by St = O(1), is investigated in this study using analytical tools. We show that the nonlinear variation of segregation versus St can be explained by considering a one-dimensional canonical setting where particles are subjected to an oscillatory velocity gradient that is constant in space. Our analysis shows that the Lyapunov exponent, as a measure of particle segregation, reaches a minimum at St = O(1) and becomes positive at St >> 1 and approaches zero as St goes to 0 or infinity. These predictions, which are corroborated by the numerical results, are directly linked and compared against measurements of the dispersion and segregation in three-dimensional turbulence. Our analysis reveals a strongly nonlinear behavior of the Lyapunov exponents in the straining regimes of strong oscillations. This work was supported by the United States Department of Energy under the Predictive Science Academic Alliance Program 2 (PSAAP2) at Stanford University. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Ali Ozel: Modelling of Gas-Solid Flows with Tribocharging ↓ Triboelectrification or tribocharging is a process by which two materials exchange electric charge upon mechanical contact and it has been observed in many industrial applications such as fluidised beds, pneumatic conveying systems and silo flows. In this study, we seek to shed light on dynamics of tribo-electrically charged particles in gas-solid flows through a combination of computational modelling and experiments.
To study how tribocharging affects hydrodynamics of gas-solid flows, we have developed Computational Fluid Dynamics-Discrete Element Method (CFD-DEM) augmented by a finite-volume based Poisson solver for electric field and a charge transfer model. In the charge model, the charging tendency of particles is captured by effective work function difference between the contacting surfaces and the electrical field at contact. In recent studies, we performed vibrated and fluidized bed experiments and measured average charge on polyethylene particles at different humidity conditions. We also performed CFD-DEM simulations of the same flow configurations and showed that the predicted charge values were in a good agreement with experimental data.
As CFD-DEM simulations are limited to flow systems with a relatively small number of particles and there is a need to examine the interplay of flow and tribocharging in large-scale systems, we have also formulated a kinetic-theory based Euler-Euler model for monodisperse particles with tribocharging. To this end, we derived the mean charge transport equation from the Boltzmann equation allowing for conduction of mean charge through collisions in the presence of electric field, and boundary condition capturing tribocharging at the wall. These models were implemented in an open-source continuum physics software, OpenFOAM. Model predictions were then assessed through comparisons with hard-sphere Euler-Lagrange simulations and experimental studies. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:00 - 11:20 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:20 - 11:50 |
Luca Brandt: Numerical simulations of rigid particles and droplets in turbulent shear flows ↓ Novel efficient numerical algorithms and large-scale super computers are enabling interface-resolved simulations of turbulent multiphase flows, giving access to details that improve our fundamental understanding and provide input for modelling efforts. In particular, we will first consider heat and mass transfer in particulate suspensions and perform direct numerical simulations to study the heat transfer within a suspension of neutrally buoyant, finite-size spherical particles in laminar and turbulent pipe flows, using the immersed boundary method (IBM) to account for the solid fluid interactions and a volume of fluid (VoF) method to resolve the temperature equation both inside and outside the particles. We examine particle volume fractions up to 40% for different pipe to particle diameter ratios. We report a considerable heat transfer enhancement (up to 330%) in the laminar regime by adding spherical particles, where larger particles are found to have a greater impact on the heat transfer enhancement than on the wall-drag increase. In the turbulent regime, however, only a transient increase in the heat transfer is observed and the heat flux decreases below the values in single-phase flows as high volume fractions of particles laminarize the core region of the pipe. A heat transfer enhancement, measured with respect to the single phase flow, is only achieved at volume fractions as low as 5% in a turbulent flow. Finally, we will consider emulsions in laminar and shear flows and examine the role of surfactants and short-range interaction forces on the rheology. As concerns the turbulent regime, we study homogeneous shear turbulence and report attenuation in the presence of a dispersed second phase. WE show how droplets break up and coalesce to reach a steady state number, with large size following the Hinze prediction. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:50 - 12:20 |
Cristian Marchioli: Point-particle Euler-Lagrange simulations of flexible fibers in turbulence ↓ Euler-Lagrange simulations of pointwise particles in turbulence have been widely employed for understanding the fundamental physics of dispersed flows. Most of the times, particles are modelled as isotropic and rigid. In this paper, we investigate the dynamics of elongated flexible particles in turbulent channel flow. We consider particles that are longer than the Kolmogorov length scale of the carrier flow, and their velocity relative to the surrounding fluid is non negligible. Such particles are modelled as chains of sub-Kolmogorov rigid rods connected through ball-and-socket joints that enable bending and twisting under the action of the local fluid velocity gradients. We examine the effect of local shear and turbulence anisotropy on the translational and rotational behaviour of the fibers, considering different elongation (parameterized by the aspect ratio) and inertia (parameterized by the Stokes number). Velocity, orientation and concentration statistics, extracted from one-way and two-way coupled direct numerical simulations, will be presented to give insights into the complex fiber-turbulence interactions that arise when non-sphericity and deformability add to inertial bias. The physical problem considered here provides a useful foundation for exploring the capability of the point-particle approach to capture the macroscopic features of multiphase flows of elongated deformable particles. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:20 - 12:50 |
Olivier Desjardins: Multiscale Modeling of Thin Liquid Films with Application to Turbulent Spray Atomization ↓ Turbulent spray atomization involves the formation of small-scale liquid structures such as ligaments and sheets that destabilize and break into droplets. Such microscale flow features can be prohibitively expensive to resolve in direct numerical simulations of atomization, making the capture of their dynamics via sub-grid scale models a highly desirable alternative. This talk presents a recently-developed multiscale volume-of-fluid (VOF) framework that enables the modeling of thin liquid and gas films, which can form in many multiphase flows. In spray formation, such thin films arise whenever bag break-up occurs. Classical VOF techniques can represent films as long as they are resolved by at least two grid cells, but under-resolved films will undergo numerically-induced break-up. The proposed framework hinges on a key improvement to standard VOF techniques: the capability of tracking two interfaces per computational cell. Among other advantages, this new capability allows VOF to explicitly represent a numerically thin film, i.e., a film of thickness much smaller than the grid size. We demonstrate how this strategy makes it possible for physics-based models to be introduced to control film break-up. The application of this idea to a turbulent spray atomization problem is explored. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:50 - 13:20 |
J.A.M. Kuipers: Multi-scale simulation of mass, momentum and heat transfer in dispersed multiphase flows with deformable interfaces ↓ Dispersed multiphase flows with deformable interfaces are frequently encountered in industrial processes involving large scale synthesis of base chemicals and energy carriers. In these flows complex processes, such as formation, coalescence and break-up of the dispersed elements (bubbles or drops), take place with accompanying physical and/or chemical transformations. These processes significantly influence the specific interfacial area, mixing of chemical species, mass and heat transfer rates as well as the large scale circulation patterns and ultimately the performance of multiphase chemical reactors.
Due to the inherent complexity of these multiphase flows a multi-scale modeling approach is adopted in which the interactions between the phases can be properly accounted for. The idea is essentially that detailed models are used to generate closures for the interphase transfer coefficients to feed coarse-grained (such as stochastic Euler-Lagrange) models which can be used to compute the system behavior on a much larger (industrial) scale. In this contribution recent advances in the area of multi-scale simulation of dispersed multi-phase flows with deformable interfaces will be highlighted with emphasis on coupled mass, momentum and heat transfer. In addition, areas which need substantial further attention will be discussed. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
13:20 - 13:30 |
Group Photo (Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
13:30 - 15:00 |
Lunch (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
15:00 - 15:30 |
Wei Ge: Large-scale direct numerical simulation and analysis of gas-solid flow ↓ Gas-solid flows in engineering are typically heterogeneous, with significant multi-scale structures. Direct numerical simulation (DNS), which fully resolves the fluid flow structures and stress distributions on particle surfaces, may present an ultimate numerical method for understanding the behaviors of these flows and the mechanisms behind.
This presentation will summarize the DNS studies in our group, using the lattice Boltzmann method to solve the gas flow and the immersed boundary method for the particle-fluid coupling. The simulations were carried out on heterogeneous supercomputers using CPUs, MICs and GPUs concurrently. Thanks to the capability of the software and hardware, scale-dependent behaviors of gas-solid flows in period boundaries and their statistical properties, such as particle velocity distributions, interphase frictions and turbulent stresses are analyzed. Pronounced locally non-equilibrium characteristics are found and their implications to larger scale models of gas-solid flows, such as the two-fluid models, are discussed. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
15:30 - 16:00 |
Jesse Capecelatro: Data-driven methods for multiphase turbulence modeling ↓ Over the last two decades, the focus of research in multiphase CFD has been on the development of advanced numerical methods, which leveraged the rapid increase in computing power. Even with the advent of exascale computing in the foreseeable future, detailed simulations of industrial-scale multiphase flows will remain out of reach for decades to come. Within many engineering processes, such as fluidized bed reactors, two-phase flow instabilities often lead to ‘demixing’ resulting in spatially non-uniform suspensions that obstruct chemical/thermal efficiencies, which current turbulence models fail to capture at large scales. As highly-resolved multiphase flow data continues to come online, new techniques are needed to integrate this information across scales. In addition, to aid in decision making, multiphase flow simulations have to be augmented to estimate underlying uncertainties in simulation components. In this talk, we will present a data-driven framework for model closure of the multiphase Reynolds Average Navier—Stokes (RANS) equations. Data generated from high-fidelity simulations are used in combination with state-of-the-art inverse modeling and machine learning techniques to (i) quantify model form uncertainty in existing models and (ii) infer the functional form of new turbulence models across a broad range of two-phase flow regimes. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:00 - 16:30 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:30 - 17:00 |
Vincent Moureau: Parallel dynamic mesh adaptation of unstructured grids: application to premixed flame and primary atomization modeling ↓ During the past two decades, the steady increase in the power of parallel super-computers participated heavily in developing 3D unsteady CFD modeling approaches. In these approaches, where the flow fluctuations are time and space resolved on a computational mesh, the cost of a simulation is directly linked to the size ratio between the largest and smallest resolved scales. Turbulent combustion and primary atomization modeling have both strongly benefited from this evolution as it enabled to increase the gas/liquid or burnt/unburnt gas interface resolution, the problem size and to include more physics. However, Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) is still out-of-reach for most of practical configurations. Adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) is an appealing technique to reach DNS at a lower CPU cost. AMR has been originally designed for Cartesian grids and the major challenge for its use on distributed memory machines is its parallelization. The local mesh refinement indeed creates load imbalance that needs frequent repartitioning and balancing. The presentation will detail recent numerical developments on dynamic adaptation of tetrahedron-based unstructured grids. The use of tetrahedra has two advantages for practical configurations: complex geometries are easily meshed and the mesh is locally more isotropic than Cartesian grids. The proposed methodology relies on frequent sequential calls to a remeshing library (www.mmgtools.org), which adapt the mesh inside each MPI rank without modifying the interface shared with the other ranks. Then, repartitioning and transfer of cell groups is performed to ensure an optimal load balance and to modify the cells at the interface. All the underlying algorithms have been optimized to reach good performances with grids of several billion cells on more than 10'000 cores. This dynamic mesh adaptation strategy has been implemented in the YALES2 code (www.coria-cfd.fr) and applied to the modeling of premixed flames and primary atomization. In these applications, the local adaptation enabled to reduce drastically the CPU cost compared to the fixed grid approach and to reach unprecedented mesh resolutions at the interface. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
17:00 - 17:30 |
Frederic Gibou: PDE solvers on Octree grids ↓ Many problems in science and engineering demand that numerical methods be developed on adaptive grids in order to capture small scale details while minimizing computational resources. I will present recent (and less recent) results on the development and application of numerical methods on Octree Cartesian grids with an emphasis on free boundary problems. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
17:30 - 18:00 |
Tingwen Li: Accelerating Computational Fluid Dynamics coupled Discrete Particle Method for Particulate Multiphase Flows in Energy Applications ↓ Computational fluid dynamic modeling has become a valuable tool to simulate multiphase flow in various energy applications, providing detailed flow hydrodynamics, chemical reaction, and heat transfer data for cost-effective reactor design, optimization and trouble-shooting. In this talk, I will focus on modeling gas-solid flows using the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) coupled discrete particle method (DPM). Specifically, I will briefly cover the evolving verification and validation of MFIX-DEM code, an open-source CFD code developed at NETL, then present our recent efforts to improve the computational speed of discrete particle model for large-scale applications. I will show numerical simulations of different fluidization systems ranging from lab-scale experimental facilities to commercial-scale reactors with systematic verification and validation. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
19:00 - 21:00 |
Dinner (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |