W.K. Hiromi Ariyaratne
Faculty of Technology, Natural Sciences and Maritime Sciences, University College of Southeast Norway, Post box 235, N-3603 Kongsberg, Norway
E.V.P.J. Manjula
Faculty of Technology, Natural Sciences and Maritime Sciences, University College of Southeast Norway, Post box 235, N-3603 Kongsberg, Norway
Chandana Ratnayake
Department of POSTEC, Tel-Tek, Kjølnes ring 30, N-3918, Porsgrunn, Norway
Morten C. Melaaen
Faculty of Technology, Natural Sciences and Maritime Sciences, University College of Southeast Norway, Post box 235, N-3603 Kongsberg, Norway
Download articlehttp://dx.doi.org/10.3384/ecp17142680Published in: Proceedings of The 9th EUROSIM Congress on Modelling and Simulation, EUROSIM 2016, The 57th SIMS Conference on Simulation and Modelling SIMS 2016
Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings 142:99, p. 680-686
Published: 2018-12-19
ISBN: 978-91-7685-399-3
ISSN: 1650-3686 (print), 1650-3740 (online)
This review study focuses on the application of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) in the investigation of gas-solids multiphase flow systems. The applicability and limitations of conventional models and recent developments of existing multiphase models for the prediction of gas-solids flows are thoroughly overviewed. Use of conventional Eulerian-Eulerian model for granular flows and Lagrangian approach incorporated with Discrete Element Method (CFD-DEM) are quite well proven, however some limitations restrict the use of these models in wide range of applications. Therefore, some new models have been introduced to model gas-solids flows, as example Dense Discrete Phase Model incorporated with Kinetic Theory of Granular Flow (DDPM-KTGF), Dense Discrete Phase Model incorporated with Discrete Element Method (DDPM-DEM) and Computational Particle Fluid Dynamics (CPFD) numerical scheme incorporated with the MultiPhase-Particle-In-Cell (MP-PIC) method. These models have been validated for certain applications under certain conditions, however, further validation of these models is still a necessity.