(54z) Modeling of a Novel Multi-Particle Collision Model for Gas-Solid Flows  | AIChE

(54z) Modeling of a Novel Multi-Particle Collision Model for Gas-Solid Flows 

Authors 

Verma, V. - Presenter, Delft University of Technology
Padding, J. T., Delft University of Technology
Fluidized beds are widely applied in the chemical, petrochemical, metallurgical, environmental and energy industries due to their favourable mass and heat transfer characteristics. In past few decades computational fluid dynamics has proven to predict hydrodynamics of fluidized beds. DPM (Euler-Lagrange) [1] and TFM (Euler-Euler) [2] are two most common modelling approaches for gas-solid flow in fluidized beds. In TFM the solid phase itself is treated as a continuum phase interpenetrating with the gas phase. Since the concept of individual particles has disappeared, the effects of particle-particle interactions in the TFM has to be incorporated in a statistically averaged way, via the solid phase pressure and viscosity. TFM is preferred model to study large scale fluidized beds but model suffer from high numerical diffusion. And the KTGF theory in TFM assume elastic collisions and is limited only to spherical particles [2]. In DPM, the gas phase is considered as the continuous phase whereas the particle trajectories are obtained by integrating Newton’s equations of motion. Particle-particle and particle-wall interactions are explicitly taken into account using various physical models such as the soft sphere model. DPM proves to be accurate modelling of gas-particle flow. However, lagrangian models quickly become computationally too expensive because of the large number of particle interactions. Therefore coarse graining of discrete particles is an emerging model that can handle large number of particles effectively. The new coarse-grained model developments are of vital importance for the advancement of large-scale modelling of gas-particle flows that are flexible to extended for polydispersity, and non-spherical particles. In this study a novel lagrangian multi-particle collision (MPC) method is developed for predicting dense particulate-fluid flow.

The MPC solver is developed in OpenFoam [5], where the fluid phase is treated as a continuum and the solids are modelled by lagrangian particles. The MPC model grew out of the multiphase particle-in-cell (MP-PIC) model [3], that employs a fixed Eulerian grid, and particles are traced in a lagrangian fashion, including a parcel approach where each simulated particle represents a large collection of real particles. Each parcel follows Newton’s equations of motion, where inter-phase momentum transfer is accounted through mapping and interpolating quantities back and forth between parcel locations and the eulerian grid. Particle collisions in MP-PIC are not fully resolved but are derived from particles stresses that are theoretically calculated from Harris and Crighton [4] stress closure. In the MPC model, we implemented a functional form for the particle stress tensor where the coefficients are obtained computationally by means of DPM simulations. The idea is to extend the model from spherical particles to non-spherical particles, for which theoretical particles closures are currently not available in the literature. The viscous stress and random forces are typically ignored in MP-PIC model due to their insignificant effect [3]. Importantly, we incorporated viscous stress and random forces representing scattering of particles by collisions, which are obtained from DPM simulations by measuring the actual variance. Details of model development and validation is presented in this study.

Results from MPC model are compared with MPPICFoam and, with DPM simulations from DEM-LIGGGHT [6], and MFiX [7] code respectively. Pseuduo-2D fluidized beds of dimension 0.01x0.15x0.45 m is considered for comparison with experiments [8]. Comparison is made on the basic of pressure drop, void fraction, bubble dynamics and solids motion. We observed that MPC is in good agreement with DPM, and experiments, when compared to MPPICFoam. Unrealistic over-packing of solids is predicted in MPPIC due to limitation of Harris and Crighton [4] model and the velocity field updates, whereas in MPC these limitations overcomes and no over packing of particles is predicted. Solid circulations are in good agreement with DPM results, where solid moving above in the center and downward near to the wall. Time-average porosity plots revels the path of bubble motion and is in close agreement with results of DPM. In conclusion a novel multi-particle collision model is developed and validated to study gas-solid fluidized beds. The model is efficient to handle large number of particles. In future study, we plan to extend the model for dense flow of non-spherical particles.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the European Research Council for its financial support under its consolidator grant scheme, contract no. 615906 (NonSphereFlow).

References

  1. N.A. Patankar, D.D. Joseph, 2001. Modeling and numerical simulation of particulate flows by the Eulerian Lagrangian approach, International Journal of Multiphase Flow, Volume 27, Issue 10, October 2001, Pages 1659-1684.
  2. Gidaspow, D., 1994. Multiphase flow and fluidization continuum and kinetic theory description, Academic Press, Boston.
  3. Andrews, M.J., O'Rourke, P.J., 1996. The multiphase particle-in-cell (MP-PIC) method for dense particulate ows, Int. J. Multiphase Flow 22, 379-402.
  4. Harris, S.E., Crighton, D.G., 1988. Solutions, solitary waves and voidage disturbances in gas-fluidized beds, J. Fluid Mech. 195, 437.
  5. OpenFOAM, 2015. The Open Source CFD Toolbox, Ver. 3.0.0. ESI Group, Paris, France.
  6. https://www.cfdem.com/liggghtsr-open-source-discrete-element-method-particle-simulation-code
  7. https://mfix.netl.doe.gov/mfix/
  8. M. Goldschmidt, 2001. PhD thesis, Hydrodynamic Modelling of Fluidised Bed Spray Granulation.

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