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Time average Eulerian approach

Since a multiphase flow usually takes place in a confined volume, the desire to have a mathematical description based on a fixed domain renders the Eulerian method an ideal one to describe the flow field. The Eulerian approach requires that the transport quantities of all phases be continuous throughout the computational domain. As mentioned before, in reality, each phase is time-dependent and may be discretely distributed. Hence, averaging theorems need to be applied to construct a continuum for each phase so that the existing Eulerian description of a single-phase flow may be extended to a multiphase flow. [Pg.182]

In Eulerian-Eulerian (EE) simulations, an effective reaction source term of the form of Eq. (5.32) can be used in species conservation equations for all the participating species. The above comments related to models for local enhancement factors are applicable to the EE approach as well. It must be noted that interfacial area appearing in Eq. (5.32) will be a function of volume fraction of dispersed phase and effective particle diameter. It can be imagined that for turbulent flows, the time-averaged mass transfer source will have additional terms such as correlation of fluctuations in volume fraction of dispersed phase and fluctuations in concentration even in the absence... [Pg.145]

The main advantage of the Eulerian approach is that it is not time-consuming in terms of CPU and consequently not costly. As a matter of fact, the code DISCO-2, including turbulence predictions, can run on a personal computer in a reasonable time. This efficiency is certainly the consequence of a previous formal effort which permits to carry out statistical averages on trajectories, in a implicit way, through pure physics and mathematics. However, this formal effort has been successful only by stating restrictive... [Pg.614]

Time Averaging of the Flow Field The Eulerian Approach... [Pg.64]

The Eulerian (bottom-up) approach is to start with the convective-diffusion equation and through Reynolds averaging, obtain time-smoothed transport equations that describe micromixing effectively. Several schemes have been proposed to close the two terms in the time-smoothed equations, namely, scalar turbulent flux in reactive mixing, and the mean reaction rate (Bourne and Toor, 1977 Brodkey and Lewalle, 1985 Dutta and Tarbell, 1989 Fox, 1992 Li and Toor, 1986). However, numerical solution of the three-dimensional transport equations for reacting flows using CFD codes are prohibitive in terms of the numerical effort required, especially for the case of multiple reactions with... [Pg.210]


See other pages where Time average Eulerian approach is mentioned: [Pg.83]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.909]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.429]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.343]    [Pg.531]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.719]    [Pg.702]    [Pg.375]    [Pg.377]    [Pg.585]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.62 ]




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Averaging time

Eulerian

Time average

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