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Detailed information |
Original study plan |
Master's programme Mechatronics 2022W |
Objectives |
The students have acquired a sound understanding of the foundations of granular mechanics for both systems with and without interstitial fluid phase. They know several models for such systems and know which one is the most appropriate under given conditions. This involves
- microscopic,
- mesoscopic and
- macroscopic
models.
Furthermore, the students are familiar with various numerical methods to use these models in computer simulations. They know their algorithmic properties regarding
- stability,
- accuracy and
- efficiency
as well as important aspects for the implementation of these techniques.
The level of the mathematical treatment corresponds roughly to that of the textbooks (i) Rao, Nott: An Introduction to Granular Flow. Cambridge University Press, 2008, (ii) Ferzinger, Peric: Computational Methods for Fluid Dynamics. Springer, 2002 and (iii) Pöschel, Schwager: Computational Granular Dynamics. Springer, 2005.
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Subject |
Introduction to the physical concepts of particle-laden flows:
- Navier-Stokes equations for the continuous phase
- Newton‘s law of motion for macroscopic particles and their mutual interaction
- Combined description of particle-fluid systems at various scales
Different models and algorithms for the simulations of granular systems and particle-laden flows:
- Discrete element method (DEM), e.g. using the velocity-Verlet algorithm
- Computational fluid dynamics coupled with discrete elements (CFD-DEM), e.g. using the PISO algorithm
- Two-fluid model (TFM)
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Criteria for evaluation |
Written or oral exam; homework exercises
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Methods |
Lecture, lecture notes
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Language |
English |
Study material |
Rao, Nott: An Introduction to Granular Flow. Cambridge University Press, 2008 Johnson: Contact Mechanics. Cambridge University Press, 1985 Ferzinger, Peric: Computational Methods for Fluid Dynamics. Springer, 2002 Pöschel, Schwager: Computational Granular Dynamics. Springer, 2005
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Changing subject? |
No |
Further information |
Until term 2022S known as: 481WTMKEPSK13 KV Introduction to particle simulation
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Earlier variants |
They also cover the requirements of the curriculum (from - to) 481WTMKEPSK13: KV Introduction to particle simulation (2013W-2022S)
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