The granular temperature for the
solids
phase is proportional to the kinetic energy of the particles’
random motion. The formal expression is:
(14–373) |
In Equation 14–373
represents the
component of the fluctuating solids velocity in the Cartesian coordinate
system. This is defined as an ensemble average of the particles’ random velocity within a
finite volume and time period. The averaging basis is particle number per unit volume following
[99] and [142].
The transport equation derived from kinetic theory takes the form [142]:
(14–374) |
where | |
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Equation 14–374
contains the
term
describing the diffusive flux of granular
energy. When the default Syamlal et al. model [640]
is used, the diffusion coefficient for granular energy,
is
given by
(14–375) |
where
Ansys Fluent uses the following expression if the optional model of Gidaspow et al. [205] is enabled:
(14–376) |
The collisional dissipation of energy, , represents the rate of energy dissipation within the
solids phase due to collisions between particles. This term is represented by
the expression derived by Lun et al. [397]
(14–377) |
The transfer of the kinetic energy of random fluctuations in
particle velocity from the
solids phase
to the
fluid or solid
phase is represented by
[205]
:
(14–378) |
Ansys Fluent allows you to solve for the granular temperature with the following options:
algebraic formulation (the default)
It is obtained by neglecting convection and diffusion in the transport equation, Equation 14–374 [640].
partial differential equation
This is given by Equation 14–374 and it is allowed to choose different options for it properties.
dpm-averaged granular temperature
An alternative formulation available only with the Dense Discrete Phase Model (DDPM).
constant granular temperature
This is useful in very dense situations where the random fluctuations are small.
UDF for granular temperature
For a granular phase , we may write the shear force at the wall in the following form:
(14–379) |
Here
is the particle slip velocity
parallel to the wall,
is the specularity coefficient between
the particle and the wall,
is the volume fraction for the particles at maximum
packing, and
is the radial
distribution function that is model dependent.
The general boundary condition for granular temperature at the wall takes the form: [282]
(14–380) |