The rate of change of temperature is governed by three physical processes: convective heat transfer, latent heat transfer associated with mass transfer, and radiative heat transfer.
The convective heat transfer  is given by: 
| (6–35) | 
where  is
the thermal conductivity of the fluid, 
 and 
 are the temperatures
of the fluid and of the particle, and 
 is the Nusselt number given by:
| (6–36) | 
where  is the specific heat of the fluid, and 
 and 
 are
the fluid dynamic viscosity and thermal conductivity respectively.
For cases including multiphase reactions, the convective heat transfer has a blowing correction based on the rate of mass transfer from the particle:
| (6–37) | 
where  is given by
| (6–38) | 
and  is the total mass transfer
rate of the particle. This modification can be omitted by using the
expert parameter setting: 
pt heat transfer blowing correction
= f.
The heat transfer associated with mass transfer  is given by the relation: 
| (6–39) | 
where the sum is taken over all components of the particle for
which heat transfer is taking place. The latent heat of vaporization  is temperature-dependent,
and is obtained directly from the MATERIALS information for the liquid
in the particle and its vapor.
The radiative heat transfer, ,
for a particle with diameter 
, uniform temperature 
, and emissivity 
, is given by:
| (6–40) | 
where  is the Radiation Intensity on the particle surface
at the location of the particle, 
 is the Refractive
Index of the fluid, and 
 is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant.
An equivalent amount of heat can be removed from the radiation field.
The rate of change of temperature for the particle is then obtained from:
| (6–41) | 
where the sum in this equation is taken over all components of the particle including those not affected by mass transfer.
The energy source to the continuous fluid is obtained from:
| (6–42) |