Particle-laden flow

Particle-laden flows refers to a class of two-phase fluid flow, in which one of the phases is continuously connected (referred to as the continuous or carrier phase) and the other phase is made up of small, immiscible, and typically dilute particles (referred to as the dispersed or particle phase). Fine aerosol particles in air is an example of a particle-laden flow; the aerosols are the dispersed phase, and the air is the carrier phase.[1]

The modeling of two-phase flows has a tremendous variety of engineering and scientific applications: pollution dispersion in the atmosphere, fluidization in combustion processes, aerosol deposition in spray medication, along with many others.

  1. ^ Hoque, Mohammad Mainul; Joshi, Jyeshtharaj B.; Evans, Geoffrey M.; Mitra, Subhasish (31 July 2023). "A critical analysis of turbulence modulation in particulate flow systems: a review of the experimental studies". Reviews in Chemical Engineering. doi:10.1515/revce-2022-0068. S2CID 260316941.