Home

Chemical Engineering, IIT Bombay

  • Contact
  • Login
Home ยป Biblio

Steady flow of smooth, inelastic particles on a bumpy inclined plane: Hard and soft particle simulations

  • Acceleration due to gravity
  • Accurate prediction
  • Computational time
  • Constitutive relations
  • Discrete-element simulations
  • Event driven
  • First-principles
  • Gravitation
  • Hard particles
  • Heat flux
  • Inclined planes
  • Inelastic particle
  • kinetic theory
  • Machinery
  • Mean velocities
  • Particle diameters
  • particle size
  • Shallow layers
  • Simulation result
  • Soft particles
  • Soft-particle model
  • Solid volume fraction
  • Steady flow
  • Stiffness
  • Stiffness constants
  • Titration
  • Viscosity
Publication Type  Journal Article
Year of Publication  2010
Authors  Tripathi, A.; Khakhar, D.V.
Journal Title  Physical Review E - Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics
Volume  81
Issue  4
Journal Date  2010///
Key Words  Acceleration due to gravity; Accurate prediction; Computational time; Constitutive relations; Discrete-element simulations; Event driven; First-principles; Hard particles; Inclined planes; Inelastic particle; Mean velocities; Particle diameters; Shallow l
Notes  

Export Date: 5 July 2011Source: ScopusArt. No.: 041307

URL  http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-77951756357&partnerID=40&md5=8c687db9dd231f73226402a898ce24dd
DOI  10.1103/PhysRevE.81.041307
Citation Key  3102
Export  Tagged XML BibTex

Information About

  • Education
  • Research
  • People
  • Services
  • Activities
  • Careers
  • Resources
  • About
  • Login

Similar Pages

  • State of dispersion of magnetic nanoparticles in an aqueous medium: Experiments and monte carlo simulation
  • Compartment modeling for flow characterization of underground coal gasification cavity
  • Diffusional transport of ions in plasticized anion-exchange membranes
  • Identification of process and measurement noise covariance for state and parameter estimation using extended Kalman filter
  • Droplet-phase synthesis of nanoparticle aerosol lipid matrices with controlled properties
Link to old site.