Dear All,

                Please see the Abstract & Bio for Dr. Sinclair Curtis below.

                                Karen

 

Mrs. Karen Heide, Secretary

School of Chemical Engineering

Purdue University

Forney Hall of Chemical Engineering

480 Stadium Mall Drive

West Lafayette  IN  47907-2100

765-494-4050

765-494-0805 (Fax)

 

 

Purdue University

 

School of Chemical Engineering

Graduate Seminar Series – Centennial Seminar

 

Dr. Jennifer Sinclair Curtis

Distinguished Professor, Chemical Engineering Department

University of Florida

 

Particle-Laden Flows: Applications, Modeling Approaches and Challenges

 

October 4, 2011

3:30 - 4:30 p.m.

FRNY G140

 

Abstract:

 

Particle processes pervade the chemical, pharmaceutical, agricultural and mining industries.  Many of these processes have significant opportunities for cost savings and productivity enhancements.  However, advances are currently unrealized due to the lack of understanding of particle flow behavior in industrial scale processes.  Reliable simulation tools can aid in this understanding and accelerate the achievement of substantial process improvements.  Recent advancements in multiphase computational fluid dynamics (CFD) can help facilitate these improvements.  However, state-of-the-art, multiphase CFD has limitations due to, for example, the lack of constitutive models that adequately describe the range of particle characteristics in a typical particle mix.

 

This presentation will overview the work in the development of improved computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models for the simulation of both dilute and dense-phase fluid-particle flows.  The linkage between DEM (Discrete Element Method) models and CFD will be shown; that is, how DEM simulations can give insight into improved constitutive models needed for large-scale CFD simulations.  Some current challenges in particle-flow modeling, including the effect particle shape and the influence of the interstitial fluid on the details of particle motion, will also be discussed. 

 

Bio:

 

Jennifer Sinclair Curtis is Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering Department at the University of Florida (UF).  Prior to this, she held administrative roles as Department Chair of Chemical Engineering at UF and Associate Dean of Engineering and Department Head of Freshman Engineering at Purdue University.  Professor Curtis received a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Purdue University (1983) and a PhD in Chemical Engineering from Princeton University (1989).  She has an internationally-recognized research program in the development and validation of numerical models for the prediction of particle flow phenomena.  Professor Curtis is a recipient of the NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, the Fulbright Senior Research Scholar Award, the American Society of Engineering Education’s (ASEE) Chemical Engineering Lectureship Award, the Eminent Overseas Lectureship Award by the Institution of Engineers in Australia, the ASEE’s Sharon Keillor Award for Women in Engineering, and the AIChE Fluidization Lectureship Award.  She currently serves as Associate Editor of the AIChE Journal in charge of all manuscripts on Particle Technology and Fluidization.  She is also on the Editorial Advisory Board of Powder Technology, Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, and Chemical Engineering Education.