Transient Response of Particle Distribution in a Chamber to Transient Particle Injection |
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Authors: | Ning Zhang Zhongquan Zheng Steven Eckels Venkata B. Nadella Xiaoyang Sun |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Engineering, McNeese State University, Lake Charles, Louisiana 70609 (USA);2. Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506‐5205 (USA) |
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Abstract: | ![]() We inject a large number of newly created nano‐particle aggregates into a chamber for the purpose of removing harmful contents in an indoor environment. This study is to experimentally and numerically investigate transient response of particle distributions to particle injections. A room‐sized chamber of 4 m × 2.1 m × 2.4 m is connected to a specially designed particle‐injection system, with two Optical Particle Counters used to simultaneously measure particle‐number densities with the size range from 0.3 μm to 10 μm at the inlet and in the chamber. A velocity probe measures the flow that is up to 1 m/s. An Euler‐type particulate‐phase‐transport model is developed and validated by comparing with experimental data. The study shows that the transient behavior of particle distributions is determined by many factors, including particle size, particle settling speed, sampling location, and velocity distribution. Particle number densities decrease in time more quickly for large particles than for small particles, and locations farther downstream in the chamber correlate more weakly with the inlet injection. |
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Keywords: | particle transient measurement particle transport simulation two‐phase flow |
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