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CISM Advanced Course on "Lagrangian Approaches to Multiphysics Two-phase Flows" (September 8-12), Udine (Italy)

Du 7 avril 2025 au 11 avril 2025

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Multiphase flows are common in nature and engineering. Atmospheric flows often involve the dispersion of droplets or solid particulate matter (dust, sand, ice crystals in clouds); marine systems are populated by plankton, sediments or microplastics. Industrial applications of disperse flows include particle separators, filtration systems, atomisers and combustion devices, spray dryers, bubble columns; interfacial and free-surface flows are widespread in chemical and process industry.

Original website: https://cism.it/en/activities/courses/C2512/
CISM Advanced Course on "Lagrangian Approaches to Multiphysics Two-phase Flows" 

September 8-12
Udine (Italy)

Multiphase flows are common in nature and engineering. Atmospheric flows often involve the dispersion of droplets or solid particulate matter (dust, sand, ice crystals in clouds); marine systems are populated by plankton, sediments or microplastics. Industrial applications of disperse flows include particle separators, filtration systems, atomisers and combustion devices, spray dryers, bubble columns; interfacial and free-surface flows are widespread in chemical and process industry.

To address the complexity associated with such flows, diverse phenomena are combined: flow dynamics (including turbulence or microfluidics), transport of dispersed phase, heat transfer and phase change, chemical reactions, surface science (particle deposition, resuspension or agglomeration) or even biology of organic objects. These multiphysics processes may span a wide range of spatial and temporal scales (from nano through macro to geophysical ones).

The course will focus on Lagrangian approaches. They are often methods of choice to treat the particulate phase transport and polydispersity; they may also be used, in terms of so-called particle-based methods, for the macroscopic description of fluid motion. Looked at from this perspective, the course should nicely complement a typical curriculum on fluid dynamics and CFD modelling to provide a broader view, next-to (but not off) the beaten track, especially valuable for PhD candidates.

The course will cover a range of Lagrangian techniques in use, with a special emphasis on particle-laden turbulence. It will include lectures and hands-on sessions on Particle Image Velocimetry and Particle Tracking Velocimetry that are widely used to measure dispersed two-phase flows. On the other hand, non-spherical tracer particles can be used to quantify turbulence. The physics of particle dispersion, aggregate breakup, and anisotropic particle dynamics will be covered.

In terms of modelling and computation, the lectures will describe hybrid Euler-Lagrange approaches for multiphysics two-phase flows, in particular disperse turbulent ones. The course will address particle-resolved and particle-modelled Direct Numerical Simulations (PR-DNS, PM-DNS), Large-Eddy Simulations (LES) with particle tracking, which may include modelling of the subscale phenomena, as well as statistical (RANS and one-point PDF) approaches with stochastic Lagrangian models to account for the missing information on turbulence. Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) will be presented as a representative of a particle-based numerical approach, including multiphase SPH, along with some fundamental issues.

Through these various examples, similarities and differences between particle-based descriptions will be discussed, considering the multiphysics nature of two-phase flows. The lectures will shed light on experimental issues (including uncertainty assessment), modelling challenges (point-particle vs. particle-resolved models, unresolved scales handling), and computational approaches (including hybrid ones).

Invited lecturers
Mickael Bourgoin (Ecole Normale de Lyon, France)

5 lectures on:
Lagrangian turbulence: statistical description of Lagrangian dynamics, single particle dispersion, pair dispersion; turbulent transport of (spherical) inertial particles: single particle dynamics, turbulent settling, preferential concentration and collective effects.

Jochen Froehlich (TU Dresden, Germany)

5 lectures on:
Overview of numerical approaches for particle-resolving simulations; Euler-Lagrange methods with immersed boundaries for Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS) of particle-laden and bubble-laden flows; sub-scale models for collision, coalescence and breakup; use of particle-resolving DNS for statistical modelling; application to sediment dynamics, extension to three-phase flows in flotation.

Alessandra S. Lanotte (CNR Institute of Nanotechnology, Lecce, Italy)

Lectures: 4 + 2 hands-on session
Breakup of aggregates in flows: from simple to turbulent flows; numerical approaches for the breakup of small, spherical or anisotropic particles in turbulence; modelling methods for the breakup of rigid aggregates in turbulent flows. Hands-on session: analysis of Lagrangian data from DNS.

Alex Liberzon (Tel Aviv University, Israel)

Lectures: 4 + 2 hands-on session
Overview of Lagrangian particle tracking experimental methods from theoretical, computational, and hardware perspectives. Hands-on sessions on two-phase Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) and Particle Tracking Velocimetry (PTV) methods for 2D/3D measurements, using open source software OpenPIV and OpenPTV; application on algae, navigation in odorant landscape.

Jacek Pozorski (IMP, PAN, Gdansk, Poland)

5 lectures on:
Introduction to Lagrangian approach and particle methods in fluid dynamics; Euler-Lagrange modelling of turbulent dispersion; Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) with point particles considering sub-scale effects (one-point stochastic models and structural-type models); Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) particle method: introduction and selected applications to two-phase flows.

Alfredo Soldati (Vienna University of Technology, Austria)

5 lectures on:

Overview of particle dynamics in turbulent flows; influence of shape on the motion of anisotropic and non-axisymmetric particles; experimental determination of motion of shape-influenced particles; use of non-spherical tracer particles to measure turbulence features.