Fundamentals of Multiphase Flow
This book is targeted to graduate students and researchers at the cutting edge of investigations into the fundamental nature of multiphase flows. It is intended as a reference book for the basic methods used in the treatment of multiphase flows. The subject of multiphase flows encompasses a vast field, a host of different technological contexts, a wide spectrum of different scales, a broad range of engineering disciplines, and a multitude of different analytical approaches. The aim of Fundamentals of Multiphase Flow is to bring much of this fundamental understanding together into one book, presenting a unifying approach to the fundamental ideas of multiphase flows. The book summarizes those fundamental concepts with relevance to a broad spectrum of multiphase flows. It does not pretend to present a comprehensive review of the details of any one multiphase flow or technological context; references to such reviews are included where appropriate.
- Focus is on presenting a unified treatment of the fundamentals of multiphase flows
- Emphasizes the practical importance of multiphase flows
- Highlights the ubiquity of multiphase flows and the range of contexts in which they need to be understood
Reviews & endorsements
'The book is an excellent reference book for basic methods used in the treatment of multiphase flows, and it is very well written and enjoyable. It is warmly recommended to graduate students and researchers interested in modern problems concerning multiphase flows.' Zentralblatt MATH
Product details
April 2005Hardback
9780521848046
368 pages
254 × 178 × 21 mm
0.85kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction to multiphase flow
- 2. Single-particle motion
- 3. Bubble or droplet translation
- 4. Bubble growth and collapse
- 5. Cavitation
- 6. Boiling and condensation
- 7. Flow patterns
- 8. Internal flow energy conversion
- 9. Homogeneous flows
- 10. Flows with bubble dynamics
- 11. Flows with gas dynamics
- 12. Sprays
- 13. Granular flows
- 14. Drift flux models
- 15. System instabilities
- 16. Kinematic waves.