Chemical Engineering Science, Vol.64, No.9, 2067-2075, 2009
A two-scale modeling of motion-induced fluid release from thin fibrous porous media
In this work, a two-scale two-phase modeling methodology is presented for studying fluid release from saturated/unsaturated thin fibrous media when brought in contact with a moving solid surface. Our macroscale model is based on the Richards' equation for two-phase fluid transport in porous media. The required constitutive relationships, capillary pressure and relative permeability as functions of medium's saturation, are obtained through microscale modeling. At microscales, a 3-D model based on fiber diameter, fiber orientation, and medium's solid volume fraction (SVF), is generated to resemble the internal structure of the fibrous sheets and be used in full-morphology analysis as well as microscale permeability simulation. A mass convection boundary condition is considered here to model the fluid transport at the boundary in contact with the target surface. It was shown that the mass convection coefficient, k(f), plays a significant role in determining the release rate and is expected to be in the range of 10(-6) < k(f) < 10(-9), depending on the properties of the fluid, fibrous sheet, the target surface as well as the speed of the relative motion, and remains to be determined experimentally. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Fibrous media;Porous media;Transport processes;Multiphase flow;Microstructure;Fluid mechanics;Convective transport