Thermal Conductivity Modeling of Monodispersed Microspheres using Discrete Element Method
Jian Zeng, Ka Man Chung, Xintong Zhang, Sarath Adapa, Tianshi Feng, Yu, Pei, Renkun Chen

TL;DR
This study combines discrete element and finite element methods to accurately model the thermal conductivity of monodispersed microsphere beds, considering realistic packing structures and multiple heat transfer mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a DEM-FEM integrated approach that improves thermal conductivity predictions over traditional simple cubic packing models.
Findings
Realistic packing structures improve model accuracy
DEM-FEM method aligns well with experimental data
Multiple heat transfer mechanisms are effectively quantified
Abstract
Particle beds are widely used in various systems and processes, such as particle heat exchangers, granular flow reactors, and additive manufacturing. Accurate modeling of thermal conductivity of particle beds and understanding of their heat transfer mechanisms are important. However, previous models were based on a simple cubic packing of particles which could not accurately represent the actual heat transfer processes under certain conditions. Here, we examine the effect of the packing structure on thermal conductivity of particle beds. We use monodispersed silica microspheres with average article sizes ranging from 23 to 330 um as a model material. We employ a transient hot-wire technique to measure the thermal conductivity of the particle beds with packing density of 43 to 57% within a temperature range of room temperature to 500 deg. C and under N2 gaseous pressures of 20 to 760…
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