2017
DOI: 10.2166/aqua.2017.058
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The comparison of discrete ordinate and Monte Carlo methods in solving of the radiation transfer equations in a heterogenous reactor

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Radiation distribution is a crucial parameter in the simulation of photochemical and photocatalytic systems [74][75][76]. The light intensity distribution inside the reactor is simulated by solving the RTE and it depends on parameters such as type and position of the lamp, reactor geometry, radiation wavelength, the optical properties of the medium, specifications of reactor walls, and operating conditions (inflow and outflow rate, catalyst type and concentrations) [77,78].…”
Section: Review Articlementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Radiation distribution is a crucial parameter in the simulation of photochemical and photocatalytic systems [74][75][76]. The light intensity distribution inside the reactor is simulated by solving the RTE and it depends on parameters such as type and position of the lamp, reactor geometry, radiation wavelength, the optical properties of the medium, specifications of reactor walls, and operating conditions (inflow and outflow rate, catalyst type and concentrations) [77,78].…”
Section: Review Articlementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Li et al used the DOM to study the wall reflection on an annular single-lamp UV reactor, which directly affects the radiation distribution [95]. Asadollahfardi et al presented a comparison of the reliability of the DOM with MC predictions for solving RTE [76]. The DOM is widely applied to model steady-state radiative transfer in media [96].…”
Section: Discrete Ordinates (Do) Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another fact that requires further consideration is that photons are not entirely directed to the reaction medium after impinging the system, which directly contributes to the system′s irradiation efficiency. In this sense, Monte Carlo method can be used to solve the RTE solution, probabilistically simulating the possible trajectory of photons in a medium, including absorption, scattering and reflection (Boyjoo et al, 2013;Asadollahfardi et al, 2018;Ayoub, 2020;Akach et al, 2020). This method involves statistical sampling to model complex chemical and physical phenomena and has shown good results when applied to model the radiation field in photochemistry systems (Singh et al, 2007).…”
Section: Radiation Transport Modelingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…68 On the other hand, Monte Carlo models work by tracking the probabilistic distribution of directions for photons, taking into account their place of emission and the possible interactions on their way to the reactor. 69,70 Akach et al 70 compared both methods to solve the RTE in a heterogeneous reactor. Experimental measurements indicated that the radiation pattern could be adequately modelled with both methods.…”
Section: Uv Led In Simulationmentioning
confidence: 99%