On theories for reacting immiscible mixtures
From MaRDI portal
Publication:531581
DOI10.1016/S0020-7225(99)00047-6zbMath1210.74076MaRDI QIDQ531581
Publication date: 30 April 2011
Published in: International Journal of Engineering Science (Search for Journal in Brave)
Composite and mixture properties (74E30) Reactive materials (74A65) Plastic materials, materials of stress-rate and internal-variable type (74C99) Mixture effects in solid mechanics (74F20) Chemical and reactive effects in solid mechanics (74F25)
Related Items (8)
Modelling of Biomaterials as an Application of the Theory of Mixtures ⋮ Algebraically constrained extended edge element method (\textbf{e}XFEM-AC) for resolution of multi-material cells ⋮ Generalized continuum mixture theory for multi-material shock physics ⋮ A coupled finite volume and material point method for two-phase simulation of liquid-sediment and gas-sediment flows ⋮ Continuous dependence in a nonlinear theory of viscoelastic porous mixtures ⋮ A note on the meaning of mixture viscosity using the classical continuum theories of mixtures ⋮ Acoustic properties of a two-fluid compressible mixture with micro-inertia ⋮ A general fluid–sediment mixture model and constitutive theory validated in many flow regimes
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Theories of immiscible and structured mixtures
- A thermomechanical theory for reacting immiscible mixtures
- On ideal multiphase mixtures with chemical reactions and diffusion
- Mathematical analysis of a two-phase continuum mixture theory
- A variational theory of immiscible mixtures
- Micro-structure in linear elasticity
- A theory of bubbly liquids
- Two-phase modeling of deflagration-to-detonation transition in granular materials: A critical examination of modeling issues
- A model for wave propagation in gassy sediments
- A two-phase mixture theory for the deflagration-to-detonation transition (ddt) in reactive granular materials
- A theory of liquids with vapor bubbles
- Transient wave propagation in bubbly liquids
- The Volume Fraction Concept in the Porous Media Theory
This page was built for publication: On theories for reacting immiscible mixtures