Doctoral Thesis Defense of Katharina Heck

December 17, 2020 /

Dissertation: "Modelling and analysis of multicomponent transport at the interface between free- and porous-medium flow - influenced by radiation and roughness"
17 December 2020 | 9 am CET

Katharin Heck, doctoral researcher at the Department of Hydromechanics and Modelling of Hydrosystems (LH2) and within the framework of SFB 1313 and the Integrated Research Training Group IRTG-IMPM, will defend her dissertation:

Title: "Modelling and analysis of multicomponent transport at the interface between free- and porous-medium flow - influenced by radiation and roughness"  
Date:
17 December 2020
Time: 9 am CET
Venue: Online. If you are interested in participating the PhD defense, please contact stefanie.siegert@iws.uni-stuttgart.de

Due to the present situation, only the members of the examination board and the examination candidate may be present for doctoral examinations. An audience is not permitted. Interested people may listen to the talk remotedly. For information please contact Stefanie Siegert.

Abstract

Quantifying evaporation rates and the emission of greenhouse gases from soil plays an important role in predicting changing climate conditions worldwide. Natural and anthropogenic sources of carbon dioxide and methane in soil, e.g. landfills, lead to the migration of these gaseous components in the subsurface and into the atmosphere.
The complexity of predicting emissions of these greenhouse gases from the soil into the atmosphere is high, as not only processes in the porous medium influence the transport, but also the ambient atmospheric conditions like wind velocities or solar radiation have a substantial influence on the exchange processes.
In order to analyse the governing processes and add to the fundamental understanding of coupled porous-medium free-flow processes, this work uses and further develops a numerical model that is able to describe mass, momentum, and energy transfer between a porous medium and an adjacent free flow. Multicomponent diffusion is described by the Maxwell-Stefan formulation and the effects of the presence of multiple components on the exchange process between the soil and atmosphere is analysed. Dominating transport processes are investigated with the help of various set-ups, including non-planar surfaces and different soil types. The influence of a diurnal cycle of solar radiation on evaporation, surface temperatures and the emission of greenhouse gases is discussed and a comparison of modelled evaporation rates with experimental data is analysed.

First Supervisor: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Rainer Helmig
Secondary Supervisor: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Joachim Groß
Secondary Supervisor: Prof. Dr. sc. nat. ETH Insa Neuweiler 

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