Top of page

Student/Staff Portal
Global Site Navigation

School of Engineering

Local Section Navigation
You are here: Main Content

A study of the aqueous droplet velocity and size under atmospheric and flash environments

Water is vital for human survival with demand surging due to population growth and climate change. This collaborative PhD research project (with the Water Resources and Environmental Engineering Research group) studies aqueous droplet velocity, droplet sizes, size distribution, and breakup characteristics in different nozzles, nozzle orientation, nozzle arrangements (single, multiple), salinity of pure water (0-3.5%) and surrounding pressure. The project employs both experimental (image based) and computation (CFD) methods.

Researchers

Skip to top of page