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1.
Atomization and sprays. by Arthur H. Lefebre by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: New York Hemisphere 1989
Availability: Items available for loan: JRD Tata Memorial Library (1)Call number: 660.2961 N89.

2.
Recent advances in spray combustion. Vol.1,2/ ed. by Kenneth K Kuo ed by Kenneth K Kuo by Series: Progress in Astronautics and Aeronautics. V.166,171
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Reston AIAA 1996
Availability: Items available for loan: JRD Tata Memorial Library (2)Call number: 629.1 N60.166&171 "SER", ...

3.
Liquid atomization by L Bayvel and Z Orzechowski by Series: Combustion An International Series
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Washington Taylor& Francis 1993
Availability: Items available for loan: Aerospace Engineering (1)Call number: 660.2945 N93 (JATP).

4.
Fluid dynamics and transport of droplets and sprays by William A Sirignano by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1999
Availability: Items available for loan: JRD Tata Memorial Library (1)Call number: 660.294515 N99.

5.
Study of spray automized and deposited hypereutectic Al-20Si alloy by Ravikumar N V by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Bangalore IISc. 1999
Availability: Items available for reference: JRD Tata Memorial Library: Not for loan (1)Call number: 669.722 N99 "THESIS".

6.
Science and engineering of droplets fundamentals and applications by Huimin Liu by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: New Jersey Noyes publications 2000
Availability: Items available for loan: Mechanical Engineering (1)Call number: 620.43 P001.

7.
Industrial sprays and atomization Design, Analysis and Applications by G G Nasar, A J Yule and L Bendig by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: London Springer Verlag 2002
Availability: Not available: Aerospace Engineering: Checked out (1).

8.
Liquid rocket thrust chambers aspects of modeling, analysis, and design ed by Vigor Yang, et al., by Series: Progress in astronautics and aeronautics. Vol.200
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Virginia AIAA 2004
Availability: Items available for loan: JRD Tata Memorial Library (1)Call number: 629.1 N60.200 "SER".

9.
Atomization and sprays by Arthur H Lefebvre by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Boca Raton CRC Press 1989
Availability: Items available for loan: Aerospace Engineering (1)Call number: 660.2961 N89;1 (JATP).

10.
Mechanistic investigations of effervescent atomization by Hrishikesh Prabhakar Gadgil by Series: IISc, Dept. of AE. PhD Thesis
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Bangalore IISc 2011
Availability: Items available for reference: JRD Tata Memorial Library: Not for loan (1)Call number: 629.47522 P11 "THESIS".

11.
Handbook of atomization and sprays Theory and applications ed by N Ashgriz by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: London Springer 2011
Availability: Items available for loan: Mechanical Engineering (1)Call number: 660.294515 P11 (ME).

12.
Interaction behavior and droplet characteristics of multi-injector sprays by Narendra Dev; advised by D Sivakumar by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Bengaluru IISc 2020
Dissertation note: MTech (Res); IISc; 2020
Online resources:
Availability: Items available for reference: JRD Tata Memorial Library: Not for loan (1)Call number: 620 NAR/I.

13.
Atomization characteristics of alternative aviation biofuels, Jet A-1, and water from a hybrid airblast atomizer by Sai Krishna Vankeswaram; advised by D Sivakumar by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Bengaluru IISc 2022
Dissertation note: PhD; IISc; 2022
Online resources:
Availability: Items available for reference: JRD Tata Memorial Library: Not for loan (1)Call number: 620 SAI/A.

14.
Studies on rotary atomization by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Language: en.
Publication details: Bangalore : Indian Insitute of science , 2022
Dissertation note: PhD; 2021; Interdisciplinary centre for energy research
Online resources:
Availability: Items available for loan: JRD Tata Memorial Library (1).

15.
Secondary atomization of a droplet in diverse interaction settings by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Bangalore: Indian Institute of Science, 2023
Dissertation note: PhD; 2023; Mechanical Engineering
Online resources:
Availability: Items available for reference: JRD Tata Memorial Library: Not For Loan (1)Call number: 620.106 SHA.

16.
Aerobreakup of a polymeric droplet by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Language: en
Publication details: Bangalore : Indian Institute of Science, 2024
Dissertation note: Aerobreakup of a liquid droplet refers to the process of breaking the droplet into smaller fragments by subjecting it to a sufficiently high-speed stream of gas (generally air). This process lies at the core of various natural and industrial processes like fuel atomization in IC engines, breakup of falling raindrops, spray atomization of paints and pharmaceutical chemicals, breakup of sneezed ejecta, etc. The present study investigates the aerobreakup of a polymeric droplet. A polymeric liquid exhibits viscoelastic nature due to the presence of long-chain polymer molecules, and the aerobreakup of such viscoelastic droplets can be drastically different from that of a purely viscous (Newtonian) droplet. Studying the aerobreakup of a polymeric droplet draws special attention because of two reasons. First, many liquids of practical importance are inherently viscoelastic, and second, polymers can be added as a rheological modifier to gain control over the aerobreakup process. While extensive research has been conducted on the aerobreakup of Newtonian droplets, studies on viscoelastic droplets are scarce, and the mechanism through which liquid elasticity influences the process remains elusive. The present study delves into both the mechanism and the impact of liquid elasticity on the aerobreakup of a polymeric droplet. The study is structured into three major parts. The first part provides an experimental study on the shock-induced aerobreakup of a polymeric droplet. Here, we explore the role of liquid elasticity on the aerobreakup process for a wide range of Weber number (∼10^2 - 10^4) and elasticity number (∼10^(-4) - 10^2) by subjecting polymeric droplets (aqueous solutions of polyethylene oxide) of different concentrations to a strong airflow induced behind a moving shock wave. Experiments revealed that the impact of liquid elasticity is negligible in the early stages of droplet breakup, which involves droplet deformation and growth of different hydrodynamic instabilities (Kelvin-Helmholtz and Rayleigh-Taylor). However, a dominant role of liquid appears in the final stages of droplet breakup in terms of the morphology of the liquid mass. In this first part of our study, the viscosity of the polymeric solutions differed from that of the Newtonian solvent (DI water), and some of these polymeric solutions displayed shear-thinning behavior. Therefore, isolating the effect of elasticity from the viscosity and shear-thinning behavior remains an unresolved issue. This forms the basis for the second part of the research work. Here, we employ Boger fluids, which do not show a strain rate-dependent viscosity in shear flows (like Newtonian liquids) but exhibit viscoelastic properties. By comparing the shock-induced aerobreakup of a Boger fluid droplet with that of a Newtonian droplet having similar shear viscosity, we eliminate any effect that may come from the shear-thinning behavior. The third part of this work provides an experimental study on the aerodynamic bag breakup of a polymeric droplet at a fixed Weber number of ≈15, while the elasticity number is varied in the range of ∼ 10^(-4) - 10^(-2). Here we attempt to address a very fundamental aspect of studying aerobreakup, i.e., to predict fragmentation. Experiments revealed that the initial deformation dynamics of a polymeric droplet are similar to the Newtonian solvent droplet. However, in the later stages, the actual fragmentation of liquid mass is resisted by the presence of polymers. Depending upon the liquid elasticity, fragmentation can be completely inhibited in the timescale of experimental observation. We provide a framework to study this problem, identify the stages where the role of liquid elasticity can be neglected and where it must be considered, and finally, establish a criterion that governs the occurrence or the absence of fragmentation in a specified time period.
Online resources:
Availability: No items available.

17.
Aerobreakup of a polymeric droplet by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Language: en
Publication details: Bangalore : Indian Institute of Science, 2024
Online resources:
Availability: Items available for reference: JRD Tata Memorial Library: Not for loan (1)Call number: 541.3 CHA.

18.
Single and twin liquid jet injection in crossflow: Influence of Mach number and jet spacing / by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Language: en
Publication details: Bangalore : Indian Institute of Science, 2025
Dissertation note: PhD ; 2025 ; Mechanical Engineering (ME)
Online resources:
Availability: Items available for reference: JRD Tata Memorial Library: Not For Loan (1)Call number: 629.1323 RAM.

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