Organiser: PC Alpe Danube Adria
Conference website: www.cmff.hu
CMFF is a historical international conference series, formerly known as Conference on Fluid Machinery, and held every fourth year in Budapest since 1959.
The recent focus of the conference is the coexistence of and collaboration between numerical flow simulation and physical flow modelling using advanced measurement methods.
The main thematic areas of the Conference Series are as follows:
Each thematic area covers research, development, design, new applications and equipment, case studies and future trends with particular emphasis on the use of CFD and advanced measurement methods.
The deadline for abstract submission is10th January 2022for those who have been informed about the event through ERCOFTAC. During the abstract submission process, please include #ERCOFTAC in the list of keywords.
You can find more information about the event on the conference website at www.cmff.hu
The Conferences incorporate Keynote Lectures, Paper Sessions, and Workshops. For CMFF'22, the following Keynote Lecturers accepted our invitation for delivering a speech in the topics specified below:
Links of the Conference Organizers to ERCOFTAC
There are strong links between ERCOFTAC and the organizers of CMFF, outlined as follows.
Conference History
The success of CMFF'03 in 2003 (170 presenting authors from about 30 countries), coupled with the rapid development of fluid mechanics, encouraged the Conference Organizers to increase the frequency of the events to every third year. The subsequent events CMFF'06, CMFF'09, CMFF'12, and CMFF'15, held in 2006, 2009, 2012, 2015, as well as in 2018, maintained the level of participation and internationality of the previous conference.
KEYNOTE LECTURES FOR THE CONFERENCES ON MODELLING FLUID FLOW (CMFF) FROM 2003 TO 2018:
2003
Application of CFD - techniques to fluid machinery
R. Schilling; Department and Laboratory for Hydraulic Machinery and Equipment, University of Munich, Germany
The challenge of modelling and simulating flow separation from continuous surfaces
M.Leschziner; Department of Aeronautics, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London, United Kingdom
Development of fluid mechanics methods in the 20th century and their application to laminar and turbulent flow investigations
F. Durst; Institute for Fluid Mechanics University of Erlangen, Germany
Theodore Von Karman: A Global Life
T.Frank; Department of American Studies Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, Hungary
2006
Modern turbomachinery component design
R. A. Van den Braembussche; Turbomachinery and Propulsion Department von Karman Institute for Fluid Dynamics, Sint-Genesius-Rode, Belgium
Modelling internal reacting flows
D. Thevenin; Institut filr Stromungstechnik & Thermodynamik Otto-Von-Guericke Universitat Magdeburg, Germany
Industrialdemands on flow modelling
S.Bross; KSB AG, Frankenthal, Germany
Ludwig Prandtl, life and work
J. Zierep; Institute of Fluid Mechanics University of Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany
2009
Trends and challenges in modelling complex turbulent flows
F. Menter; Scientific Coordination ANSYS Germany, Otterfing, Germany
Advanced optical flow diagnostics for fluid mechanics
L. David; Laboratoire d'Etudes Aerodynamiques University of Poitiers, Poitiers, France
Large-scale simulations for turbine engine core noise
D. Van Zante; Acoustics Branch, NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, USA
Osborne Reynolds - the turbulent years
B. E. Launder; School of MACE University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
2012
The role of LES in unsteady ground vehicle aerodynamics
S.Krajnovic; Department of Applied Mechanics Chalmers University of Technology, Goteborg, Sweden
The application of PIV to investigate turbulent flows
J. Westerweel; Laboratory for Aero & Hydrodynamics Delft UniversityofTechnology,Delft,TheNetherlands
Open rotor aeroacoustic modeling
E. Envia; Acoustics Branch, NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, USA
Prof N.Y. Zhukovsky, his life, work and development of his ideas in TsAGI
V.V. Vyshinsky; Department of Aeromechanics and Flying Engineering Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Moscow, Russia
2015
Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics: towards accurate Lagrangian flow prediction
D. Violeau; Electricite de France (EDF) R&D Division, Laboratoire National d'Hydraulique et Environnement (LNHE), Chatou, France
Wind tunnel experiments or advanced CFD ... what do we need for understanding flow and dispersion in the lower atmospheric boundary layer?
B. Leitl; Institut fiir Meteorologie UniversitatHamburg, Hamburg, Germany
Jet noise seen from a beamformer 's viewpoint
R. P. Dougherty; OptiNav, Inc. Bellevue, WA, USA
The birth of combustion research in France: Lavoisier, Berthelot, Vieille, Mallard, Le Chatelier, Jouguet... and their impact on current science
S. Candel; Laboratoire EM2C, Ecole Centrale Paris, Chatenay-Malabry Cedex, France
2018
Turbomachinery-related aeroacoustic modelling and simulation
S.Moreau; Department of Mechanical Engineering; UniversitedeSherbrooke,Sherbrooke,Canada
State of the Art and challenges related to application of CFD in Fluids Engineering
M.Perie; Institute of Ship Technology, Ocean Engineering and Transmit Systems, Faculty of Engineering; University of Duisburg-Essen
Experimental characterization of sprays: special needs in validating computational models
Y. Hardalupas; Department of Mechanical Engineering Imperial College London, London, UK
Modeling (understanding and controlling) turbulent flows: the heritage of Leonardo da Vinci in modern computational fluid dynamics
A. Corsini; Dipartimento di Meccanicae Aeronautica Universita di Roma "La Sapienza", Rome, Italy