11,333 research outputs found
Application of the exact regularized point particle method (ERPP) to particle laden turbulent shear flows in the two-way coupling regime
The Exact Regularized Point Particle method (ERPP), which is a new inter-phase momentum coupling ap- proach, is extensively used for the first time to explore the response of homogeneous shear turbulence in presence of different particle populations. Particle suspensions with different Stokes number and/or mass loading are considered. Particles with Kolmogorov Stokes number of order one suppress turbulent kinetic energy when the mass loading is increased. In contrast, heavier particles leave this observable almost un- changed with respect to the reference uncoupled case. Turbulence modulation is found to be anisotropic, leaving the streamwise velocity fluctuations less affected by unitary Stokes number particles whilst it is increased by heavier particles. The analysis of the energy spectra shows that the turbulence modulation occurs throughout the entire range of resolved scales leading to non-trivial augmentation/depletion of the energy content among the different velocity components at different length-scales. In this regard, the ERPP approach is able to provide convergent statistics up to the smallest dissipative scales of the flow, giving the opportunity to trust the ensuing results. Indeed, a substantial modification of the turbu- lent fluctuations at the smallest-scales, i.e. at the level of the velocity gradients, is observed due to the particle backreaction. Small scale anisotropies are enhanced and fluctuations show a greater level of in- termittency as measured by the probability distribution function of the longitudinal velocity increments and by the corresponding flatness
Direct simulation of liquid-gas-solid flow with a free surface lattice Boltzmann method
Direct numerical simulation of liquid-gas-solid flows is uncommon due to the
considerable computational cost. As the grid spacing is determined by the
smallest involved length scale, large grid sizes become necessary -- in
particular if the bubble-particle aspect ratio is on the order of 10 or larger.
Hence, it arises the question of both feasibility and reasonability. In this
paper, we present a fully parallel, scalable method for direct numerical
simulation of bubble-particle interaction at a size ratio of 1-2 orders of
magnitude that makes simulations feasible on currently available
super-computing resources. With the presented approach, simulations of bubbles
in suspension columns consisting of more than fully resolved
particles become possible. Furthermore, we demonstrate the significance of
particle-resolved simulations by comparison to previous unresolved solutions.
The results indicate that fully-resolved direct numerical simulation is indeed
necessary to predict the flow structure of bubble-particle interaction problems
correctly.Comment: submitted to International Journal of Computational Fluid Dynamic
- …