450 research outputs found
Turbulent channel flow of dense suspensions of neutrally-buoyant spheres
Dense particle suspensions are widely encountered in many applications and in
environmental flows. While many previous studies investigate their rheological
properties in laminar flows, little is known on the behaviour of these
suspensions in the turbulent/inertial regime. The present study aims to fill
this gap by investigating the turbulent flow of a Newtonian fluid laden with
solid neutrally-buoyant spheres at relatively high volume fractions in a plane
channel. Direct Numerical Simulation are performed in the range of volume
fractions Phi=0-0.2 with an Immersed Boundary Method used to account for the
dispersed phase. The results show that the mean velocity profiles are
significantly altered by the presence of a solid phase with a decrease of the
von Karman constant in the log-law. The overall drag is found to increase with
the volume fraction, more than one would expect just considering the increase
of the system viscosity due to the presence of the particles. At the highest
volume fraction here investigated, Phi=0.2, the velocity fluctuation
intensities and the Reynolds shear stress are found to decrease. The analysis
of the mean momentum balance shows that the particle-induced stresses govern
the dynamics at high Phi and are the main responsible of the overall drag
increase. In the dense limit, we therefore find a decrease of the turbulence
activity and a growth of the particle induced stress, where the latter
dominates for the Reynolds numbers considered here.Comment: Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 201
Exact regularized point particle method for multi-phase flows in the two-way coupling regime
Particulate flows have been largely studied under the simplifying assumptions
of one-way coupling regime where the disperse phase do not react-back on the
carrier fluid. In the context of turbulent flows, many non trivial phenomena
such as small scales particles clustering or preferential spatial accumulation
have been explained and understood. A more complete view of multiphase flows
can be gained calling into play two-way coupling effects, i.e. by accounting
for the inter-phase momentum exchange between the carrier and the suspended
phase, certainly relevant at increasing mass loading. In such regime, partially
investigated in the past by the so-called Particle In Cell (PIC) method, much
is still to be learned about the dynamics of the disperse phase and the ensuing
alteration of the carrier flow.
In this paper we present a new methodology rigorously designed to capture the
inter-phase momentum exchange for particles smaller than the smallest
hydrodynamical scale, e.g. the Kolmogorov scale in a turbulent flow. In fact,
the momentum coupling mechanism exploits the unsteady Stokes flow around a
small rigid sphere where the transient disturbance produced by each particle is
evaluated in a closed form. The particles are described as lumped, point masses
which would lead to the appearance of singularities. A rigorous regularization
procedure is conceived to extract the physically relevant interactions between
particles and fluid which avoids any "ah hoc" assumption. The approach is
suited for high efficiency implementation on massively parallel machines since
the transient disturbance produced by the particles is strongly localized in
space around the actual particle position. As will be shown, hundred thousands
particles can therefore be handled at an affordable computational cost as
demonstrated by a preliminary application to a particle laden turbulent shear
flow.Comment: Submitted to Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 56 pages, 15 figure
Turbulent mixing of a slightly supercritical Van der Waals fluid at Low-Mach number
Supercritical fluids near the critical point are characterized by liquid-like
densities and gas-like transport properties. These features are purposely
exploited in different contexts ranging from natural products
extraction/fractionation to aerospace propulsion. Large part of studies
concerns this last context, focusing on the dynamics of supercritical fluids at
high Mach number where compressibility and thermodynamics strictly interact.
Despite the widespread use also at low Mach number, the turbulent mixing
properties of slightly supercritical fluids have still not investigated in
detail in this regime. This topic is addressed here by dealing with Direct
Numerical Simulations (DNS) of a coaxial jet of a slightly supercritical Van
der Waals fluid. Since acoustic effects are irrelevant in the Low Mach number
conditions found in many industrial applications, the numerical model is based
on a suitable low-Mach number expansion of the governing equation. According to
experimental observations, the weakly supercritical regime is characterized by
the formation of finger-like structures-- the so-called ligaments --in the
shear layers separating the two streams. The mechanism of ligament formation at
vanishing Mach number is extracted from the simulations and a detailed
statistical characterization is provided. Ligaments always form whenever a high
density contrast occurs, independently of real or perfect gas behaviors. The
difference between real and perfect gas conditions is found in the ligament
small-scale structure. More intense density gradients and thinner interfaces
characterize the near critical fluid in comparison with the smoother behavior
of the perfect gas. A phenomenological interpretation is here provided on the
basis of the real gas thermodynamics properties.Comment: Published on Physics of Fluid
Maximizing Vanadium Redox Flow Battery Efficiency: Strategies of Flow Rate Control
Vanadium redox flow batteries (VRFBs) are one of the most promising technologies for large-scale energy storage due to their flexible energy and power capacity configurations. The energy losses evaluation assumes a very important rule on the VRFB characterization in order increase the efficiency of the battery. Very few papers describe the relations between hydraulic, electrical and chemical contributions to the system energy losses, especially in a large size VRFB system. In the first part a fluid dynamics characterization of a 9kW / 27 kWh VRFB test facility has been conducted. In particular, we will consider the internal resistance as the sum of an ohmic and a transport resistance. Secondly, an overall loss assessment based on both numerical and experimental results has been carried out. Finally, some improvements in the battery management strategy and in stack engineering are proposed, that results from this work and can help the future designer to develop more efficient VRFB stack with a compact design
Enhancing the efficiency of kW-class vanadium redox flow batteries by flow factor modulation: An experimental method
he paper presents a control method of the electrolyte flow factor in kW-class Vanadium Redox Flow Batteries that minimizes transport losses without affecting the battery's electrical performance. This method uses experimental data acquired on a 9 kW/27 kWh test facility at varying operating conditions. The effects of overpotentials on the polarization curves are then modeled as non-linear electrical resistances that vary with the stack current, state of charge and electrolyte flow rates. Our analysis of these variables shows that the optimal performance is found if the flow factor is modulated during operation according to stack current and the battery state, so as to minimize the overall flow-dependent losses. The optimal profiles have been identified as functions of the battery's operating conditions. Based on these results, a dynamic control for the electrolyte flow rates has been implemented at a software level (i.e. without modifying the hardware of the test facility), which is capable of maximizing the round-trip efficiency and exceeds the performance achieved with a constant flow factor strategy, as proposed in previous literature. The implementation of the optimal flow rate control requires a preliminary test campaign to collect performance data, which are then used in the control protocol to manage the battery's operation. This scheme is easily implementable at a software level in other industrial redox flow batteries
Direct numerical simulation of supersonic and hypersonic turbulent boundary layers at moderate-high Reynolds numbers and isothermal wall condition
We study the structure of high-speed zero-pressure-gradient turbulent boundary layers up to friction Reynolds number Reτ ≈ 2000 using direct numerical simulation of the Navier-Stokes equations. Both supersonic and hypersonic conditions with nominal free-stream Mach numbers M∞ = 2, M∞ = 5.86 and heat transfer at the wall are considered. The present simulations extend the database currently available for wall-bounded flows, enabling us to explore high-Reynolds-number effects even in the hypersonic regime. We first analyse the instantaneous fields to characterize the structure of both velocity and temperature fluctuations. In all cases elongated strips of uniform velocity and temperature (superstructures) are observed in the outer portion of the boundary layer, characterized by a clear association between low-/high-speed momentum and high/low temperature streaks. The results highlight important deviations from the typical organization observed in the inner region of adiabatic boundary layers, revealing that the near-wall temperature streaks disappear in strongly non-adiabatic flow cases. We also focus on the structural properties of regions of uniform streamwise momentum (De Silva, Hutchins & Marusic, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 786, 2016, pp. 309.331) observed in turbulent boundary layers, confirming the presence of such zones in the high-speed regime at high Reynolds number and revealing the existence of similar regions for the temperature field. The accuracy of different compressibility transformations and temperature-velocity relations is assessed extending their range of validation to moderate/high Reynolds numbers. Spanwise spectral densities of the velocity and temperature fluctuations at various wall distances have been calculated revealing the energy content and the size of the turbulent eddies across the boundary layer. Finally, we propose a revised scaling for the characteristic length scales, that is based on the local mean shear computed according to the recent theory by Griffin, Fu & Moin [Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, vol. 118 (34)]
Virtual Functions Placement with Time Constraints in Fog Computing: a Matching Theory Perspective
This paper proposes two virtual function (VFs) placement approaches in a Fog domain. The considered solutions formulate a matching game with externalities, aiming at minimizing both the worst application completion time and the number of applications in outage, i.e., the number of applications with an overall completion time greater than a given deadline. The first proposed matching game is established between the VFs set and the Fog Nodes (FNs) set by taking into account the ordered sequence of services (i.e., chain) requested by each application. Conversely, the second proposed method overlooks the applications service chain structure in formulating the VF placement problem, with the aim at lowering the computation complexity without loosing the performance. Furthermore, in order to complete our analysis, the stability of the reached matchings has been theoretically proved for both the proposed solutions. Finally, performance comparisons of the proposed MT approaches with different alternatives are provided to highlight the superior performance of the proposed methods
Curvature and velocity strain dependencies of burning speed in a turbulent premixed jet flame
In this work the dependency of the turbulent burning speed on flame stretch in a premixed jet flame is analyzed. Considering a reference system attached to the front, the flame stretch is split into three contributions based on flame front curvature, normal fluid velocity and divergence of tangential velocity. The turbulent burning velocity is derived from the measure of the divergence of the mean unconditioned velocity field, that is taken as an estimate of the mean reaction rate in the context of flamelet hypothesis. The results are in a reasonable agreement with the literature data on turbulent combustion rates. Though the present methodology is more complex than the usual one based on reactant consumption rate, it provides the local burning speed and not the overall one. Combining these measurements with the local flame stretch, we show that, for a given flame, it exists a wide region along the flame height where the increase of the local flame speed in respect to the laminar unstretched one (stretching factor) is constant. Since the Reynolds number controls the small-scale behavior of turbulence, these findings denote a direct connection between the local, turbulence-induced, flame front deformation and the increase of the local flame propagation speed. The aim of this work is to establish correlations between the three different terms of flame stretch and the turbulent combustion speed that can lead to the definition of suitable closure models for turbulent combustion numerical simulations
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