314 research outputs found
A modified lattice Bhatnagar-Gross-Krook model for convection heat transfer in porous media
The lattice Bhatnagar-Gross-Krook (LBGK) model has become the most popular
one in the lattice Boltzmann method for simulating the convection heat transfer
in porous media. However, the LBGK model generally suffers from numerical
instability at low fluid viscosities and effective thermal diffusivities. In
this paper, a modified LBGK model is developed for incompressible thermal flows
in porous media at the representative elementary volume scale, in which the
shear rate and temperature gradient are incorporated into the equilibrium
distribution functions. With two additional parameters, the relaxation times in
the collision process can be fixed at a proper value invariable to the
viscosity and the effective thermal diffusivity. In addition, by constructing a
modified equilibrium distribution function and a source term in the evolution
equation of temperature field, the present model can recover the macroscopic
equations correctly through the Chapman-Enskog analysis, which is another key
point different from previous LBGK models. Several benchmark problems are
simulated to validate the present model with the proposed local computing
scheme for the shear rate and temperature gradient, and the numerical results
agree well with analytical solutions and/or those well-documented data in
previous studies. It is also shown that the present model and the computational
schemes for the gradient operators have a second-order accuracy in space, and
better numerical stability of the present modified LBGK model than previous
LBGK models is demonstrated.Comment: 38pages,50figure
Volume-averaged macroscopic equation for fluid flow in moving porous media
Darcy's law and the Brinkman equation are two main models used for creeping
fluid flows inside moving permeable particles. For these two models, the time
derivative and the nonlinear convective terms of fluid velocity are neglected
in the momentum equation. In this paper, a new momentum equation including
these two terms are rigorously derived from the pore-scale microscopic
equations by the volume-averaging method, which can reduces to Darcy's law and
the Brinkman equation under creeping flow conditions. Using the lattice
Boltzmann equation method, the macroscopic equations are solved for the problem
of a porous circular cylinder moving along the centerline of a channel.
Galilean invariance of the equations are investigated both with the intrinsic
phase averaged velocity and the phase averaged velocity. The results
demonstrate that the commonly used phase averaged velocity cannot serve as the
superficial velocity, while the intrinsic phase averaged velocity should be
chosen for porous particulate systems
Numerical study of three-dimensional natural convection in a cubical cavity at high Rayleigh numbers
A systematic numerical study of three-dimensional natural convection of air in a differentially heated cubical cavity with Rayleigh number () up to is performed by using the recently developed coupled discrete unified gas-kinetic scheme. It is found that temperature and velocity boundary layers are developed adjacent to the isothermal walls, and become thinner as increases, while no apparent boundary layer appears near adiabatic walls. Also, the lateral adiabatic walls apparently suppress the convection in the cavity, however, the effect on overall heat transfer decreases with increasing . Moreover, the detailed data of some specific important characteristic quantities is first presented for the cases of high (up to ) . An exponential scaling law between the Nusselt number and is also found for from to for the first time, which is also consistent with the available numerical and experimental data at several specific values of
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