Influence of Reynolds number on the motion of settling, bidisperse inertial particles in turbulence
Using direct numerical simulations, we examine the effects of the Taylor Reynolds number, Rλu′λ/ν (where u′, λ, and ν denote the fluid root-mean-squared velocity, the Taylor microscale and the fluid kinematic viscosity, respectively), and Froude number, Fraη/g (where aη is the Kolmogorov acceleration, and g is the acceleration due to gravity), on the motion of small, spherical, settling, bidisperse inertial particles (characterized by their Stokes number Stτp/τη, which is the ratio of the particle response time to the Kolmogorov timescale) in isotropic turbulence. Particle accelerations play a key role in the relative motion of bidisperse particles, and we find that reducing Fr leads to an enhancement of the accelerations but a suppression of their intermittency. For Stokes numbers St>1, the effect of Rλ on the accelerations is enhanced by gravity, since settling causes the particle accelerations to be affected by a larger range of flow scales. The results for the probability density function (PDF) of the particle relative velocities show that even when the particles are settling very fast, turbulence continues to play a key role in their vertical relative velocities, and increasingly so as Rλ is increased. This occurs because although the settling velocity may be much larger than typical velocities of the turbulence, due to intermittency, there are significant regions of the flow where the turbulence contribution to the particle motion is of the same order as that from gravitational settling. Increasing Rλ enhances the non-Gaussianity of the relative velocity PDFs, while reducing Fr has the opposite effect, and for fast settling particles, the PDFs become approximately Gaussian. Finally, we observe that low-order statistics such as the radial distribution function and the particle collision kernel are strongly affected by Fr and St, and especially by the degree of bidispersity of the particles. However, we also find that these low-order statistics are very weakly affected by Rλ when St≤O(1), irrespective of the degree of bidispersity. Therefore, although the mechanisms controlling the collision rates of monodisperse and bidisperse particles are different, they share the property of a weak sensitivity to Rλ when St≤O(1).
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- 4012 Fluid mechanics and thermal engineering
- 0913 Mechanical Engineering
- 0203 Classical Physics
- 0102 Applied Mathematics
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Related Subject Headings
- 4012 Fluid mechanics and thermal engineering
- 0913 Mechanical Engineering
- 0203 Classical Physics
- 0102 Applied Mathematics