Large Eddy Simulation of Inertial Particle Preferential Dispersion in a Turbulent Flow over a Backward-Facing Step
Large eddy simulation of inertial particle dispersion in a turbulent flow over a backward-facing step was performed. The numerical results of both instantaneous particle dispersion and two-phase velocity statistics were in good agreement with the experimental measurements. The analysis of preferenti...
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Series: | Advances in Mechanical Engineering |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/493212 |
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doaj-15732612aacf4373b86f21b4d8059d7c2020-11-25T03:14:06ZengSAGE PublishingAdvances in Mechanical Engineering1687-81322013-01-01510.1155/2013/49321210.1155_2013/493212Large Eddy Simulation of Inertial Particle Preferential Dispersion in a Turbulent Flow over a Backward-Facing StepBing WangHuiqiang ZhangXilin WangLarge eddy simulation of inertial particle dispersion in a turbulent flow over a backward-facing step was performed. The numerical results of both instantaneous particle dispersion and two-phase velocity statistics were in good agreement with the experimental measurements. The analysis of preferential dispersion of inertial particles was then presented by a wavelets analysis method for decomposing the two-phase turbulence signal obtained by numerical simulations, showing that the inertial particle concentration is separation from the Gaussian random distribution with very strong intermittencies. The statistical PDF of vorticity seen by particles shows that the inertial particles tend to accumulate in low vorticity regions where ∇ u : ∇ u is larger than zero. The concentration distribution of particle preferential dispersion preserves the historical effects. The research conclusions are useful for further understanding the two-phase turbulence physics and establishing accurate engineering prediction models of particle dispersion.https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/493212 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Bing Wang Huiqiang Zhang Xilin Wang |
spellingShingle |
Bing Wang Huiqiang Zhang Xilin Wang Large Eddy Simulation of Inertial Particle Preferential Dispersion in a Turbulent Flow over a Backward-Facing Step Advances in Mechanical Engineering |
author_facet |
Bing Wang Huiqiang Zhang Xilin Wang |
author_sort |
Bing Wang |
title |
Large Eddy Simulation of Inertial Particle Preferential Dispersion in a Turbulent Flow over a Backward-Facing Step |
title_short |
Large Eddy Simulation of Inertial Particle Preferential Dispersion in a Turbulent Flow over a Backward-Facing Step |
title_full |
Large Eddy Simulation of Inertial Particle Preferential Dispersion in a Turbulent Flow over a Backward-Facing Step |
title_fullStr |
Large Eddy Simulation of Inertial Particle Preferential Dispersion in a Turbulent Flow over a Backward-Facing Step |
title_full_unstemmed |
Large Eddy Simulation of Inertial Particle Preferential Dispersion in a Turbulent Flow over a Backward-Facing Step |
title_sort |
large eddy simulation of inertial particle preferential dispersion in a turbulent flow over a backward-facing step |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
Advances in Mechanical Engineering |
issn |
1687-8132 |
publishDate |
2013-01-01 |
description |
Large eddy simulation of inertial particle dispersion in a turbulent flow over a backward-facing step was performed. The numerical results of both instantaneous particle dispersion and two-phase velocity statistics were in good agreement with the experimental measurements. The analysis of preferential dispersion of inertial particles was then presented by a wavelets analysis method for decomposing the two-phase turbulence signal obtained by numerical simulations, showing that the inertial particle concentration is separation from the Gaussian random distribution with very strong intermittencies. The statistical PDF of vorticity seen by particles shows that the inertial particles tend to accumulate in low vorticity regions where ∇ u : ∇ u is larger than zero. The concentration distribution of particle preferential dispersion preserves the historical effects. The research conclusions are useful for further understanding the two-phase turbulence physics and establishing accurate engineering prediction models of particle dispersion. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/493212 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT bingwang largeeddysimulationofinertialparticlepreferentialdispersioninaturbulentflowoverabackwardfacingstep AT huiqiangzhang largeeddysimulationofinertialparticlepreferentialdispersioninaturbulentflowoverabackwardfacingstep AT xilinwang largeeddysimulationofinertialparticlepreferentialdispersioninaturbulentflowoverabackwardfacingstep |
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1724644471633608704 |