DNS of Falling Droplets in a Vertical Channel

DNS of Falling Droplets in a Vertical Channel

Néstor Balcázar Jesús Castro Jorge Chiva Assensi Oliva

Heat and Mass Transfer Technological Center (CTTC), Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya - BarcelonaTech (UPC) ETSEIAT, Colom Terrassa (Barcelona), Spain

Termo Fluids, S.L., Avda Jacquard 97 1-E, Terrassa (Barcelona), Spain

Page: 
398-410
|
DOI: 
https://doi.org/10.2495/CMEM-V6-N2-398-410
Received: 
N/A
| |
Accepted: 
N/A
| | Citation

OPEN ACCESS

Abstract: 

This paper presents Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) of the falling motion of single and multiple deformable drops in a vertical channel. A systematic study of the wall effect on the motion of single drop is performed for Eötvös number (0.5£Eo£5), Morton number (10−3£M£10-8), and confinement ratio CR = 2. Second, the gravity-driven motion of multiple drops and their interactions are studied in a periodic vertical channel for CR = 4. These simulations are performed using a multiple marker level-set methodology, integrated in a finite-volume framework on a collocated unstructured grid. Each droplet is described by a level-set function, which allows capturing multiple interfaces in the same control volume, avoiding the numerical merging of the droplets. Numerical algorithms for fluid motion and interface capturing have been developed in the context of the finite-volume and level-set methodology, surface tension is modeled by means of the continuous surface force approach, and the pressure-velocity coupling is solved using a fractional-step projection method. DNS of single drop shows that they migrate to the symmetry axis of the channel when the Reynolds number is low, following a monotonic approach or damped oscillations according to the dimensionless parameters. If Eötvös number increases, stronger oscillations around the symmetry axis are observed. Simulations of multiple drops show that the collision of two drops follows the drafting-kissing tumbling (DKT) phenomenon. Deformable drops do not collide with the wall, whereas DKT phenomenon in the droplet swarm leads to the formation of groups which move through the center of the channel.

Keywords: 

conservative level-set method, DNS, drops, interface capturing, multiphase flow, multiple marker, surface tension, vertical channel

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