Transport of temperature-velocity covariance in gas-solid flow and its relation to the axial dispersion coefficient

ORAL

Abstract

The presence of solid particles in a steady laminar flow generates velocity fluctuations with respect to the mean fluid velocity that are termed pseudo-turbulence. The level of these pseudo-turbulent velocity fluctuations has been characterized in statistically homogeneous fixed particle assemblies and freely evolving suspensions using particle-resolved direct numerical simulation (PR-DNS) by Mehrabadi {\it et al.}(JFM, 2015), and it is found to be a significant contribution to the total kinetic energy associated with the flow. The correlation of these velocity fluctuations with temperature (or a passive scalar) generates a flux term that appears in the transport equation for the average fluid temperature (or average scalar concentration). The magnitude of this transport of temperature-velocity covariance is quantified using PR-DNS of thermally fully developed flow past a statistically homogeneous fixed assembly of particles, and the budget of the average fluid temperature equation is presented. The relation of this transport term to the axial dispersion coefficient (Brenner, {\em Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. A}, 1980) is established. The simulation results are then interpreted in the context of our understanding of axial dispersion in gas-solid flow.

Authors

  • Shankar Subramaniam

    Iowa State University

  • Bo Sun

    Iowa State University