Modeling of Cluster-Induced Turbulence in Particle-Laden Channel Flow
ORAL
Abstract
A phenomenon often observed in gas-solid flows is the formation of mesoscale clusters of particles due to the relative motion between the solid and fluid phases that is sustained through the dampening of collisional particle motion from interphase momentum coupling inside these clusters. The formation of such sustained clusters, leading to cluster-induced turbulence (CIT), can have a significant impact in industrial processes, particularly in regards to mixing, reaction progress, and heat transfer. Both Euler-Lagrange (EL) and Euler-Euler anisotropic Gaussian (EE-AG) approaches are used in this work to perform mesoscale simulations of CIT in fully developed gas-particle channel flow. The results from these simulations are applied in the development of a two-phase Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) model to capture the wall-normal flow characteristics in a less computationally expensive manner. Parameters such as mass loading, particle size, and gas velocity are varied to examine their respective impact on cluster formation and turbulence statistics.
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Authors
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Michael Baker
Iowa State Univ
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Jesse Capecelatro
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, University of Michigan, Assistant Professor, Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor
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Bo Kong
Ames Laboratory, Iowa State Univ
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Rodney Fox
Iowa State University and Ames Laboratory, Iowa State University, Iowa State Univ, Center for Multiphase Flow Research and Education, Iowa State University; and Ames Laboratory, US DOE
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Olivier Desjardins
Cornell University, Cornell Univ