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Response of Evaporating Droplets to Vortices

POSTER

Abstract

We study the dynamics of small water droplets in vortical airflow and explore the important differences between the collective dynamics of individual droplets and those of merely a heavier phase of the fluid. We had shown earlier ([1],[2]) that heavy droplets getting centrifuged out of vortices can form caustics (cross each other) within a certain radius, and that this can make a big difference to the collision and coalescence. We now explore how evaporation/ condensation affects this process, given that the Stokes number of each droplet changes as phase change proceeds. We also discuss how the resulting buoyancy injection modifies the flow itself, in model three-dimensional vortical flows as well as in turbulence. References [1] Ravichandran, S., & Govindarajan, R. (2015). Caustics and clustering in the vicinity of a vortex. Physics of Fluids, 27(3), 033305. [2] Govindarajan, R., Ravichandran, S., Ray, S., & Deepu, P. (2016). Caustics and the growth of droplets. APS, 2016, K53-005.

Authors

  • Anu V. S. Nath

    Indian Institute of Technology Madras

  • Rama Govindarajan

    ICTS-TIFR, Bangalore, International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS), International Centre fo Theoretical Sciences (ICTS), https://www.icts.res.in/, ICTS - TIFR Bangalore, International Centre for Theoretical Sciences - TIFR

  • S. Ravichandran

    Nordita, KTH Royal Institute of Technology and Stock- holm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden, https://www.nordita.org/people/staff/index.php?u=ravichandran.sivaramakrishnan, Nordita, KTH Royal Institute of Technology and Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden

  • Anubhab Roy

    Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Assistant Professor, IIT Madras, Department of Applied Mechanics, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, https://apm.iitm.ac.in/anubhab.html, Indian Inst of Tech-Madras