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Thin liquid layer atomization: a simple numerical model of cough

ORAL

Abstract



Thin liquid sheets atomization in closed channels is one of the main physical processes related to aerosols production during coughing and sneezing, with applications to health related issues such as Covid-19 transmission. In this work, we study a simplified cough model that consists of a thin liquid layer subject to an impulsively started, rapid air stream in a closed rectangular channel. We run numerical simulations of this setup using the Volume-of-Fluid method with octree adaptive mesh refinement to capture local small-scale phenomena related to turbulence and breakup. The obtained droplet-size distributions confirm trends between a Log-Normal and a Pareto distribution, in agreement with a previous analysis of experimental results by one of the authors. The atomization mechanisms present in this problem are analogous to those observed on previous and current multiphase mixing layer experiments and simulations. No mechanism for a bimodal distribution, also sometimes observed, is evidenced in the current simulations. We also report the droplet velocity distribution, observing that smaller droplets reach the stream velocity before leaving the channel.

Publication: Pairetti, Cesar, Raphaël Villiers, and Stéphane Zaleski. "A numerical cough machine." arXiv preprint arXiv:2101.05662 (2021), submitted to Computers and Fluids.

Presenters

  • Cesar I Pairetti

    Centro Internacional Mecanica Computacional (CONICET - UNL), Santa Fe, Argentina and Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Ingenieria y Agrimensura (UNR), Rosario, Argentina, Sorbonne, Sorbonne University

Authors

  • Cesar I Pairetti

    Centro Internacional Mecanica Computacional (CONICET - UNL), Santa Fe, Argentina and Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Ingenieria y Agrimensura (UNR), Rosario, Argentina, Sorbonne, Sorbonne University

  • Stephane L Zaleski

    Sorbonne University

  • Leonardo Chirco

    Sorbonne University

  • Raphael Villiers

    Sorbonne University

  • Yue Ling

    Baylor University