Turbulence transport in particle-laden compressible flows
ORAL
Abstract
Turbulence transport in compressible dispersed two-phase flows is complicated by strong coupling between velocity fluctuations, shock waves, and particles. In this talk, highly-resolved numerical simulations are employed to quantify turbulence transport mechanisms and guide the development of a reduced-order model. Two canonical flows are considered: (i) compressible flow through homogeneous suspension of particles and (ii) a planar shock interacting with a cloud of particles. Turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) is found to contribute to a significant portion of the resolved kinetic energy, as much as 100% at the highest volume fractions considered. The TKE budget reveals turbulence is primarily produced via drag and is hindered by gas-phase compressibility. A two-equation model is proposed and implemented within a hyperbolic Eulerian-based two-fluid model. The model is found to be accurate across a wide range of volume fractions and Mach numbers in both homogeneous and inhomogeneous flows.
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Publication: Capecelatro, J., Wagner, J.L. (2024) Gas-particle dynamics in high-speed flows. Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics. 56: Accepted. https://arxiv.org/abs/2303.00825<br>Osnes, A., Vartdal, M., Khalloufi, M., Capecelatro, J., Balachandar, S. (2023) Comprehensive quasi-steady force correlations for compressible flow through random particle suspensions. International Journal of Multiphase Flow. 165, 104485.<br>Khalloufi, M., Capecelatro, J. (2023) Drag force of compressible flows past random arrays of spheres. International Journal of Multiphase Flow. 165, 104496.
Presenters
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Jesse Capecelatro
University of Michigan
Authors
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Jesse Capecelatro
University of Michigan
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Archana Sridhar
University of Michigan
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Rodney O Fox
Iowa State University