Title of article
Effect of near-wall turbulence enhancement on the mechanisms of particle deposition
Author/Authors
Botto، نويسنده , , Lorenzo and Narayanan، نويسنده , , Chidambaram and Fulgosi، نويسنده , , Marco and Lakehal، نويسنده , , Djamel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
17
From page
940
To page
956
Abstract
The modification of deposition mechanisms of small particles in wall turbulence due to enhanced near-wall fluctuations is presented. The direct numerical simulation database of turbulent air flow over a water surface populated by gravity-capillary waves of small wave slope was used to mimic the enhancement in fluctuation intensity. Lagrangian tracking of particles is performed under the assumption of one-way coupling between the particles and the flow. Two sets of particles have been considered with inertial response times of 5 and 15, respectively, normalized using the friction velocity at the air–water interface and the kinematic viscosity of air. Compared to wall-bounded flow, the particle deposition rates on the interface were found to be considerably higher; specifically for the low-inertia particles, an eightfold increase was observed. The deposition rate for particles of higher inertia increased by only 60%. The correlation characterizing particle deposition rates for wall-bounded flows, where the deposition rate is proportional to the square of the particle response time, was found to be invalid for the flow with enhanced near-wall turbulence. Comparison with experimental results on particle deposition onto rough walls showed better correlation. Depositing particles were divided into free-flight and diffusional deposition populations. Since the primary effect of the interfacial waves is to increase the turbulence intensity in the near-interface region with high particle concentration, a remarkable increase in diffusional deposition is observed. As in wall-bounded flows, diffusional deposition is seen to be the dominant mechanism of deposition. The free-flight mechanism, where particles acquire velocities high enough to travel directly to the interface, remains unaffected by enhanced near-wall velocity fluctuations.
Keywords
Deposition , Particle tracking , Turbulence
Journal title
International Journal of Multiphase Flow
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
International Journal of Multiphase Flow
Record number
1409734
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