Experimental investigation into the drag volume fraction correction term for gas-liquid bubbly flows

2017 ◽  
Vol 170 ◽  
pp. 91-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale D. McClure ◽  
John M. Kavanagh ◽  
David F. Fletcher ◽  
Geoffrey W. Barton
Author(s):  
Qiang Li ◽  
Yimin Xuan ◽  
Feng Yu ◽  
Junjie Tan

An experimental investigation was performed to study the heat transfer and flow features of Cu-water nanofluids (Cu particles with 26 nm diameter) in a submerged jet impingement cooling system. Three particular nozzle-to-heated surface distances (2, 4 and 6 mm) and four particle volume fractions (1.5%, 2.0%, 2.5% and 3.0%) are involved in the experiment. The experimental results reveal that the suspended nanoparticles increase the heat transfer performance of the base liquid in the jet impingement cooling system. Within the range of experimental parameters considered, it has been found that highest surface heat transfer coefficients can be achieved using a nozzle-to-surface distance of 4 mm and the nanofluid with 3.0% particle volume fraction. In addition, the experiments show that the system pressure drop of the dilute nanofluids is almost equal to that of water under the same entrance velocity.


1986 ◽  
Vol 108 (3) ◽  
pp. 614-618 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Yamada ◽  
J. D. Cartigny ◽  
C. L. Tien

Dependent radiative scattering by particles is experimentally investigated using plane-parallel cells containing latex spheres of 11, 2, and 0.08 μm diameter dispersed in an air or water matrix. The dependent scattering efficiencies and the bidirectional transmittance and reflectance were measured and compared with analytical results. The close-packed 2-μm spheres, which were expected to show dependent scattering from the previous criterion, gave results identical to independent scattering. Measured dependent scattering efficiencies of the small particles tested decrease with increasing particle volume fraction and were compared with those predicted by the theoretical investigation. The bidirectional transmittance and reflectance of dependent scattering were compared with those of independent scattering with the same number of spheres within the test cells. Several different patterns of dependent transmittance and reflectance appeared depending on the optical thickness. Finally, a newly proposed regime map bounding independent and dependent scattering is compared with the present and previous experimental data.


2019 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 16-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Rueda Villegas ◽  
D. Colombet ◽  
P. Guiraud ◽  
D. Legendre ◽  
S. Cazin ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 816 ◽  
pp. 94-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aurore Loisy ◽  
Aurore Naso ◽  
Peter D. M. Spelt

Various expressions have been proposed previously for the rise velocity of gas bubbles in homogeneous steady bubbly flows, generally a monotonically decreasing function of the bubble volume fraction. For suspensions of freely moving bubbles, some of these are of the form expected for ordered arrays of bubbles, and vice versa, as they do not reduce to the behaviour expected theoretically in the dilute limit. The microstructure of weakly inhomogeneous bubbly flows not being known generally, the effect of microstructure is an important consideration. We revisit this problem here for bubbly flows at small to moderate Reynolds number values for deformable bubbles, using direct numerical simulation and analysis. For ordered suspensions, the rise velocity is demonstrated not to be monotonically decreasing with volume fraction due to cooperative wake interactions. The fore-and-aft asymmetry of an isolated ellipsoidal bubble is reversed upon increasing the volume fraction, and the bubble aspect ratio approaches unity. Recent work on rising bubble pairs is used to explain most of these results; the present work therefore forms a platform of extending the former to suspensions of many bubbles. We adopt this new strategy also to support the existence of the oblique rise of ordered suspensions, the possibility of which is also demonstrated analytically. Finally, we demonstrate that most of the trends observed in ordered systems also appear in freely evolving suspensions. These similarities are supported by prior experimental measurements and attributed to the fact that free bubbles keep the same neighbours for extended periods of time.


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