scholarly journals Direct Numerical Simulations of Flows With Phase Change

Author(s):  
Gretar Tryggvason ◽  
Nabeel AlRawahi ◽  
Asghar Esmaeeli

During the last decade, direct numerical simulations of multiphase flow have emerged as a major research tool. It is now possible, for example, to simulate the motion of several hundred bubbles and particles in simple flows and to obtain meaningful average quantities that can be compared with experimental results. These systems are, however, still very simple compared to those systems routinely encountered in engineering applications. It is, in particular, frequently necessary to account for phase change, both between solid and liquid as well as liquid and vapor. Most materials used for manmade artifacts are processed as liquids at some stage, for example, and the way solidification takes place generally has major impact on the properties of the final product. The formation of microstructures, where some parts of the melt solidify faster than others, or solidify with different composition as in the case of binary alloys, is particularly important since the size and composition of the microstructure impact the hardness and ductility, for example, of the final product. Boiling is one of the most efficient ways of removing heat from a solid surface. It is therefore commonly used in energy generation and refrigeration. The large volume change and the high temperatures involved can make the consequences of design or operational errors catastrophic and accurate predictions are highly desirable. The change of phase from liquid to vapor and vice-versa usually takes place in a highly unsteady manner with a very convoluted phase boundary. Numerical simulations are therefore essential for theoretical investigations and while a few simulations of both problems have been published, the field is still very immature. In the talk the author gives a brief overview of the state of the art and discusses recent simulations of boiling and solidification in some detail. The progress made during the last few years in simulating the motion of multiphase flows without phase change has relied heavily on the so-called “one-fluid” formulation of the governing equations. In this approach one set of equations is written for all the phases involved. The formulation allows for different material properties in each phase and singular terms must be added at the phase boundaries to correctly incorporate the appropriate boundary conditions. The key challenge is to correctly advect the phase boundary and a number of methods have been proposed to do so. Those include the Volume-Of-Fluid (VOF), the level-set, the phase field methods, as well as front-tracking methods where the boundary is explicitly tracked by connected marker points [1]. The last approach, front tracking, has been particularly successful and is used for the examples shown here. In both boiling and solidification it is necessary to solve the energy equation, in addition to conservation equations for mass and momentum, and account for the release/absorption of latent heat at the phase boundary. The latent heat source also determines the motion of the phase boundary relative to the fluid. In boiling there is significant volume expansion as liquid is transformed into vapor and this expansion must be accounted for in the mass conservation equation. For solidification the volume expansion can often be neglected, but the transformation of the liquid into a stationary solid poses new computational challenges. An example of a bubble undergoing vapor explosion is shown in figure 1. The bubble is initially started as a small nearly spherical sphere in superheated liquid confined in a domain that is periodic in two directions, with a solid wall at the bottom and open on the top to allow outflow as the bubble expands. In this case the domain is resolved by a 643 grid. As the bubble grows, the interface becomes unstable, developing a corrugated shape (usually referred to experimentally as a “black bubble” since the corrugated surface is opaque). The increase in surface area greatly affects the growth rate of the bubble. Figure 2 shows one example of a simulation of the growth of a dendrite of pure material in uniform flow. The domain is a square resolved by a 2563 grid. A uniform inflow is specified on the left boundary, the top and bottom boundaries are periodic, and all gradients are set to zero at the outlet boundary. The temperature of the incoming flow is equal to the undercooled temperature and as latent heat is released at the phase boundary, the flow sweeps it from the front to the back. This results in a thinner thermal boundary layer at the tip of the upstream growing arm and a relatively uniform temperature in the wake. The growth rate of the upstream arm is therefore enhanced and the growth of the downstream arm is reduced.

Author(s):  
Anahita Ayasoufi ◽  
Theo G. Keith ◽  
Ramin K. Rahmani

An improvement is introduced to the conservation element and solution element (CE/SE) phase change scheme presented previously. The improvement addresses a well known weakness in numerical simulations of the enthalpy method when the Stefan number, (the ratio of sensible to latent heat) is small (less than 0.1). Behavior of the improved scheme, at the limit of small Stefan numbers, is studied and compared with that of the original scheme. It is shown that high dissipative errors, associated with small Stefan numbers, do not occur using the new scheme.


Author(s):  
Sarath Kannan ◽  
M. A. Jog ◽  
Raj M. Manglik

Abstract Salt hydrate based Phase-Change Materials (PCM) typically store and discharge large quantities of heat during their phase transition process. However, the repeated use of these PCM, especially when they are completely dehydrated and superheated in a cyclic process, is impeded by certain irreversible behavior. These include (1) phase segregation: where the PCM degrades to forms a lower hydrate during phase transition while losing its storage capacity, and (2) subcooling: when crystallization and rehydration from the liquid PCM state occurs at a temperature lower than their phase transition point. Higher degrees of subcooling (ΔTs), which is how much the PCM has to be super cooled below its phase transition temperature for crystallization to begin, adversely affects its performance and in some cases renders it ineffective. Lithium Nitrate Trihydrate [(LNT) LiNO3.3H2O] is one of the more promising candidate among these inorganic salt hydrate PCMs because of its rather stable phase change behavior and relatively very high latent heat capacity (282kJ/kg). Nevertheless, when completely in superheated liquid phase, it requires a high degree of subcooling (ΔTs > 20°C), which limits its utility. This study reports a novel nucleating agent — Zinc Nitrate Hexahydrate (ZNH) that reduces the subcooling to below 5°C (1000 Cycles). However, the latent heat capacity reduced to half the initial value after the cycling.


Author(s):  
Arturo Ferna´ndez ◽  
Jiacai Lu ◽  
Gre´tar Tryggvason

Direct numerical simulations of the motion of bubbles in turbulent flows are being carried out, using a finite volume/front tracking technique that accounts fully for the effect of fluid inertia, viscosity, bubble deformability, and surface tension. The objective of the simulations is both to address the fundamental interaction mechanisms between the bubbles and the flow and how the bubbles modify the wall turbulent structures, as well as to provide data for validation of simplified models. Results for bubbles placed in the so-called “minimum turbulent channel” show significant drag reduction as the bubbles disrupt the near-wall turbulent flow.


1997 ◽  
Vol 342 ◽  
pp. 231-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRANK G. JACOBITZ ◽  
SUTANU SARKAR ◽  
CHARLES W. VAN ATTA

Direct numerical simulations (DNS) are performed to investigate the evolution of turbulence in a uniformly sheared and stably stratified flow. The spatial discretization is accomplished by a spectral collocation method, and the solution is advanced in time with a third-order Runge–Kutta scheme. The turbulence evolution is found to depend strongly on at least three parameters: the gradient Richardson number Ri, the initial value of the Taylor microscale Reynolds number Reλ, and the initial value of the shear number SK/<ε. The effect of each parameter is individually studied while the remaining parameters are kept constant. The evolution of the turbulent kinetic energy K is found to follow approximately an exponential law. The shear number SK/<ε, whose effect has not been investigated in previous studies, was found to have a strong non-monotone influence on the turbulence evolution. Larger values of the shear number do not necessarily lead to a larger value of the eventual growth rate of the turbulent kinetic energy. Variation of the Reynolds number Reλ indicated that the turbulence growth rate tends to become insensitive to Reλ at the higher end of the Reλ range studied here. The dependence of the critical Richardson number Ricr, which separates asymptotic growth of the turbulent kinetic energy K from asymptotic decay, on the initial values of the Reynolds number Reλ and the shear number SK/<ε was also obtained. It was found that the critical Richardson number varied over the range 0.04<Ricr<0.17 in our DNS due to its strong dependence on Reynolds and shear numbers.


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