scholarly journals Numerical simulations of transverse liquid jet to a supersonic crossflow using a pure two-fluid model

2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 168781401662934 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haixu Liu ◽  
Yincheng Guo ◽  
Wenyi Lin
Author(s):  
Swann Thuillet ◽  
Davide Zuzio ◽  
Olivier Rouzaud ◽  
Pierre Gajan

The design of modern aeronautical propulsion systems is constantly optimized to reduce pollutant emissions whileincreasing fuel combustion efficiency. In order to get a proper mixing of fuel and air, Liquid Jets Injected in gaseous Crossflows (LJICF) are found in numerous injection devices. However, should combustion instabilities appear in the combustion chamber, the response of the liquid jet and its primary atomization is still largely unknown. Coupling between an unstable combustion and the fuel injection process has not been well understood and can result from multiple basic interactions.The aim of this work is to predict by numerical simulation the effect of an acoustic perturbation of the shearing air flow on the primary breakup of a liquid jet. Being the DNS approach too expensive for the simulation of complex injector geometries, this paper proposes a numerical simulation of a LJICF based on a multiscale approach which can be easily integrated in industrial LES of combustion chambers. This approach results in coupling of two models: a two-fluid model, based on the Navier-Stokes equations for compressible fluids, able to capture the largest scales of the jet atomization and the breakup process of the liquid column; and a dispersed phase approach, used for describing the cloud of droplets created by the atomization of the liquid jet. The coupling of these two approaches is provided by an atomization and re-impact models, which ensure liquid transfer between the two-fluid model and the spray model. The resulting numerical method is meant to capture the main jet body characteristics, the generation of the liquid spray and the formation of a liquid film whenever the spray impacts a solid wall.Three main features of the LJICF can be used to describe, in a steady state flow as well as under the effect of the acoustic perturbation, the jet atomization behavior: the jet trajectory, the jet breakup length and droplets size and distribution.The steady state simulations provide good agreement with ONERA experiments conducted under the same condi- tions, characterized by a high Weber number (We>150). The multiscale computation gives the good trajectory of the liquid column and a good estimation of the column breakup location, for different liquid to air momentum flux ratios. The analysis of the droplet distribution in space is currently undergoing. A preliminary unsteady simulation was able to capture the oscillation of the jet trajectory, and the unsteady droplets generation responding to the acousticperturbation.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/ILASS2017.2017.4697


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
I. Kinoshita ◽  
M. Murase ◽  
A. Tomiyama

We have previously done numerical simulations using the two-fluid model implemented in the CFD software FLUENT6.3.26 to investigate effects of shape of a flow channel and its size on CCFL (countercurrent flow limitation) characteristics in PWR hot leg models. We confirmed that CCFL characteristics in the hot leg could be well correlated with the Wallis parameters in the diameter range of0.05 m≤D≤0.75 m. In the present study, we did numerical simulations using the two-fluid model for the air-water tests withD=0.0254 m to determine why CCFL characteristics forD=0.0254 m were severer compared with those in the range,0.05 m≤D≤0.75 m. The predicted CCFL characteristics agreed with the data forD=0.0254 m and indicated that the CCFL difference betweenD=0.0254 m and0.05 mm≤D≤0.75 mm was caused by the size effect and not by other factors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 033324
Author(s):  
Alejandro Clausse ◽  
Martín López de Bertodano

2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 037116
Author(s):  
Victor L. Mironov

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Ponalagusamy ◽  
Ramakrishna Manchi

AbstractThe present communication presents a theoretical study of blood flow through a stenotic artery with a porous wall comprising Brinkman and Darcy layers. The governing equations describing the flow subjected to the boundary conditions have been solved analytically under the low Reynolds number and mild stenosis assumptions. Some special cases of the problem are also presented mathematically. The significant effects of the rheology of blood and porous wall of the artery on physiological flow quantities have been investigated. The results reveal that the wall shear stress at the stenotic throat increases dramatically for the thinner porous wall (i.e. smaller values of the Brinkman and Darcy regions) and the rate of increase is found to be 18.46% while it decreases for the thicker porous wall (i.e. higher values of the Brinkman and Darcy regions) and the rate of decrease is found to be 10.21%. Further, the streamline pattern in the stenotic region has been plotted and discussed.


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