VISUALIZATION STUDY ON FLOW CHARACTERISTICS OF STAGGERED CYLINDER ARRAYS IN TRANSITIONAL FLOW STATE

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenjun Zhang ◽  
Jie Zhou ◽  
Jiahui Xu ◽  
Guannan Xi
2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (6 Part B) ◽  
pp. 4477-4484
Author(s):  
Jun-Jun Liu ◽  
Jing Xie ◽  
Yi-Ting Liu ◽  
Gui-Kang Liu ◽  
Rui-Feng Tang ◽  
...  

Single fracture is the most basic element in complex fracture network of rock mass. Therefore, the study of flow characteristics of single fracture is an important way to reasonably predict the complex flow state in engineering rock mass. In order to study the flow characteristics of fractal single fracture, fracture models with dif?ferent fractal dimension and different fracture width are established in this paper. The results show that: the blocking effect of rough structure on fluid is obviously enhanced under high pressure. In addition, it is weakened and reaches a steady-state with the increase of fracture fractal dimension. The larger the fracture width is, the more obvious the phenomenon is. The hydraulic gradient index tends to 0.5 with the increase of fracture width when fractal dimension is greater than 1.3. It also could tend to 0.5 with the increase of fractal dimension when fracture width is greater than 1 mm.


Author(s):  
Norbert Kockmann ◽  
Craig Holvey ◽  
Dominique M. Roberge

In microchannels with typical dimensions from 10 μm to few hundreds μm, the flow is dominated by viscous forces, leading often to laminar flow conditions. At the entrance or in bends and curves, where the flow is accelerated or changes its direction, inertial forces generate transverse flow velocities. Due to continuity, compensating transverse velocity components generate vortex pairs, such as Dean flow in circular bends. The flow is still laminar, steady, and shows no statistically distributed fluctuations typical for turbulent flow. This deviation from straight laminar conditions, often in larger channels (100 μm to few mm) or for higher flow rates, is called transitional flow. That embraces the first occurrence of pulsating vortices, period doubling of vortex pairs, flow bifurcation, and regularly fluctuating wake flow or vortex shedding. With increased flow velocity, this process leads to chaotic flow phenomena being first evidence of turbulence. This paper describes the transitional flow characteristics in single channel elements such as bends and T-junction as well as around fins and posts in channels. These elements are used to augment the transport characteristics in microchannels for enhanced heat and mass transfer and for performing chemical reactions in microreactors. The profound understanding of the flow characteristics is fundamental for the understanding of transport phenomena. Additionally, this knowledge can be used to design successful microstructured devices for various applications by knowing how to generate and control vortices in microchannels. Concepts from chaotic advection are presented here to describe vortex flow and related transport characteristics. Though recent advances has shed new light on transport phenomena in complex channel structures, many issues are still unknown and huge potential is hidden in optimized channel devices.


Author(s):  
Chungpyo Hong ◽  
Toru Yamada ◽  
Yutaka Asako ◽  
Mohammad Faghri ◽  
Koichi Suzuki ◽  
...  

This paper presents experimental results on flow characteristics of laminar, transitional to turbulent gas flows through micro-channels. The experiments were performed for three micro-channels. The micro-channels were etched into silicon wafers, capped with glass, and their hydraulic diameter are 69.48, 99.36 and 147.76 μm. The pressure was measured at seven locations along the channel length to determine local values of Mach number and friction factor for a wide range of flow regime from laminar to turbulent flow. Flow characteristics in transitional flow regime to turbulence were obtained. The result shows that f·Re is a function of Mach number and higher than incompressible value due to the compressibility effect. The values of f·Re were compared with f·Re correlations in available literature.


Author(s):  
George Papadopoulos

A dimensional analysis that is based on the scaling of the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations is presented for correlating bulk flow characteristics arising from a variety of initial conditions. The analysis yields a functional relationship between the characteristic variable of the flow region and the Reynolds number for each of the two independent flow regimes. A linear relationship is realized for the laminar regime, while a nonlinear relationship is realized for the turbulent regime. Both relationships incorporate mass-flow profile characteristics to fully capture the effects of initial conditions on the variation of the characteristic variables. The union of these two independent relationships is formed utilizing the concept of flow intermittency to further expand into a generic scaling relationship that incorporates transitional flow effects to fully encompass solutions spanning the laminar to turbulent flow regimes. The results of the analysis are discussed within the context of several flow phenomena (e.g. pipe flow, jet flow & separated flow) resulting from various initial and boundary conditions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 631-632 ◽  
pp. 696-699
Author(s):  
Tian Biao Huang

Through the establishment of ANSYS tundish steel liquid flow finite element model analysis of finite element method in simulating the flow field in tundish for applications. comparison with and without flow control device of liquid steel in tundish flow characteristics the results have guiding significance for practical production.


2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 267-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masato Kawabata ◽  
Rachel Evans

The present study examined the extent to which scores on the Flow State Scale-2 (FSS-2) could differentiate individuals who experienced flow characteristics in physical activity from those who did not. A total of 1,048 participants completed the Japanese version of the FSS-2. Latent class factor analysis (LCFA), which combines the strengths of both latent class analysis and factor analysis, was conducted on the FSS-2 responses. Four classes were identified through a series of LCFAs and the patterns of the item-average scores for the nine flow attributes were found parallel among these classes. The top two classes (15.1% and 38.9% of the whole sample) were considered the groups who experienced flow characteristics during their physical activities. These results indicated that individuals who experienced flow attributes in physical activity could be differentiated from those who did not based on their FSS-2 scores. Criteria for classifying individuals into the two groups were proposed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 218 ◽  
pp. 108245
Author(s):  
Jiahuang Tu ◽  
Zhihao Zhang ◽  
Haiyu Lv ◽  
Zhaolong Han ◽  
Dai Zhou ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Marc C. Goldbach ◽  
Mesbah Uddin

While Reynolds-averaged simulatons (RAS) have found success in the evaluation of many canonical shear flows, and moderately separated flows, their application to highly separated flows have shown notable deficiencies. This study aims to investigate these deficiencies in the eddy-viscosity formulation of four commonly used turbulence models under separated flow in an attempt to aid in the improved formulation of such models. Analyses are performed on the flow field around a wall mounted cube at a Reynolds number of 40,000 based on the cube height, h, and free stream velocity, U0. While a common occurrence in industrial applications, this type of flow constitutes a complex structure exhibiting a large separated wake region, high anisotropy, and multiple vortex structures. As well, interactions between vortices developed off of different faces of the cube significantly alter the overall flow characteristics, posing a significant challenge for the commonly used industrial turbulence models. Comparison of mean flow characteristics show remarkable agreement between experimental values and turbulence models which are capable of predicting transitional flow. Evaluation of turbulence parameters show the general underestimation of Reynolds stress for transitional models, while fully turbulent models show this value to be overestimated, resulting in completely disparate representations of mean flow structures between the two classes of models (transitional and fully turbulent).


2014 ◽  
Vol 1046 ◽  
pp. 196-199
Author(s):  
Jun Wang ◽  
Guang Sheng Du ◽  
Yong Hui Liu

In order to study the lower critical point in transitional area of pipe, we used the method of direct numerical simulation to simulate fluid flow and contrasted it with experiment. The result showed that the flow state is close to laminar. Along the pipe axis, the change of pressure is not obviously. The changing rate of axial velocity U near wall region was significantly greater than in the mainstream area, it proved the important role of viscous force.


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