confined flows
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2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisco Sastre ◽  
Elena B. Martin ◽  
Angel Velazquez ◽  
Abderrahmane Baïri

Purpose This paper aims to compare the performance of flow pulsation versus flow stirring in the context of mixing of a passive scalar at moderate Reynolds numbers in confined flows. This comparison has been undertaken in two limits: diffusion can be neglected as compared to convection (very large Peclet) and diffusion and convection effects are comparable. The comparison was performed both in terms of global parameters: pumping power and mixing efficiency and local flow topology. Design/methodology/approach The study has been addressed by setting up a common conceptual three-dimensional problem that consisted of the mixing of two parallel streams in a square section channel past a square section prism. Stirring and pulsation frequencies and amplitudes were changed and combined at an inlet Reynolds number of 200. The numerical model was solved using a finite volume formulation by adapting a series of open-source OpenFOAM computational fluid dynamic (CFD) libraries. For cases with flow pulsation, the icoFoam solver for laminar incompressible transient flows was used. For cases with stirring, the icoDyMFoam solver, which uses the arbitrary Lagrangian–Eulerian method for the description of the moving dynamical mesh, was used to model the prism motion. At the local flow topology level, a new method was proposed to analyze mixing. Time evolution of folding and wrinkling of sheets made up of virtual particles that travel along streak lines was quantified by generating lower rank projections of the sheets onto the spaces spanned by the main eigenvectors of an appropriate space-temporal data decomposition. Findings In the limit when convection is dominant, the results showed the superior performance of stirring versus flow pulsation both in terms of mixing and required pumping power. In the cases with finite Peclet, the mixing parameters by stirring and flow pulsation were comparable, but pulsation required larger pumping power than stirring. For some precise synchronization of stirring and pulsation, the mixing parameter reached its maximum, although at the expense of higher pumping power. At the local flow topology level, the new method proposed to quantify mixing has been found to correlate well with the global mixing parameter. Originality/value A new systematic comparative study of two methods, stirring and pulsation, to achieve mixing of passive scalars in the mini scale for confined flows has been presented. The main value, apart from the conclusions, is that both methods have been tested against the same flow configuration, which allows for a self-consistent comparison. Of particular interest is the fact that it has been found that accurate synchronization of both methods yields mixing parameters higher than those associated to both methods taken separately. This suggests that it is possible to synchronize mixing methods of a different nature to achieve optimum designs. The new theoretical method that has been proposed to understand the mixing performance at the local level has shown promising results, and it is the intention of the authors to test its validity in a broader range of flow parameters. All these findings could be taken as potential guidelines for the design of mixing processes in the mini scale in the process industry.


2021 ◽  
Vol 263 (6) ◽  
pp. 519-525
Author(s):  
Paul Maurerlehner ◽  
Stefan Schoder ◽  
Sebastian Floss ◽  
Johannes Tieber ◽  
Helfried Steiner ◽  
...  

Confined flows induce sound at certain flow conditions, which can be annoying in electric vehicles due to the absence of combustion noise. Noise in internal flow may occur due to unfavorable flow-guiding geometries caused by the complex packaging required in engine compartments of modern vehicles. The flow-induced sound is emitted at duct openings (e.g., ventilation inside the passenger cabin). It also originates from the vibroacoustic emissions of the flow-guiding structure excited by the flow. We propose a modular validation procedure for aeroacoustic simulations of confined flows. The experimental setup includes the vibroacoustic emission of the involved flow-guiding structure. The test rig consists of a sensor system, a high-pressure blower, modular pipe sections, and absorbers, which decouple the system from blower noise and avoid acoustic reflections at the pipe exit. A sufficiently long straight inlet section ensures fully developed flow conditions entering the investigated region. For capturing the vibroacoustic sound radiation of the flow-guiding structure, the measurement object and the surrounding microphones are encapsulated in a wooden box, lined with micro-perforated plates. Measurement results of a straight pipe and a pipe with a half-moon-shaped orifice are presented. Additionally, the sound generation is reproduced by Lighthill's aeroacoustic analogy applying a hybrid approach.


Soft Matter ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel Guyard ◽  
Alexandre Vilquin ◽  
Nicolas Sanson ◽  
Stéphane Jouenne ◽  
Frederic Restagno ◽  
...  

Understanding confined flows of complex fluids requires simultaneous access to the mechanical behaviour of the liquid and the boundary condition at the interfaces. Here, we use evanescent wave microscopy to...


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (18) ◽  
pp. 4854
Author(s):  
Robert Freda ◽  
Bradford Knight ◽  
Siddharth Pannir

No accepted fluid theory exists for power extraction from unpressurized confined flow. The absence of a valid model to determine baseline uniform power extraction in confined flows creates difficulties in characterizing the coefficient of power. Currently, the primary body of research has been limited to Diffuser Augmented Wind Turbines (DAWTs) and passive fluid accelerators. Fluid power is proportional to the cube of velocity; therefore, passive acceleration is a promising path to effective renewable energy. Hypothetical models and experiments for passive accelerators yield low ideal power limits and poor performance, respectively. We show that these results derive from the misapplication of Betz’s Law and lack of a general theory for confined flow extraction. Experimental performance is due to the low efficiency of DAWTs and prior hypotheses exhibit high predictive error and continuity violations. A fluid model that accurately predicts available data and new experimental data, showing disk specific maximum CP for the confined channel at 38% of power available to disk, is presented. This is significantly lower than the 59% Betz freestream limit yielded by hypothetical models when the area ratio equals one. Experiments and their results are presented with non-DAWT accelerators, where new experimental results exceed CP limits predicted previously and correlate with the proposed predictive model.


2019 ◽  
Vol 265 ◽  
pp. 41-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Kanarska ◽  
E.B. Duoss ◽  
J.P. Lewicki ◽  
J.N. Rodriguez ◽  
A. Wu

2019 ◽  
pp. 55-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ravi Radhakrishnan ◽  
Samaneh Farokhirad ◽  
David M. Eckmann ◽  
Portonovo S. Ayyaswamy

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4.27) ◽  
pp. 132
Author(s):  
Ahmad H. A Hamid ◽  
Mohd H. Jamaludin ◽  
Mohd H. M. Noh ◽  
Mohd A. M. Sapardi

In the present study, confined flows around two square cylinders in staggered arrangement were numerically investigated. Cross-flow and streamwise center-to-center spacings of one- and three-cylinder diameters, respectively, were considered. Simulations were carried out at Reynolds numbers Re = 50,100,150 and 180, where the resulting wakes are laminar and periodic. Results indicate that the presence of the downstream cylinder tends to reduce the Strouhal number, amplitude and the time-averaged lift coefficient of the upstream cylinder relative to the single cylinder cases. Furthermore, the time variations of upstream cylinder’s lift coefficient behave similar to that of a single cylinder.  


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1 (Aug)) ◽  
pp. 61-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. R. Vogel ◽  
R. H. J. Willden

An embedded Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes blade element actuator disk model is used to investigate the hydrodynamic design of tidal turbines and their performance in a closely spaced cross-stream fence. Turbines designed for confined flows are found to require a larger blade solidity ratio than current turbine design practices imply in order to maximise power. Generally, maximum power can be increased by operating turbines in more confined flows than they were designed for, although this also requires the turbines to operate at a higher rotational speed, which may increase the likelihood of cavitation inception. In-array turbine performance differs from that predicted from single turbine analyses, with cross-fence variation in power and thrust developing between the inboard and outboard turbines. As turbine thrust increases the cross-fence variation increases, as the interference effects between adjacent turbines strengthen as turbine thrust increases, but it is observed that cross-stream variation can be mitigated through strategies such as pitch-to-feather power control. It was found that overall fence performance was maximised by using turbines designed for moderately constrained (blocked) flows, with greater blockage than that based solely on fence geometry, but lower blockage than that based solely on the turbine and local flow passage geometry to balance the multi-scale flow phenomena around tidal fences.


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