Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/105213
Title: Exact regularized point particle (ERPP) method for particle-laden wall-bounded flows in the two-way coupling regime
Authors: Battista, Francesco
Mollicone, Jean-Paul
Gualtieri, Paolo
Messina, Roberta
Casciola, Carlo Massimo
Keywords: Surface chemistry -- Mathematical models
Fluid mechanics
Computer simulation
Computational fluid dynamics
Turbulence
Pipe -- Fluid dynamics
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Citation: Battista, F., Mollicone, F.-P., Gualtieri, P., Messina, R. & Casciola, C. M. (2019). Exact regularized point particle (ERPP) method for particle-laden wall-bounded flows in the two-way coupling regime. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 878, 420-444.
Abstract: The exact regularised point particle (ERPP) method is extended to treat the inter-phase momentum coupling between particles and fluid in the presence of walls by accounting for vorticity generation due to particles close to solid boundaries. The ERPP method overcomes the limitations of other methods by allowing the simulation of an extensive parameter space (Stokes number, mass loading, particle-to-fluid density ratio and Reynolds number) and of particle spatial distributions that are uneven (few particles per computational cell). The enhanced ERPP method is explained in detail and validated by considering the global impulse balance. In conditions when particles are located close to the wall, a common scenario in wall-bounded turbulent flows, the main contribution to the total impulse arises from the particle-induced vorticity at the solid boundary. The method is applied to direct numerical simulations of particle-laden turbulent pipe flow in the two-way coupling regime to address turbulence modulation. The effects of the mass loading, the Stokes number and the particle-to-fluid density ratio are investigated. The drag is either unaltered or increased by the particles with respect to the uncoupled case. No drag reduction is found in the parameter space considered. The momentum stress budget, which includes an extra stress contribution by the particles, provides the rationale behind the drag behaviour. The extra stress produces a momentum flux towards the wall that strongly modifies the viscous stress, the culprit of drag at solid boundaries.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/105213
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacEngME

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