Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1897243 Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

The incorporation of particle inertia into the usual mean field theory for particle aggregation and fragmentation in fluid flows is still an unsolved problem. We therefore suggest an alternative approach that is based on the dynamics of individual inertial particles and apply this to study steady state particle size distributions in a 3D synthetic turbulent flow. We show how a fractal-like structure, typical of aggregates in natural systems, can be incorporated in an approximate way into the aggregation and fragmentation model by introducing effective densities and radii. We apply this model to the special case of marine aggregates in coastal areas and investigate numerically the impact of three different modes of fragmentation: large-scale splitting, where fragments have similar sizes, erosion, where one of the fragments is much smaller than the other and uniform fragmentation, where all sizes of fragments occur with the same probability. We find that the steady state particle size distribution depends strongly on the mode of fragmentation. The resulting size distribution for large-scale fragmentation is exponential. As some aggregate distributions found in published measurements share this latter characteristic, this may indicate that large-scale fragmentation is the primary mode of fragmentation in these cases.

Research highlights► We introduce a new, inertial particle-based model for aggregation and fragmentation. ► Using this model, we investigate numerically different modes of fragmentation. ► We find a strong dependence of the steady state size distribution on fragmentation.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Applied Mathematics
Authors
, , ,