Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6588711 | Chemical Engineering Science | 2018 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
This work reports on the development and application of a new approach, corrective interface tracking, to simulate finite size bubbles. Finite-size bubbles, which are by definition bigger than the grid cell size but not well resolved, are not capable of being modeled with any standard two-phase flow approaches, such as interface tracking (IT), Euler-Euler (EE), or Lagrangian particle tracking (LPT). This poses a problem when simulating bubbly flows with different bubble sizes on the same computational grid. The Finite-size Lagrangian particle tracking (FSL) approach (Badreddine et al., 2015), aimed at simulating finite-size bubbly flows by inheriting features of IT and LPT approaches, simulated a single bubble with good accuracy. However, deficiencies with the FSL approach led to a newly developed approach based on interface tracking with the addition of a correcting force. The correcting force, derived from modeling the hydrodynamic forces on a bubble, attempts to correct for errors introduced when a coarse grid is used and the flow and pressure fields around the bubble are under-resolved. Therefore, as a finer grid is used the correcting force decreases. The corrective interface tracking approach is validated against a single bubble rising in stagnant and linear flow, and then results are compared to FSL and to finely resolved IT simulations.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Hassan Badreddine, Nathan Lafferty, Bojan NiÄeno, Horst-Michael Prasser,