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Two-fluid coaxial atomization in a high-pressure environment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2022

Kee Onn Fong*
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA
Xinzhi Xue
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA
R. Osuna-Orozco
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA
A. Aliseda
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA
*
Email address for correspondence: kofong@uw.edu

Abstract

We study the dynamics of atomization of a liquid column by a coaxial gas flow with varying gas pressures. Specifically, we analyse how the gas density increase associated with elevated gas pressures in the ambient and co-flowing gas jet influences the liquid destabilization and breakup process, as well as the resulting droplet formation and dispersion. We present new experimental results for a coaxial liquid–gas atomizer operating in a high-pressure environment, with gas–liquid momentum ratio in the range $M = 5\unicode{x2013}56$ and pressurized gas densities $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 1\unicode{x2013}5$, where $\rho _0$ is the ambient gas density at standard conditions. High-speed shadowgraphy images are used to quantify the spatially and temporally varying liquid–gas interface in the spray near-field. Liquid core lengths, spreading angles and other spray metrics are presented, and the influence of gas density is identified from the comparison with atomization at atmospheric conditions. In the spray mid-field, phase Doppler interferometry is used in conjunction with laser Doppler velocimetry to quantify the droplet size and velocities, as well as their radial variations across the spray. Results show an increase in droplet size at elevated ambient pressures, when keeping the gas–liquid momentum ratio constant. Finally, we show that these observations are in line with predictions from the Kelvin–Helmholtz and Rayleigh–Taylor instabilities, both of which are relevant to the gas–liquid atomization process.

Information

Type
JFM Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Schematic representation of the pressurized coaxial jet facility: (a) front view, and (b) top view, including the angles between the four viewing windows. Panel (c) is an inset of the movable nozzle, showing the inner and outer diameters of the liquid inlet, $d_l$ and $D_l$, as well as the inner diameter of the air inlet, $d_g$.

Figure 1

Table 1. Main physical parameters characterizing the experiments.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Schematic of the high-speed shadowgraphy set-up.

Figure 3

Figure 3. (a) Original image, (b) image after background subtraction, (c) image after normalization and binarization, and (d) final image after filling in gaps due to lighting conditions.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Instantaneous images of the spray at different momentum ratios $M$, increasing from (a,e,i) to (d,h,l), and different air density ratios $\rho _p/\rho _g$, increasing from (ad) to (il).

Figure 5

Figure 5. (a) Instantaneous image of the spray showing the liquid intact core length $L_B$ for case $M = 5$, $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 1$. (b) Plot showing a time series of the evolution of $L_B$ in time, for the same case $M = 5$, $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 1$. (c) Convergence plot of the liquid intact core length. (d) Autocorrelation example of the liquid core length.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Liquid core length characteristics as functions of air density ratio $\rho _g/\rho _0$. (a) Mean liquid core length $\langle L_B \rangle /d_g$. (b) R.m.s. fluctuation ${L'_B}/{d_g}$. (c) Characteristic time scale derived from the autocorrelation $\tau _{L_B}$. Symbols represent different momentum ratios as indicated in the legend in (c). Dashed lines represent a linear fit of the data points for each momentum ratio. Where not visible, error bars associated with the data points are smaller than the data symbol itself.

Figure 7

Figure 7. (a) Probability of liquid presence, P(x,r), averaged over the entire image set (from the binarized shadowgraph images). The location of the spray edge (delineated by red dashes at angle $\theta$, with the virtual origin $x_0$) is defined as $r/d_g = \pm 2\,{\rm s.d.}$. The axial locations of $\langle L_B \rangle$ and $\langle 1.5L_B \rangle$ are marked in white dashes. (b) Profiles of axial slices showing the Gaussian distribution of the liquid presence probabilities.

Figure 8

Figure 8. Spray characteristics, as functions of air density ratio $\rho _g/\rho _0$, for (a) the spreading angle $\theta$, and (b) the virtual origin $x_0$. Symbols represent different momentum ratios, as indicated in the legend in (a). When not visible, the error bars have sizes similar to or smaller than the data point symbol.

Figure 9

Figure 9. Colour contours for the PSD of the liquid presence field, with the $y$-axis indicating frequencies and $x$-axis indicating radial distances. The air density ratio is $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 1$, and momentum ratio $M$ increases from (a) to (d).

Figure 10

Figure 10. Colour contours for the PSD of the liquid presence field, with the $y$-axis indicating frequencies and $x$-axis indicating radial distances. The air density ratio is $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 5$, and momentum ratio $M$ increases from (a) to (d).

Figure 11

Figure 11. LDV/PDI system set-up to study the spray mid-field under high ambient pressures/densities. (a) Front view of the set-up, including the axial distance from the nozzle and the radial span of the sampling locations. (b) Top view of the set-up, including the orientation of the transmitter and receiver modules.

Figure 12

Figure 12. Radial profiles of the arithmetic mean droplet diameter $d_{10}$ for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend in (c).

Figure 13

Figure 13. Radial profiles of the Sauter mean droplet diameter $d_{32}$ for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend shown in (c).

Figure 14

Figure 14. Probability distribution functions (p.d.f.s) of the arithmetic mean droplet diameter $d_{10}$ sampled at the centre of the jet, for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend in (c).

Figure 15

Figure 15. (a) Mean droplet axial velocity at the spray centre, $U_0$, as a function of air density ratio $\rho _g/\rho _0$. (b) Radial profiles of the mean droplet axial velocity, $U_x$, normalized by their respective centreline velocities $U_0$, including all $M$ and $\rho _g/\rho _0$ data, and compared with the self-similarity solution for a free jet. Symbols indicate different momentum ratios, as indicated by the legends.

Figure 16

Figure 16. Radial profiles of the mean droplet radial velocity $U_r$ normalized by their respective centreline velocities $U_0$, for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend in (c).

Figure 17

Figure 17. Radial profiles of the mean slip velocity $U_{slip} = U_x - U_{air}$, normalized by their respective centreline droplet velocities $U_0$, for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend shown in (c).

Figure 18

Figure 18. P.d.f.s of the droplet Reynolds number $\mbox{Re}_p$ for droplets sampled at $x = 9d_g$, $r = 0$, for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend shown in (c).

Figure 19

Figure 19. P.d.f.s of the droplet Weber number $We_p$ for droplets sampled at $x = 9d_g$, $r = 0$, for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend shown in (c).

Figure 20

Figure 20. Radial profiles of the liquid volume flux $\dot {g}$ at the sampling location for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend shown in (c).

Figure 21

Figure 21. Radial profiles of the liquid momentum flux $\dot {m}_l$ at the sampling location for the three momentum ratios: (a) $M = 25$, (b) $M = 39$, and (c) $M = 56$. Symbols indicate different air density ratios corresponding to the legend shown in (c).

Figure 22

Figure 22. (a) Liquid recovery from the LDV/PDI measurements. (b) Momentum gain in the liquid phase. (c) Momentum gain after adjusting for the liquid recovery. Symbols indicate different momentum ratios, and the $x$-axis shows different air densities.

Figure 23

Figure 23. (a) Instability wavenumber $k$ and its associated growth rate $n$ for $M = 25$ and $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 1$. The black dashed line indicates the wavenumber with the highest growth rate $k_{max,KH}$, and the red cross indicates the growth rate for the instability with wavenumber $k = 2\rho _g U_g^{2} /3 \sigma$. (b) Wavenumber associated with the maximum growth rate $k_{max,KH}$ for different momentum ratios and different air densities. Symbol sizes indicate the relative magnitudes of the growth rate $n$. Symbol colours indicate the value of the growth rate normalized by the maximum growth rate for each momentum ratio at $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 1$.

Figure 24

Figure 24. (a) Instability wavenumber $k$ and its associated growth rate $n$ for the case $M = 25$ and $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 1$. The black dashed line indicates the wavenumber with the highest growth rate. (b) Wavenumber associated with maximum growth rate, $k_{max,KH}$ for different momentum ratios (indicated by different symbols) and different air densities. Symbol sizes indicate the relative magnitudes of the growth rate $n$. Symbol colours indicate the value of the growth rate normalized by the maximum growth rate for each momentum ratio at $\rho _g/\rho _0 = 1$.

Figure 25

Figure 25. Instantaneous binarized spray images comparing two cases with the same gas and liquid Reynolds numbers ($\mbox{Re}_l = 1170$, $\mbox{Re}_g = 15\,000$), but different momentum ratios ($M = 5,25$) and liquid Weber numbers ($We = 36,190$).