4 results
Impingement of high-speed cylindrical droplets embedded with an air/vapour cavity on a rigid wall: numerical analysis
- Wangxia Wu, Bing Wang, Gaoming Xiang
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- Journal:
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics / Volume 864 / 10 April 2019
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 February 2019, pp. 1058-1087
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The high-speed impingement of hollow droplets embedded with a cavity has fundamental applications in various scenarios, such as in spray coating and biomedical engineering. The impingement dynamics is modulated by the wrapping medium, different from that of denser solid droplets. With air and vapour cavities, the impingement of two kinds of hollow cylindrical droplets is simulated in the present study to investigate the morphology and physical mechanisms regarding droplet and cavity dynamics. The compressible two-phase Eulerian model is used to couple with the phase transition procedure. The results detail the evolution of droplets and collapsing dynamics of the two kinds of cavities. Processes are captured in which the impinging water-hammer shock wave interacts with the cavity, and vertical liquid jets are induced to impact the embedded cavity. For the case of the air cavity, a transmitted shock wave is formed and propagates inside the cavity. The air cavities are compressively deformed and broken into a series of small cavities. Subsequently, a range of intermittent collapsing compression wavelets are generated due to the interface collapse driven by local jets. As for the vapour cavity in the saturated state, initially, once it is impacted by the impinging shock wave, it gradually shrinks accompanied by local condensation but without generation of transmitted waves. Following the first interaction between the lower and upper surfaces of the cavity, the vapour cavity undergoes continuous condensation and collapse with repeated interface fusion. The vapour cavity finally turns into liquid water blended into the surroundings, and the strong collapsing shock waves are expanded inside the droplet. The radius ratios and initial impinging speeds are chosen to analyse the variation of the collapsing time, maximum collapsing pressure and mean pressure on the rigid wall. The pressure withstood by the wall due to the collapsing cavity increases with the initial size of the cavity and initial impinging speed. The maximum local pressures in the entire fluids and the mean pressure on the wall during the collapsing of the vapour cavities are higher than those for the air cavities.
On high-speed impingement of cylindrical droplets upon solid wall considering cavitation effects
- Wangxia Wu, Gaoming Xiang, Bing Wang
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- Journal:
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics / Volume 857 / 25 December 2018
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 30 October 2018, pp. 851-877
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The high-speed impingement of droplets on a wall occurs widely in nature and industry. However, there is limited research available on the physical mechanism of the complicated flow phenomena during impact. In this study, a simplified multi-component compressible two-phase fluid model, coupled with the phase-transition procedure, is employed to solve the two-phase hydrodynamics system for high-speed cylindrical droplet impaction on a solid wall. The threshold conditions of the thermodynamic parameters of the fluid are established to numerically model the initiation of phase transition. The inception of cavitation inside the high-speed cylindrical droplets impacting on the solid wall can thus be captured. The morphology and dynamic characteristics of the high-speed droplet impingement process are analysed qualitatively and quantitatively, after the mathematical models and numerical procedures are carefully verified and validated. It was found that a confined curved shock wave is generated when the high-speed cylindrical droplet impacts the wall and this shock wave is reflected by the curved droplet surface. A series of rarefaction waves focus at a position at a distance of one third of the droplet diameter away from the top pole due to the curved surface reflection. This focusing zone is identified as the cavity because the local liquid state satisfies the condition for the inception of cavitation. Moreover, the subsequent evolution of the cavitation zone is demonstrated and the effects of the impact speed, ranging from $50$ to $200~\text{m}~\text{s}^{-1}$, on the deformation of the cylindrical droplet and the further evolution of the cavitation were studied. The focusing position, where the cavitation core is located, is independent of the initial impaction speed. However, the cavity zone is enlarged and the stronger collapsing wave is induced as the impaction speed increases.
Effect of the multiphase composition in a premixed fuel–air stream on wedge-induced oblique detonation stabilisation
- Zhaoxin Ren, Bing Wang, Gaoming Xiang, Longxi Zheng
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- Journal:
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics / Volume 846 / 10 July 2018
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 May 2018, pp. 411-427
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An oblique detonation wave in two-phase kerosene–air mixtures over a wedge is numerically studied for the first time. The features of initiation and stabilisation of the two-phase oblique detonation are emphasised, and they are different from those in previous studies on single-phase gaseous detonation. The gas–droplet reacting flow system is solved by means of a hybrid Eulerian–Lagrangian method. The two-way coupling for the interphase interactions is carefully considered using a particle-in-cell model. For discretisation of the governing equations of the gas phase, a WENO-CU6 scheme (Hu et al., J. Comput. Phys., vol. 229 (23), 2010, pp. 8952–8965) and a sixth-order compact scheme are employed for the convective terms and the diffusive terms, respectively. The inflow parameters are chosen properly from real flight conditions. The fuel vapour, droplets and their mixture are taken as the fuel in homogeneous streams with a stoichiometric ratio, respectively. The effects of evaporating droplets and initial droplet size on the initiation, transition from oblique shock to detonation and stabilisation are elucidated. The two-phase oblique detonation wave is stabilised from the oblique shock wave induced by the wedge. As the mass flow rate of droplets increases, a shift from a smooth transition with a curved shock to an abrupt one with a multi-wave point is found, and the initiation length of the oblique detonation increases, which is associated with the increase of the transition pressure. By increasing the initial droplet size, a smooth transition pattern is observed, even if the equivalence ratio remains constant, and the transition pressure decreases. The factor responsible is incomplete evaporation before the detonation fronts, which results in a complicated flame structure, including regimes of formation of oblique detonation, evaporative cooling of droplets and post-detonation reaction.
Numerical study of a planar shock interacting with a cylindrical water column embedded with an air cavity
- Gaoming Xiang, Bing Wang
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- Journal:
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics / Volume 825 / 25 August 2017
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 24 July 2017, pp. 825-852
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This paper performs a numerical study on the interaction of a planar shock wave with a water column embedded with/without a cavity of different sizes at high Weber numbers. The conservative-type Euler and non-conservative scalar two-equations representing the transportation of two-phase properties consist of the diffusion interface capture models. The numerical fluxes are computed by the Godunov-type Harten-Lax–van Leer contact Riemann solver coupled with an incremental fifth-order weighted essentially non-oscillatory (WENO) scheme. A third-order total variation diminishing (TVD) Runge–Kutta scheme is used to advance the solution in time. The morphology and dynamical characteristics are analysed qualitatively and quantitatively to demonstrate the breakup mechanism of the water column and formation of transverse jets under different incident shock intensities and embedded-cavity sizes. The jet tip velocities are extracted by analysing the interface evolution. The liquid column is prone to aerodynamic breakup with the formation of micro-mist at later stages instead of liquid evaporation because of the weakly heating effects of the surrounding air. It is numerically confirmed that the liquid-phase pressure will drop below the saturated vapour pressure, and the low pressure can be sustained for a certain time because of the focusing of the expansion wave, which accounts for the cavitation inside the liquid water column. The geometrical parameters of the deformed water column are identified, showing that the centreline width decreases but the transverse height increases nonlinearly with time. The deformation rates are nonlinearly correlated under different Mach numbers. The first transverse jet is found for a water column with an embedded cavity, whereas the water hammer shock and second jet do not occur under the impact of low intensity incident shock waves. The $x$-velocity component recorded at the rear stagnation point can remain unchanged for a comparable time after a declined evolution, which indicates that the downstream wall of the shocked water ring somehow moves uniformly. It can be explained that the acceleration of the downstream wall is balanced by the trailing shedding vortex, and this effect is more evident under higher Mach numbers. The increased enstrophy, mainly generated at the interface, demonstrates the competition of the baroclinic effects of the shock wave impact over dilatation.