Logo del repository
  1. Home
 
Opzioni

Anisotropy in Pair Dispersion of Inertial Particles in Turbulent Channel Flow

Enrico PITTON
•
Valentina LAVEZZO
•
Federico TOSCHI
altro
SOLDATI, Alfredo
2012
  • journal article

Periodico
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Abstract
The rate at which two particles separate in turbulent flows is of central importance to predict the inhomogeneities of particle spatial distribution and to characterize mixing. Pair separation is analyzed for the specific case of small, inertial particles in turbulent channel flow to examine the role of mean shear and small-scale turbulent velocity fluctuations. To this aim an Eulerian-Lagrangian approach based on pseudo-spectral direct numerical simulation (DNS) of fully developed gas-solid flow at shear Reynolds number Reτ = 150 is used. Pair separation statistics have been computed for particles with different inertia (and for inertialess tracers) released from different regions of the channel. Results confirm that shear-induced effects predominate when the pair sepa- ration distance becomes comparable to the largest scale of the flow. Results also reveal the fundamental role played by particles-turbulence interaction at the small scales in triggering separation during the initial stages of pair dispersion. These findings are discussed examining Lagrangian observables, including the mean square separa- tion, which provide prima facie evidence that pair dispersion in non-homogeneous anisotropic turbulence has a superdiffusive nature and may generate non-Gaussian number density distributions of both particles and tracers. These features appear to persist even when the effects of shear dispersion are filtered out, and exhibit strong dependency on particle inertia. Application of present results is discussed in the con- text of modelling approaches for particle dispersion in wall-bounded turbulent flows.
DOI
10.1063/1.4737655
WOS
WOS:000308406000016
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/11390/881574
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84864775058
Diritti
metadata only access
Scopus© citazioni
21
Data di acquisizione
Jun 14, 2022
Vedi dettagli
Web of Science© citazioni
23
Data di acquisizione
Mar 16, 2024
Visualizzazioni
2
Data di acquisizione
Apr 19, 2024
Vedi dettagli
google-scholar
Get Involved!
  • Source Code
  • Documentation
  • Slack Channel
Make it your own

DSpace-CRIS can be extensively configured to meet your needs. Decide which information need to be collected and available with fine-grained security. Start updating the theme to match your nstitution's web identity.

Need professional help?

The original creators of DSpace-CRIS at 4Science can take your project to the next level, get in touch!

Realizzato con Software DSpace-CRIS - Estensione mantenuta e ottimizzata da 4Science

  • Impostazioni dei cookie
  • Informativa sulla privacy
  • Accordo con l'utente finale
  • Invia il tuo Feedback