Author:
HILL REGHAN J.,KOCH DONALD L.,LADD ANTHONY J. C.
Abstract
Theory and lattice-Boltzmann simulations are used to examine the effects of fluid
inertia, at small Reynolds numbers, on flows in simple cubic, face-centred cubic and
random arrays of spheres. The drag force on the spheres, and hence the permeability
of the arrays, is determined at small but finite Reynolds numbers, at solid volume
fractions up to the close-packed limits of the arrays. For small solid volume fraction,
the simulations are compared to theory, showing that the first inertial contribution
to the drag force, when scaled with the Stokes drag force on a single sphere in
an unbounded fluid, is proportional to the square of the Reynolds number. The
simulations show that this scaling persists at solid volume fractions up to the
close-packed limits of the arrays, and that the first inertial contribution to the drag
force relative to the Stokes-flow drag force decreases with increasing solid volume
fraction. The temporal evolution of the spatially averaged velocity and the drag
force is examined when the fluid is accelerated from rest by a constant average
pressure gradient toward a steady Stokes flow. Theory for the short- and long-time
behaviour is in good agreement with simulations, showing that the unsteady force
is dominated by quasi-steady drag and added-mass forces. The short- and long-time
added-mass coefficients are obtained from potential-flow and quasi-steady
viscous-flow approximations, respectively.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
434 articles.
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