Study on solid‐air dendrite growth and motion with thermosolutal convection‐diffusion using non‐isothermal PF‐PSLBM model

Author:

Li Chaolong1ORCID,Wen Jian1ORCID,Li Ke1,Wang Simin2

Affiliation:

1. School of Energy and Power Engineering Xi'an Jiaotong University Xi'an China

2. School of Chemical Engineering and Technology Xi'an Jiaotong University Xi'an China

Abstract

AbstractThis study unveils a numerical paradigm that amalgamates the partially saturated lattice Boltzmann method (PSLBM) with the non‐isothermal quantitative phase‐field (PF) model. This innovative integration equips us with a prognostic tool ready to elucidate the progression and motion of solid‐air dendritic growth in the presence of both natural and forced convection. The PSLBM is employed to compute the flow of the solution and the interaction forces between the fluid and solid dendrites. Concurrently, the PF model is utilized to simulate the formation of solid‐air dendrites. The reliability of calculating of interaction forces between the fluid and solid was confirmed through a numerical case study involving fluid flow around a stationary cylinder. The results indicate that this model is applicable for simulating the growth and evolution of single/multiple solid‐air dendrites under the influence of convection, whether they are stationary or in motion. The promotion of the upstream side dendritic arms and the inhibition of the downstream dendritic arms increase with the intensification of natural convection. As the initial undercooling is raised, the capacity of natural convection to reshape dendritic morphology gradually diminishes. With the enhancement of forced convection intensity, due to alterations in the flow pattern, the downstream dendritic arms do not consistently exhibit growth suppression. The motion of solid‐air dendrites induced by forced convection counteracts the influence of convection, resulting in slightly faster growth of the downstream dendritic arms compared to the upstream arms. Simultaneously, it fosters the formation of secondary dendritic branches in the upstream zone.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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