Affiliation:
1. Engineering Department, University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, 81031 Aversa, Italy
Abstract
Two different scale-resolving simulation (SRS) approaches to turbulence modeling and simulation are used to predict the breakup of a spherical water droplet in air, due to the impact of a traveling plane shock wave. The compressible flow governing equations are solved by means of a finite volume-based numerical method, with the volume-of-fluid technique being employed to track the air–water interface on the dynamically adaptive mesh. The three-dimensional analysis is performed in the shear stripping regime, examining the drift, deformation, and breakup of the droplet for a benchmark flow configuration. The comparison of the present SRS results against reference experimental and numerical data, in terms of both droplet morphology and breakup dynamics, provides evidence that the adopted computational methods have significant practical potential, being able to locally reproduce unsteady small-scale flow structures. These computational models offer viable alternatives to higher-fidelity, more costly methods for engineering simulations of complex two-phase turbulent compressible flows.
Reference42 articles.
1. On the physics of aerobreakup;Theofanous;Phys. Fluids,2008
2. Secondary atomization;Guildenbecher;Exp. Fluids,2009
3. Ranger, A.A., and Nicholls, J.A. (1968, January 22–24). Aerodynamic shattering of liquid drops. Proceedings of the 6th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, New York, NY, USA.
4. Investigation of the physical phenomena associated with rain impacts on supersonic and hypersonic flight vehicles;Moylan;Procedia Eng.,2013
5. Effect of Mach number on droplet aerobreakup in shear stripping regime;Wang;Exp. Fluids,2020
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献