4.2 Article

Assessment of turbulence models for single phase CFD computations of a liquid-liquid hydrocyclone using OpenFOAM

Journal

JOURNAL OF TURBULENCE
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 79-113

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14685248.2020.1846050

Keywords

CFD; hydrocyclones; turbulence models; OpenFOAM

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior -Brasil (CAPES) [001]

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Hydrocyclones are widely used in industry and CFD has been employed to test various turbulence models for their computations. Results have shown that, except for the RSM, all turbulence models returned similar tangential velocity profiles as the standard k-epsilon model, but failed in predicting axial velocity. Assessment of Reynolds stresses indicated the importance of Reynolds shear stress component for predicting tangential velocity accurately. Geometric proportions of hydrocyclones may significantly affect rotational and streamline curvature effects.
Hydrocyclones are widely used in industry and CFD has been used to compute them. Reynolds stress turbulence models (RSM), which are computationally costly and oftentimes hard to converge, are often recommended in these computations. The present work has selected a liquid-liquid separation hydrocyclone for which singlephase experimental tangential and axial velocity profiles are available. CFD has been employed to test simpler turbulence models than the RSM and results have been compared with experimental data. The turbulence models assessed in the present work were: standard k-e, standard k-e with a curvature correction term, RNG k-epsilon, realizable k-epsilon, k-omega, SST, a two-time-scale linear eddy viscosity model, nonlinear quadratic and cubic k-epsilon eddy viscosity models and the Gibson and Launder and LRR Reynolds stress models. Computations have been carried out with OpenFOAM (R) 2.2.2. Results using the Gibson and Launder turbulence model have been compared to some obtained with Ansys (R) Fluent and these were in agreement. Results have shown that all turbulence models, apart from the RSM, returned basically the same tangential velocity profiles as the standard k - epsilon model. All turbulence models have failed in predicting axial velocity. Assessment of the Reynolds stresses has indicated that the internal flow field in hydrocyclones might be shear dominant and that the Reynolds shear stress component tau(t)(yz) is the most relevant to correctly predict tangential velocity. Geometric proportions of hydrocyclones may affect significantly the intensity of rotational and streamline curvature effects. Two-equation eddy-viscosity models are likely to be able to attend such condition, since appropriate levels of eddy viscosity are predicted at free and forced vortexes regions, however further investigation is still needed.

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