4.7 Article

On the interactions between a propagating shock wave and evaporating water droplets

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 32, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0035968

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education Tier 1 [R-265-000-688-114]

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One-dimensional numerical simulations based on the hybrid Eulerian-Lagrangian approach are performed to investigate the interactions between propagating shock waves and dispersed evaporating water droplets in two-phase gas-droplet flows. Two-way coupling for interphase exchanges of mass, momentum, and energy is adopted. A parametric study on shock attenuation, droplet evaporation, motion, and heating is conducted, through considering various initial droplet diameters (5 mu m-20 mu m), number densities (2.5 x 10(11)/m(3)-2 x 10(12)/m(3)), and incident shock Mach numbers (1.17-1.9). It is found that the leading shock may be attenuated to the sonic wave and even to the subsonic wave when the droplet volume fraction is large and/or the incident shock Mach number is low. Attenuation in both strength and propagation speed of the leading shock is mainly caused by momentum transfer to the droplets that interact at the shock front. Total pressure recovery is observed in the evaporation region, whereas pressure loss results from shock compression, droplet drag, and pressure gradient force behind the shock front. Recompression of the region between the leading shock and the two-phase contact surface is observed when the following compression wave is supersonic. After a critical point, this region gets stable in width and interphase exchanges in mass, momentum, and energy. However, the recompression phenomenon is sensitive to the droplet volume fraction and may vanish with high droplet loading. For an incident shock Mach number of 1.6, recompression only occurs when the initial droplet volume fraction is below 3.28 x 10(-5).

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