4.7 Article

Particle radial distribution function and relative velocity measurement in turbulence at small particle-pair separations

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 921, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2021.486

Keywords

particle/fluid flow; isotropic turbulence

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1828544]
  2. Directorate For Engineering
  3. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys [1828544] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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A new approach was reported to measure radial distribution function (RDF) and radial relative velocity (RV) near contact in particle collisions in turbulent flow, revealing significant enhancement of particle clustering and relative velocities at small separations.
Particle collisions in turbulent flow are critical to particle agglomeration and droplet coalescence. The collision kernel can be evaluated by radial distribution function (RDF) and radial relative velocity (RV) between particles at small separations r. Previously, the smallest r was limited to roughly the Kolmogorov length eta due to particle position uncertainty and image overlap. We report a new approach to measuring RDF and RV near contact (r/a approximate to 2.07, where a is particle radius). Three-dimensional particle tracking velocimetry using the four-pulse shake-the-box algorithm recorded short tracks with the interpolated midpoints registered as particle positions, avoiding image overlap and track mismatch. We measured RDF and RV of inertial particles in a one metre diameter isotropic air turbulence chamber with Taylor Reynolds number Re-lambda = 324, a = 12-16 mu m (approximate to 0.12 eta) and Stokes number approximate to 0.7. At large r the measured RV agrees with the literature, but when r < 20 eta the first moment of negative RV starts to increase, reaching 10 times higher values than direct numerical simulations of non-interacting particles. Likewise, RDF scales as r(-0.39) when r > eta, reflecting the well-known scaling for polydisperse particles, but when r (sic) eta, RDF scales as r(-6), yielding 1000 times higher near-contact RDF than simulations. Such RV enhancement and extreme clustering at small r can be attributed to particle-particle interactions including hydrodynamic interactions, which are not well-understood. Uncertainty analysis substantiates the observed trends. This first-ever simultaneous RDF and RV measurement at small separations provides a clear glimpse into the clustering and relative velocities of particles in turbulence near-contact.

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