4.7 Article

Wake characteristics of complex-shaped snow particles: Comparison of numerical simulations with fixed snowflakes to time-resolved particle tracking velocimetry experiments with free-falling analogs

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 34, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0089759

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Roman Stocker's Group

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Experimental and numerical approaches have advantages and limitations in studying complex phenomena such as the falling of snow particles. This study compares the time- and space-averaged flow quantities in the wake of falling snowflakes using both experimental and numerical methods. The results show that a fixed-particle model can accurately represent the wake flow for steadily falling snowflakes, but significant differences are present at moderate/high Reynolds numbers (unsteady falling motion). The findings suggest that an unsteady fall significantly alters the average wake structure compared to a fixed particle model.
Experimental and numerical approaches have their own advantages and limitations, in particular, when dealing with complex phenomena such as snow particles falling at moderate Reynolds numbers (Re). Time-resolved, three-dimensional particle tracking velocimetry (4D-PTV) experiments of free-falling, three-dimensional (3D)-printed snowflakes' analogs shed light on the elaborate falling dynamics of irregular snow particles but present a lower resolution (tracer seeding density) and a limited field of view (domain size) to fully capture the wake flow. Delayed-detached eddy simulations of fixed snow particles do not realistically represent all the physics of a falling ice particle, especially for cases with unsteady falling attitudes, but accurately predict the drag coefficient and capture the wake characteristics for steadily falling snowflakes. In this work, we compare both approaches on time- and space-averaged flow quantities in the snowflake wake. First, we cross validate the two approaches for low Re cases, where close agreement of the wake features is expected, and second, we assess how strongly the unsteady falling motion perturbs the average wake pattern as compared to a fixed particle at higher Re. For steadily falling snowflakes, the fixed-particle model can properly represent the wake flow with errors within the experimental uncertainty (+/-;15%). At moderate/high Re (unsteady falling motion), larger differences are present. Applying a co-moving frame to the experimental data to account for the particle movement or filtering the numerical data on larger grids reduces these differences only to some extent, implying that an unsteady fall significantly alters the average wake structure as compared to a fixed particle model.

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