4.1 Review

Coaxial Circular Jets-A Review

Journal

FLUIDS
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/fluids6040147

Keywords

jet flows; impinging jet flows; coaxial jets; near-field flow dynamics; heat transfer; mass transfer

Funding

  1. Pazy Foundation
  2. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [2199/19]

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This review article focuses on the near-field flow characteristics of coaxial circular jets, discussing the impact of velocity ratios and nozzle geometry on the flow, as well as the presence of shear and wake instabilities. It also explores different states of coaxial jets in the near-field and their potential for specific heat and mass transfer applications.
This review article focuses on the near-field flow characteristics of coaxial circular jets that, despite their common usage in combustion processes, are still not well understood. In particular, changes in outer to inner jet velocity ratios, ru, absolute jet exit velocities and the nozzle dimensions and geometry have a profound effect on the near-field flow that is characterized by shear as well as wake instabilities. This review starts by presenting the set of equations governing the flow field and, in particular, the importance of the Reynolds stress distributions on the static pressure distribution is emphasized. Next, the literature that has led to the current stage of knowledge on coaxial jet flows is presented. Based on this literature review, several regions in the near-field (based on ru) are identified in which the inner mixing layer is either governed by shear or wake instabilities. The latter become dominant when ru approximate to 1. For coaxial jets issued into a quiescent surrounding, shear instabilities of the annular (outer) jet are always present and ultimately govern the flow field in the far-field. We briefly discuss the effect of nozzle geometry by comparing the flow field in studies that used a blockage disk to those that employed thick inner nozzle lip thickness. Similarities and differences are discussed. While impinging coaxial jets have not been investigated much, we argue in this review that the rich flow dynamics in the near-field of the coaxial jet might be put to an advantage in fine-tuning coaxial jets impinging onto surfaces for specific heat and mass transfer applications. Several open questions are discussed at the end of this review.

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