This paper reports an experimental study focused on the impact of chevrons (serrations on the trailing edge of the nozzle) on the mixing process of an incompressible jet issuing from a convergent nozzle. The study also explores enhancement of the mixing performance by a novel approach to geometry modification. Profiles of mean velocity were used to characterize the extent of mixing. For a comparative assessment, studies were carried out with a base line circular nozzle, a conventional chevron nozzle and an improvised tabbed chevron nozzle. Flow visualization studies were carried out for jets issuing from chevron nozzles and the results corroborate well with quantitative measurements. The impact of confinement on mixing of jets issuing from chevron nozzles is also studied. The results show that the proposed geometry modification can significantly improve the rate of mixing in the range of Reynolds numbers considered in the study. In confined jets, presence of chevrons was found to accelerate the process of jet breakdown .
The focus of this paper is a numerical simulation study of the flow dynamics in a periodic porous medium to analyse the physics of a symmetry-breaking phenomenon, which causes a deviation in the direction of the macroscale flow from that of the applied pressure gradient. The phenomenon is prominent in the range of porosity from 0.43 to 0.72 for circular solid obstacles. It is the result of the flow instabilities formed when the surface forces on the solid obstacles compete with the inertial force of the fluid flow in the turbulent regime. We report the origin and mechanism of the symmetry-breaking phenomenon in periodic porous media. Large-eddy simulation (LES) is used to simulate turbulent flow in a homogeneous porous medium consisting of a periodic, square lattice arrangement of cylindrical solid obstacles. Direct numerical simulation is used to simulate the transient stages during symmetry breakdown and also to validate the LES method. Quantitative and qualitative observations are made from the following approaches: (1) macroscale momentum budget and (2) two- and three-dimensional flow visualization. The phenomenon draws its roots from the amplification of a flow instability that emerges from the vortex shedding process. The symmetry-breaking phenomenon is a pitchfork bifurcation that can exhibit multiple modes depending on the local vortex shedding process. The phenomenon is observed to be sensitive to the porosity, solid obstacle shape and Reynolds number. It is a source of macroscale turbulence anisotropy in porous media for symmetric solid-obstacle geometries. In the macroscale, the principal axis of the Reynolds stress tensor is not aligned with any of the geometric axes of symmetry, nor with the direction of flow. Thus, symmetry breaking in porous media involves unresolved flow physics that should be taken into consideration while modelling flow inhomogeneity in the macroscale.
Turbulent flow in a homogeneous porous medium was investigated through the use of numerical methods by employing the Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) modeling technique. The focus of our research was to study how microscopic vortices in porous media flow influence the heat transfer from the solid obstacles comprising the porous medium to the fluid. A Representative Elementary Volume (REV) with 4 × 4 cylindrical obstacles and periodic boundary conditions was used to represent the infinite porous medium structure.
Our hypothesis is that the rate of heat transfer between the obstacle surface and the fluid (qavg) is strongly influenced by the size of the contact area between the vortices and the solid obstacles in the porous medium (Avc). This is because vortices are regions with low velocity that form an insulating layer on the surface of the obstacles. Factors such as the porosity (φ), Pore Scale Reynolds number (Rep), and obstacle shape of the porous medium were investigated. All three of these factors have different influences on the contact area Avc, and, by extension, the overall heat transfer rate qavg. Under the same Pore Scale Reynolds number (Rep), our results suggest that a higher overall heat transfer rate is exhibited for smaller contact areas between the vortices and the obstacle surface. Although the size of the contact area, Avc, is affected by Rep, the direct influence of Rep on the overall heat transfer rate qavg is much stronger, and exceeds the effect of Avc on qavg. The Pore Scale Reynolds number, Rep, and the mean Nusselt number, Num, have a seemingly logarithmic relationship.
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