A Coupled CFD-DEM Study on the Effect of Basset Force Aimed at the Motion of a Single Bubble
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Discrete Phase
2.2. Continuous Phase
2.3. Bubble–Fluids Interactions
3. Validation Tests
3.1. Experimental
3.2. Simulation Conditions
3.3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Initial Velocity Effects
4.2. Releasing Depth Effects
4.3. Bubble Size Effects
4.4. Two-Phase Density Ratio Effects
4.5. Two-Phase Viscosity Ratio Effects
5. Conclusions
- (a)
- Basset force represents the influence of unsteady viscosity in the process of motion; hence, it should not be ignored. In particular, by the method of Fourier series representation, Basset force on the particles/bubbles is very small and can be ignored for the high-frequency component in the turbulent flow field.
- (b)
- In order to realize the unsteady coupling process of the bubble, a coupled CFD-DEM model with Basset force is constructed, and there is good agreement with the experimental and numerical results.
- (c)
- Five potential influence factors are studied in this work: initial velocity, releasing depth, bubble size, density ratio and viscosity ratio. In our cases, /(+) and |/| are employed to quantify the contribution of Basset force, and the results indicated that:
- (1)
- Basset force is a matter of less significance to the bubble with higher initial velocity due to a larger order of magnitude of drag force than Basset force, and the effect of Basset force can be ignored in the case of ≥ 20 m/s.
- (2)
- It is evident that the shallower the releasing depth is, the smaller the pressure at the initial position is, resulting in the lower impact of Basset force on the bubble motion. Or more quantitatively, when the releasing depth is smaller than 6.9 m, its effect can be negligible.
- (3)
- As for the bubble size, the effect of Basset force on the bubble motion decreases with the diameter increasing, and the Basset force is considered to be overlooked when the bubble diameter is larger than 1 mm.
- (4)
- When the density ratio becomes smaller, there is a more intensified effect of Basset force on the bubble motion due to the low inertia of the bubble. Moreover, the calculation of Basset force can be ignored when the density ratio is greater than 1.14 × 10−3.
- (5)
- In terms of the smaller viscosity ratio, the effect of Basset force on the bubble motion becomes more delayed, because the greater fluid viscosity leads to a larger shear force per unit velocity and worse momentum exchange. When the viscosity ratio is smaller than 0.028, the contribution of Basset force reduces to 0.1, and it is regarded to be negligible.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
correction coefficient | |
drag coefficient | |
d | diameter, m |
Basset force, N | |
drag force, N | |
contact force, N | |
noncontact force, N | |
Bubble–fluid interaction force, N | |
gravity force, N | |
reacting force of bubble–fluid interactions, N | |
h | releasing depth, m |
moment of inertia | |
identity matrix | |
rolling friction moments, N·m | |
tangential friction moments, N·m | |
m | mass, kg |
P | pressure, Pa |
Q | flow rate, L/h |
Re | Reynolds number |
time, s | |
initial time, s | |
time to reach liquid surface, s | |
the time differences between the simulation and the experiment, s | |
fluid velocity, m/s | |
volume, m3 | |
bubble/particle velocity, m/s | |
bubble velocity in the case with Basset force, m/s | |
translation velocity of the bubble, m/s | |
rising velocity, m/s | |
the velocity differences between the simulation and the experiment, m/s | |
Greek symbols | |
volume fraction, | |
density, kg/m3 | |
dynamic viscosity, Pa·s | |
angular velocity of the bubble, rad/s | |
shear viscosity of phase-q, Pa·s | |
bulk viscosity of phase-q, Pa·s | |
Subscripts | |
b | bubble phase |
f | fluid phase |
q | phase-q |
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n | Explanation | ||
---|---|---|---|
0 | The particle moves at constant acceleration relative to the fluid. Basset force increases monotonically with t and can reach a considerable order of magnitude given enough large t. (When b = 0, the particle will move at a uniform speed relative to the fluid and 0) | ||
1 | The particle makes an aperiodic variable acceleration motion relative to the fluid. | varies with t according to the law of 3/2 power. | |
k | varies with t according to the law of 1/2 power increase. |
Material | Density (kg/m3) | Viscosity (Pa·s) |
---|---|---|
Air | 1.29 | 1.8 × 10−5 |
Water | 1000 | 1.0 × 10−3 |
Mesh | Nodes | Hexahedral Cells | GCI (%) |
---|---|---|---|
1.1 mm grid size (mesh 1) | 10,528,218 | 10,417,488 | 0.52 |
1.2 mm grid size (mesh 2) | 8,194,765 | 8,101,296 | 1.71 |
1.5 mm grid size (mesh 3) | 4,272,020 | 4,211,392 | 2.81 |
2.0 mm grid size (mesh 4) | 1,859,688 | 1,824,977 | 5.06 |
3.0 mm grid size (mesh 5) | 570,741 | 554,944 | 10.05 |
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Chen, H.; Ding, W.; Wei, H.; Saxén, H.; Yu, Y. A Coupled CFD-DEM Study on the Effect of Basset Force Aimed at the Motion of a Single Bubble. Materials 2022, 15, 5461. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15155461
Chen H, Ding W, Wei H, Saxén H, Yu Y. A Coupled CFD-DEM Study on the Effect of Basset Force Aimed at the Motion of a Single Bubble. Materials. 2022; 15(15):5461. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15155461
Chicago/Turabian StyleChen, Huiting, Weitian Ding, Han Wei, Henrik Saxén, and Yaowei Yu. 2022. "A Coupled CFD-DEM Study on the Effect of Basset Force Aimed at the Motion of a Single Bubble" Materials 15, no. 15: 5461. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15155461
APA StyleChen, H., Ding, W., Wei, H., Saxén, H., & Yu, Y. (2022). A Coupled CFD-DEM Study on the Effect of Basset Force Aimed at the Motion of a Single Bubble. Materials, 15(15), 5461. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15155461