Numerical Research of Dynamical Behavior in Engineering Applications by Using E–E Method
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Description of Models
3. Test Cases
- Test case A.1: investigation of bubble plumes in a bubble column with rectangular shape developed by Díaz et al. [39]. The test setup consisted of a partially aerated bubble column with a width of 0.2 m, height of 1.8 m and depth of 0.04 m filled with tap water to 0.45 m under atmospheric pressure and room temperature while the air was fed through a sparger with eight concentric holes with a diameter of 1 mm and pitch 6 mm. This was a very interesting test case since liquid vortices created by bubble plumes were desirable for mixing and, consequently, accelerating all transport phenomena [40]. In addition, flow structures with unsteady liquid recirculations were typical phenomena of industrial bubble columns.
- Test case A.2: investigation of gas-liquid flows in an industrial bubble column proposed by McClure et al. [41], which was a partially aerated bubble column with a cylindrical shape of 0.19 m in diameter filled with water up to 1 m equipped with a multi-point sparger. The aspect ratio () was about 5. In the bio-processing industry, the bubble column height-to-diameter ratio typically ranges from 2 to 5 and is usually operated in the heterogeneous flow regime to speed up mass and heat transfer.
- Test case A.3: the test case investigated in this work was a bubbly air/water upward flow in a pipe with a sudden enlargement. The two sections of the pipe were 50 and 100 mm in diameter. The inlet phase fraction was known to have a wall peak. The main characteristic of this test was a large separation zone at the pipe bottom. This has been extensively applied for the verification and implimenttion of the E–E method [42,43,44,45].
- Test case B.1: investigation of bubbly flow in a cylindrical pipe of Lucas et al. [46]. The mixture of the gas and liquid was injected from the bottom pipe of 0.0256 m in diameter and 3.53 m in height. In vertical upward flows, small bubbles moved towards the wall. A wall peak for gas phase fraction occurred at high . Tomiyama et al. witnessed this phenomenon for individual bubbles [47]. For vertical co-current pipe flows, radial flow fields had symmetric stability over a long distance. Hence, this flow type is well investigated in terms of non-drag forces.
- Test case B.2: investigation of bubbly flows in a circular pipe developed by Banowski et al. [48]. The experiment comprised a vertical pipe with an inner diameter of 54.8 mm and a length of 6 m. The gas and liquid mixture was injected from the bottom. It was similar to the test case B.2. However, besides the typical wall peak formed due to the smaller bubbles’ movement, a double peak of the phase fraction can also be observed due to the existence of large bubbles since large bubbles tend to the centre.
- Test case B.3: investigation of bubbly flows in a rectangle pipe developed by Žun [49]. This test case was similar to test case B.3 with a slight difference of geometry. The mixture of the gas and liquid was injected from the bottom of a rectangle channel of 0.0254 m in length and 2 m in height. Only the central peak of the gas phase was witnessed.
- Test case B.4: investigation of the bubbly flow of Besagni et al. [50]. The gas-liquid flows in bubble columns with annular gaps and two non-regular internal pipes were investigated. It consisted of a non-pressurized vertical column with an inner diameter of 0.24 m and height of 5.3 m. It consisted of a non-pressurized vertical column with an inner diameter of 0.24 m and a height of 5.3 m. In the simulation domain, the height was limited to 5 m. Two internal pipes were arranged within the column: one positioned asymmetrically (0.075 m in external diameter) and the other positioned centrally (0.06 m in external diameter). The sparger was assumed to be a uniform surface with a cylindrical shape of 0.01 m in height located on the lateral inner pipe at a vertical position of 0.3 m from the domain bottom. The aspect ratio of the geometry was small. Due to the existence of the non-irregular components, the gas phase fraction distribution developed to be quite flattened, and no wall peak was observed in the experiments, even though it could be seen as a pipe flow.
- Test case C.1: investigation of gas-liquid flows in a continuous casting mould of Iguchi and Kasai [51]. The geometry employed in this test case was quite different from previous ones. The gas and liquid were injected into a rectangular vessel of 0.3 m in length and 0.15 m in width. In the experiments, it was observed that larger bubbles were lifted towards the liquid surface because of buoyancy forces exerted on them, while smaller bubbles were pushed deep. Such a phenomenon is also known as phase segregation or poly-dispersity in other works, which was proven as a tough work for the E–E method.
- Test case C.2: investigation of gas-liquid flows in a continuous casting mould of Sheng and Irons [52]. The gas phase was injected from the bottom of a vessel with a height of 0.76 m and a diameter of 0.5 m. In this test case, measured gas phase fraction distributions, turbulence fields, and velocities of gas/liquid in plume zones were employed for the validation of different turbulence models. It was observed to be a suitable test case to validate the multi-phase turbulence model against experimental data.
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Test Case A.1–A.3
4.2. Test Case B.1–B.4
4.3. Test Case C.1–C.2
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Term | Configuration |
---|---|
Euler implicit | |
Gauss linear | |
Gauss linear | |
Gauss limitedLinearV 1; | |
Gauss limitedLinear 1 | |
Gauss linear | |
Gauss linear uncorrected | |
Uncorrected | |
Linear |
Solver | Preconditioner | Rel. Tol. | Final Tol. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
p | PCG | DIC | 0.01 | 1 × 10 |
k | PBiCGStab | DILU | - | 1 × 10 |
PBiCGStab | DILU | - | 1 × 10 |
Test Case | Operating Conditions |
---|---|
A.1 | Superficial gas velocity: 0.0024 m/s Inlet liquid velocity: 0 m/s Bubble diameter: 0.00505 m |
A.2 | Superficial gas velocity: 0.16 m/s Inlet liquid velocity: 0 m/s Bubble diameter: 0.008 m |
A.3 | Inlet gas velocity: 1.87 m/s Inlet liquid velocity: 1.57 m/s Bubble diameter: 0.002 m |
B.1 | Superficial gas velocity: 0.0115 m/s Superficial liquid velocity: 1.0167 m/s Bubble diameter: 0.0048 m |
B.2 | Superficial gas velocity: 0.0151 m/s Superficial liquid velocity: 1.017 m/s Bubble diameter: 0.0046 m |
B.3 | Superficial gas velocity: 0.005 m/s Superficial liquid velocity: 0.43 m/s Bubble diameter: 0.006 m |
B.4 | Inlet gas velocity: 0.0087 m/s Inlet liquid velocity: 0 m/s Bubble diameter: 0.0042 m |
C.1 | Inlet gas velocity: 4 cm3/s Inlet liquid velocity: 5 L/s Bubble diameter: 0.005 m |
C.2 | Inlet gas velocity: 50 mL/s Inlet liquid velocity: 0 m/s Bubble diameter: 0.006 m |
Gas velocity at walls: slip. Liquid velocity at walls: no-slip. k and at walls: wall function. Outlet: zero-gradient. |
Test Case | Exp. Data | Features | Pseudo-Steady-State |
---|---|---|---|
A.1 | Plume oscillating period Gas holdup | Periodic flow field | No |
A.2 | Phase frac. distri. | High phase fraction | No |
A.3 | Upward liquid vel. Turb. kinetic energy | Stagnant vortex | Yes |
Drag Force | Drag & Dispersion Forces | Drag & Dispersion & Lift and Wall Forces | Exp. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gas holdup | 0.00613 | 0.0065 | 0.0075 | 0.0069 |
Gas holdup rel. error | −11% | −6% | +8% | - |
POP | 9.37 | 8.87 | 8.98 | 11.38 |
POP rel. error | −17% | −22% | −21% | - |
Test Case | Exp. Data | Features | Pseudo-Steady-State |
---|---|---|---|
B.1 | Phase frac. distri. Upward gas vel. | Wall peak | Yes |
B.2 | Phase frac. distri. | Double peak | Yes |
B.3 | Phase frac. distri. | Central peak | Yes |
B.4 | Global gas holdup | Non-regular components | No |
Drag | Drag & Dis. | Drag & Dis. & Lift & Wall | Exp. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gas holdup | 0.0226 | 0.02318 | 0.02358 | 0.0287 |
Test Case | Exp. Data | Features | Pseudo-Steady-State |
---|---|---|---|
C.1 | Axial liquid vel. Radial liquid vel. | Non-regular flow | Yes |
C.2 | Axial liquid vel. Turbulent kinetic energy | Central bubble plume | Yes |
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Wu, T.; Li, Y.; Jiang, D.; Zhang, Y. Numerical Research of Dynamical Behavior in Engineering Applications by Using E–E Method. Mathematics 2022, 10, 3150. https://doi.org/10.3390/math10173150
Wu T, Li Y, Jiang D, Zhang Y. Numerical Research of Dynamical Behavior in Engineering Applications by Using E–E Method. Mathematics. 2022; 10(17):3150. https://doi.org/10.3390/math10173150
Chicago/Turabian StyleWu, Tiecheng, Yulong Li, Dapeng Jiang, and Yuxin Zhang. 2022. "Numerical Research of Dynamical Behavior in Engineering Applications by Using E–E Method" Mathematics 10, no. 17: 3150. https://doi.org/10.3390/math10173150
APA StyleWu, T., Li, Y., Jiang, D., & Zhang, Y. (2022). Numerical Research of Dynamical Behavior in Engineering Applications by Using E–E Method. Mathematics, 10(17), 3150. https://doi.org/10.3390/math10173150