Miguel Ángel Ballesteros Martínez, Deisy Becerra, Volker Gaukel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Air-Core-Liquid-Ring atomizer is a pioneering internal-mixing pneumatic atomization technique designed for energy-efficient spray drying of highly viscous liquid feeds with substantial solid contents. However, it can suffer internal flow instabilities, which may lead to spray droplets with a wide variation in diameter. Experimental investigation of how flow conditions mechanistically determine the resulting droplet sizes is hindered by high velocities near the nozzle outlet. Therefore, this study addressed the issue by implementing a numerical model, employing a coupled Eulerian-Lagrangian approach with adaptive mesh refinement, to simulate the breakup of the liquid into ligaments and droplets. Additionally, Large Eddy Simulation was incorporated to replicate turbulent flow conditions observed in experiments. The numerical model demonstrated significant improvement in predicting liquid film thickness, compared to previous work. Additionally, the simulated droplet size distributions mirrored experimental trends, shifting to smaller sizes as pressure increased. Unfortunately, while reduced, there is a persistent underestimation of the lamella thickness and the droplet sizes at 0.2 MPa. In spite of this, the fact that the error propagates between the two phenomena underscores the effective coupling between Eulerian and Lagrangian approaches.
期刊介绍:
Flow, Turbulence and Combustion provides a global forum for the publication of original and innovative research results that contribute to the solution of fundamental and applied problems encountered in single-phase, multi-phase and reacting flows, in both idealized and real systems. The scope of coverage encompasses topics in fluid dynamics, scalar transport, multi-physics interactions and flow control. From time to time the journal publishes Special or Theme Issues featuring invited articles.
Contributions may report research that falls within the broad spectrum of analytical, computational and experimental methods. This includes research conducted in academia, industry and a variety of environmental and geophysical sectors. Turbulence, transition and associated phenomena are expected to play a significant role in the majority of studies reported, although non-turbulent flows, typical of those in micro-devices, would be regarded as falling within the scope covered. The emphasis is on originality, timeliness, quality and thematic fit, as exemplified by the title of the journal and the qualifications described above. Relevance to real-world problems and industrial applications are regarded as strengths.