Turbulence-Induced Bubble Collision Force Modeling and Validation in Adiabatic Two-Phase Flow Using CFD

Abstract

The prediction capability of the two-fluid model for gas-liquid dispersed two-phase flow depends on the accuracy of the closure relations for the interfacial forces. In previous studies of two-phase flow Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), interfacial force models for a single isolated bubble has been extended to disperse two-phase flow assuming the effect in a swarm of bubbles is similar. Limited studies have been performed investigating the effect of the bubble concentration on the lateral phase distribution. Bubbles, while moving through the liquid phase, may undergo turbulence-driven random collision with neighboring bubbles without significant coalescence. The rate of these collisions depends upon the bubble approach velocity and bubble spacing. The bubble collision frequency is expected to be higher in locations with higher bubble concentrations, i.e., volume fraction. This turbulence-driven random collision causes the diffusion of the bubbles from high concentration to low concentration. Based on experimental observations, a phenomenological model has been developed for a "turbulence-induced bubble collision force" for use in the two-fluid model. For testing the validity of the model, two-phase flow data measured at Purdue University are utilized. The geometry is a 10 mm x 200 mm cross section channel. Experimentally, non-uniform inlet boundary conditions are applied with different sparger combinations to vary the volume fraction distribution across the wider dimension. Examining uniform and non-uniform inlet data allows for the influence of the volume fraction to be studied as a separate effect. The turbulence-induced bubble collision force has been implemented in ANSYS CFX. The assessment results show agreement with the measured data, correctly capturing the redistribution of volume fraction downstream with uniform and non-uniform inlet profiles. In particular, for the non-uniform data, the transverse redistribution of volume fraction at downstream locations is captured. This signifies the importance of bubble—bubble collision phenomena in correctly predicting volume fraction distributions.

Department(s)

Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science

Research Center/Lab(s)

Center for High Performance Computing Research

Keywords and Phrases

Computational fluid dynamics; Diffusion in liquids; Turbulence; Volume fraction; Adiabatic two-phase flows; Approach velocities; Bubble concentration; Dispersed two-phase flows; Interfacial force models; Phenomenological modeling; Prediction capability; Volume fraction distribution; Two phase flow

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

0029-5493

Document Type

Article - Journal

Document Version

Citation

File Type

text

Language(s)

English

Rights

© 2017 Elsevier, All rights reserved.

Publication Date

01 Feb 2017

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