Wavelet investigation of preferential concentration in particle-laden turbulence

ORAL

Abstract

Direct numerical simulations of particle-laden homogeneous-isotropic turbulence are employed in conjunction with wavelet multi-resolution analyses to study preferential concentration in both physical and spectral spaces. Spatially-localized energy spectra for velocity, vorticity and particle-number density are computed, along with their spatial fluctuations that enable the quantification of scale-dependent probability density functions, intermittency and inter-phase conditional statistics. The main result is that particles are found in regions of lower turbulence spectral energy than the corresponding mean. This suggests that modeling the subgrid-scale turbulence intermittency is required for capturing the small-scale statistics of preferential concentration in large-eddy simulations. Additionally, a method is defined that decomposes a particle number-density field into the sum of a coherent and an incoherent components. The coherent component representing the clusters can be sparsely described by at most 1.6{\%} of the total number of wavelet coefficients. An application of the method, motivated by radiative-heat-transfer simulations, is illustrated in the form of a grid-adaptation algorithm that results in non-uniform meshes refined around particle clusters. It leads to a reduction of the number of control volumes by one to two orders of magnitude.

*PSAAP-II Center at Stanford (Grant DE-NA0002373)

Authors

  • Maxime Bassenne

    • Center for Turbulence Research, Stanford University
  • Javier Urzay

    • Center for Turbulence Research, Stanford University
  • Kai Schneider

    • Aix-Marseille Universite
  • Parviz Moin

    • Center for Turbulence Research, Stanford University