Bubbly drag reduction using a superhydrophobic inner cylinder in Taylor-Couette turbulence
ORAL
Abstract
We investigate the drag of a highly turbulent flow over a non-wetting surface of micro-scale roughness. The Taylor-Couette geometry is used, allowing accurate drag and flow measurements. The inner cylinder is coated with a rough, hydrophobic material, whereas the outer cylinder is kept smooth. We vary the void fraction of air α present in the working fluid to introduce bubbles to the flow. For smaller volume fractions of air, up to α ≤ 2%, we observe that the increased surface roughness from the coating increases the drag. For larger fractions of air, α > 2%, the drag decreases compared to a smooth hydrophilic, uncoated cylinder using the same volume fraction of air. This suggests that two mechanisms play a role: the roughness invokes a shift in the log-layer – resulting in an increase in drag – and the more effective drag-reducing mechanism of the superhydrophobic surface. The balance between these two effects determines whether bubble drag reduction is more effective when using a superhydrophobic surface compared to using a smooth hydrophilic surface.
*NWO-TTW project 14504 (Bullee), NWO-TTW project 13265 (Verschoof), NWO MCEC project (Huisman), NWO-TTW project 12ULT01 (Ezeta) and VIDI grant 13477 and Natural Science Foundation of China under grant 11672156 (Sun and Bakhuis).
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Presenters
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Pim Adriaan Bullee
- University of Twente
- Twente Tech Univ