Particle extreme clustering and inward drifts measured at small separations in an isotropic turbulent flow

ORAL

Abstract

Recent experiments have shown explosive growth of the radial distribution function g(r) of particles in isotropic turbulence with -6 scaling when r/η < 1 (r is particle-pair separation; η is Kolmogorov length scale), characteristic of hydrodynamic interaction. Using high-resolution particle tracking we measure g(r), inward radial relative velocities, and kinematic quantities for varying particle radius a and Stokes number at r down to near-contact (r/a = 2.07). A kinematic relation governing g(r) shows particles cluster when inward drift 〈wr'(t)〉r - ▽rS2 is < 0 (〈wr'(t)〉r is the mean particle-pair radial acceleration, -▽rS2 is the gradient of 2nd-order velocity structure function). Extreme clustering regime statistics scale with r/a, indicating particle interactions. At the onset of extreme clustering,〈wr'(t)〉r turns strongly negative, indicative of inward-driving forces and increases magnitude as r decreases. After〈wr'(t)〉r magnitude peaks, -▽rS2 dominates. The experimental collision kernel estimate is O(103)-O(105) higher than simulations assuming non-interacting particles. Our study highlights the need to understand particle interactions responsible for extreme clustering.

*NSF through Major Research Instrumentation program (Award 1828544, Program Manager Harsha Chelliah)

Publication: HAMMOND, A. L. & MENG, H. 2021. Particle Radial Distribution Function and Relative Velocity Measurement in Turbulence at Small Particle-Pair Separations. arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.17113.

Presenters

  • Danielle Johnson

    • State Univ of NY - Buffalo

Authors

  • Danielle Johnson

    • State Univ of NY - Buffalo
  • Adam L Hammond

    • State Univ of NY - Buffalo
  • Andrew D Bragg

    • Duke University
    • Duke
  • Hui Meng

    • State Univ of NY - Buffalo