Particle-resolved simulations and dune formation in particulate Rayleigh-Bénard flow

ORAL

Abstract

Fully resolved simulations of particulate Rayleigh-Bénard convection in a doubly periodic cell (aspect ratio Γ=2) with 20,000 particles at a volume fraction of 3.25% and a Rayleigh number of Ra = 108 have been conducted using 2.1 billion grid points and 600 NVIDIA V100 GPUs on DOE's Summit system. The particles are 10% heavier than the fluid and tend to settle. However, near the cell bottom, the velocity of the circulating fluid acquires a horizontal component which entrains them toward the root of rising plumes. The particles gradually accumulate at these sites forming dunes which strengthen the plumes. When the dunes are sufficiently large, other particles are dragged up their slope by the flow, acquire a vertical velocity component and are entrained by the rising fluid. Thus, particle resuspension ultimately depends on drag, rather than lift, forces. The simulations demonstrate a tendency for our system to form a single large, stable dune that perpetuates the process. Most particles in the large dune remain within it, stabilizing its structure and promoting the resuspension of other particles. Other transient smaller dunes also form, but are quickly eroded by the flow.

*This study was supported in part by the National Science Foundation Program CBET TTP under grant No. 2053204. This research used resources of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725.

Presenters

  • Xianyang Chen

    • University of Houston

Authors

  • Xianyang Chen

    • University of Houston
  • Myoungkyu Lee

    • University of Houston, Texas
    • University of Houston
  • Daniel Floryan

    • University of Houston
  • Rodolfo Ostilla Monico

    • University of Cadiz
    • Universidad de Cádiz
  • Andrea Prosperetti

    • University of Houston