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Main Authors: Mortazavi, Saeed, Yaali, Iman
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.02617
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author Mortazavi, Saeed
Yaali, Iman
author_facet Mortazavi, Saeed
Yaali, Iman
contents Film boiling has practical applications in the current technology including steam power plants, cooling of electronic devices and emergency cooling systems. A finite difference/front tracking method is used to simulate film boiling at high density ratios on a horizontal plate subject to a constant wall heat flux. The grid resolution is relatively high (768 grids per width of the domain). The flow is dominated by Rayleigh-Taylor instability as well as Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. The flow structure includes the roll up of the interface between the gas and liquid. This happens at high density ratio (1000) where the difference between the gas and the liquid velocities across the interface is large. The jump in tangential velocity is an order of magnitude smaller at a lower density ratio (100). Hence, there is no roll up at lower density ratio. The flow is also influenced by vortex development as a result of the baroclinic term in the vorticity transport equation. The density gradient is large at the interface at high density ratio which tends to increase the baroclinic term. The plot of pressure gradient and density gradient shows that they are not parallel in the roll up regions. As a result, vortices in small scales develop that shed in the gas phase. The plot of the enstrophy with time shows that it shows smooth variation that match for two grid resolutions, however at a specific time enstrophies become spiky, and they depart from each other at two grid resolutions. The spiky behavior of enstrophy is due to vortex shedding in the roll up region.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2406_02617
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Fine Structures Roll up in the Flow of Film Boiling at High Density Ratios
Mortazavi, Saeed
Yaali, Iman
Fluid Dynamics
Film boiling has practical applications in the current technology including steam power plants, cooling of electronic devices and emergency cooling systems. A finite difference/front tracking method is used to simulate film boiling at high density ratios on a horizontal plate subject to a constant wall heat flux. The grid resolution is relatively high (768 grids per width of the domain). The flow is dominated by Rayleigh-Taylor instability as well as Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. The flow structure includes the roll up of the interface between the gas and liquid. This happens at high density ratio (1000) where the difference between the gas and the liquid velocities across the interface is large. The jump in tangential velocity is an order of magnitude smaller at a lower density ratio (100). Hence, there is no roll up at lower density ratio. The flow is also influenced by vortex development as a result of the baroclinic term in the vorticity transport equation. The density gradient is large at the interface at high density ratio which tends to increase the baroclinic term. The plot of pressure gradient and density gradient shows that they are not parallel in the roll up regions. As a result, vortices in small scales develop that shed in the gas phase. The plot of the enstrophy with time shows that it shows smooth variation that match for two grid resolutions, however at a specific time enstrophies become spiky, and they depart from each other at two grid resolutions. The spiky behavior of enstrophy is due to vortex shedding in the roll up region.
title Fine Structures Roll up in the Flow of Film Boiling at High Density Ratios
topic Fluid Dynamics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.02617