The evolution of energy in flow driven by rising bubbles
Irene Mazzitelli, Detlef Lohse

TL;DR
This study uses direct numerical simulations to explore how rising bubbles influence flow energy, revealing large-scale motion generation and the effects of lift forces on bubble distribution and flow forcing.
Contribution
Introduces a simplified Eulerian-Lagrangian simulation approach to model large numbers of rising bubbles and analyzes their impact on flow energy and turbulence characteristics.
Findings
Large-scale motions are generated via inverse energy cascade.
Flow exhibits a lack of strong vortices and local energy transfer.
Zero lift force enhances flow forcing and energy accumulation.
Abstract
We investigate by direct numerical simulations the flow that rising bubbles cause in an originally quiescent fluid. We employ the Eulerian-Lagrangian method with two-way coupling and periodic boundary conditions. In order to be able to treat up to 288000 bubbles, the following approximations and simplifications had to be introduced: (i) The bubbles were treated as point-particles, thus (ii) disregarding the near-field interactions among them, and (iii) effective force models for the lift and the drag forces were used. In particular, the lift coefficient was assumed to be 1/2, independent of the bubble Reynolds number and the local flow field. The results suggest that large scale motions are generated, owing to an inverse energy cascade from the small to the large scales. However, as the Taylor-Reynolds number is only in the range of 1, the corresponding scaling of the energy spectrum…
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