Pseudophase-Change Effects in Turbulent Channel Flow under Transcritical Temperature Conditions
Kukjin Kim, Jean-Pierre Hickey, Carlo Scalo

TL;DR
This study uses direct numerical simulations to explore how pseudophase change effects influence turbulence and flow properties in supercritical channel flow with temperature gradients, revealing deviations from classical laws and detailed fluid behavior.
Contribution
It provides new insights into pseudophase change effects on turbulence in supercritical fluids using high-fidelity DNS with realistic fluid equations.
Findings
Pseudophase change location shifts with temperature difference.
Flow deviations from classical velocity scaling laws.
Fluid ejections cause density skewness and fluctuations.
Abstract
We have performed direct numerical simulations (DNS) of compressible turbulent channel flow at supercritical pressure with top and bottom isothermal walls kept respectively at a supercritical (Ttop > Tpb) and subcritical temperature (Tbot < Tpb), where Tpb is the pseudoboiling temperature. The DNS are conducted using a high-order discretization of the fully compressible Navier-Stokes equations in conservative form closed with the Peng-Robinsion (PR) state equation. Bulk density is adjusted to obtain a bulk pressure of approximately pb = 1.1pcr where pcr is the critical pressure of the working fluid. Top-to-bottom temperature differences investigated are DT = 5 K, 10 K, and 20 K, where Ttop/bot = Tpb +- DT / 2; buoyancy effects are neglected. Varying DT modifies the average location of pseudophase change from ypb/h = -0.23 (DT = 5 K) to 0.89 (DT = 20 K), where h is the channel…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeat transfer and supercritical fluids · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics · Combustion and flame dynamics
