Enhanced and suppressed multiscale dispersion of bidisperse inertial particles due to gravity
Rohit Dhariwal, Andrew D. Bragg

TL;DR
This study uses DNS to explore how gravity influences the multiscale dispersion of bidisperse inertial particles in turbulence, revealing that gravity can both enhance and suppress dispersion depending on particle properties and direction.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dual role of gravity in modulating particle dispersion, especially highlighting the unexpected enhancement of horizontal dispersion.
Findings
Gravity enhances vertical relative dispersion due to settling velocities.
Gravity can significantly increase horizontal dispersion through fluid velocity fluctuations.
Bidispersity generally increases mean-square separation, with gravity amplifying this effect for large Stokes differences.
Abstract
Using Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS), we investigate how gravity modifies the multiscale dispersion of bidisperse inertial particles in isotropic turbulence. The DNS has a Taylor Reynolds number , and we simulate Stokes numbers (based on the Kolmogorov timescale) in the range , and consider Froude numbers and , corresponding to strong gravity and no gravity, respectively. The degree of bidispersity is quantified by the difference in the Stokes number of the particles . We first consider the mean-square separation of bidisperse particle-pairs and find that without gravity (i.e. ), bidispersity leads to an enhancement of the the mean-square separation over a significant range of scales. When , the relative dispersion is further enhanced by gravity due to the large difference in the settling…
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