A two-phase mixing layer between parallel gas and liquid streams: multiphase turbulence statistics and influence of interfacial instability
Y. Ling, D. Fuster, G. Tryggvason, S. Zaleski

TL;DR
This study uses direct numerical simulation to analyze turbulence statistics and interfacial instability in a two-phase gas-liquid mixing layer, revealing the importance of mesh resolution and challenging existing droplet size scales.
Contribution
It provides detailed turbulence statistics and insights into interfacial instability effects in a two-phase mixing layer through high-resolution simulations.
Findings
Dominant frequency matches viscous stability theory predictions.
Turbulent dissipation requires very fine mesh resolution.
Hinze scale exceeds observed droplet sizes, questioning its relevance.
Abstract
The two-phase mixing layer formed between parallel gas and liquid streams is an important fundamental problem in turbulent multiphase flows. The problem is relevant to many industrial applications and natural phenomena, such as air-blast atomizers in fuel injection systems and breaking waves in the ocean. The velocity difference between the gas and liquid streams triggers an interfacial instability which can be convective or absolute depending on the stream properties and injection parameters. In the present study, a direct numerical simulation of a two-phase gas-liquid mixing layer that lie in the absolute instability regime is conducted. A dominant frequency is observed in the simulation and the numerical result agrees well with the prediction from viscous stability theory. As the interfacial wave plays a critical role in turbulence transition and development, the temporal evolution…
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