Direct numerical simulations of transient turbulent jets: vortex-interface interactions
Cristian R. Constante-Amores, Lyes Kahouadji, Assen Batchvarov,, Seungwon Shin, Jalel Chergui, Damir Juric, and Omar K. Matar

TL;DR
This study uses advanced numerical simulations to explore how vortex interactions influence the breakup of turbulent liquid jets, revealing detailed flow regimes and mechanisms leading to droplet formation.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid interface-tracking method to analyze vortex-interface interactions in turbulent jets across different flow regimes.
Findings
Streamwise vorticity is crucial for 3D jet surface instabilities.
High Re and We lead to mushroom-like structures and droplet formation.
Kelvin-Helmholtz vortices evolve into hairpin vortices, causing lobe and droplet creation.
Abstract
The breakup of an interface into a cascade of droplets and their subsequent coalescence is a generic problem of central importance to a large number of industrial settings such as mixing, separations, and combustion. We study the breakup of a liquid jet introduced through a cylindrical nozzle into a stagnant viscous phase via a hybrid interface-tracking/level-set method to account for the surface tension forces in a three-dimensional Cartesian domain. Numerical solutions are obtained for a range of Reynolds (Re) and Weber (We) numbers. We find that the interplay between the azimuthal and streamwise vorticity components leads to different interfacial features and flow regimes in Re-We space. We show that the streamwise vorticity plays a critical role in the development of the three-dimensional instabilities on the jet surface. In the inertia-controlled regime at high Re and We, we expose…
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