An experimental study on the multiscale properties of turbulence in bubble-laden flows
Tian Ma, Hendrik Hessenkemper, Dirk Lucas, Andrew D. Bragg

TL;DR
This experimental study investigates the multiscale turbulence properties in bubble-laden flows, revealing anisotropy, energy transfer directions, and extreme event behaviors at different scales and bubble sizes.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of turbulence structure functions and energy transfer in bubble-laden flows, highlighting the effects of bubble size and void fraction on flow anisotropy and extreme events.
Findings
Velocity structure functions differ in vertical and horizontal directions.
Extreme events are the most anisotropic and occur near bubble wakes.
Energy transfer is downscale horizontally and upscale vertically.
Abstract
The properties of bubble-laden turbulent flows at different scales are investigated experimentally, focusing on the flow kinetic energy, energy transfer, and extreme events. The experiments employed particle shadow velocimetry measurements to measure the flow in a column generated by a homogeneous bubble swarm rising in water, for two different bubble diameters ( mm mm) and moderate gas volume fractions (). The two velocity components were measured at high-resolution, and used to construct structure functions up to twelfth order for separations spanning the small to large scales in the flow. Concerning the flow anisotropy, the velocity structure functions are found to differ for separations in the vertical and horizontal directions of the flow, and the cases with smaller bubbles are the most anisotropic, with a dependence on void fraction. The degree of…
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