Intermittency and collisions of fast sedimenting droplets in turbulence
Itzhak Fouxon, Seulgi Lee, and Changhoon Lee

TL;DR
This paper investigates how turbulence and gravity influence droplet distribution and collision rates, revealing the transition between flow regimes and providing a collision kernel applicable to moderate Reynolds numbers.
Contribution
It offers a theoretical and numerical analysis of droplet behavior in turbulence, including the distribution, collision kernel, and the effects of increasing Reynolds number on flow regimes.
Findings
Collision rate is influenced by rare quiescent vortices at higher Re.
Pairwise distance distribution follows a power-law with multifractal characteristics.
Angular RDF shows maximum at small angles, indicating spatial column formation.
Abstract
We study theoretically and numerically spatial distribution and collision rate of droplets that sediment in homogeneous isotropic Navier-Stokes turbulence. It is assumed that typical turbulent accelerations of fluid particles are much smaller than gravity. This was shown to imply that the particles interact weakly with individual vortices and, as a result, form a smooth flow in most of the space. In weakly intermittent turbulence with moderate Reynolds number, rare regions where the flow breaks down can be neglected in the calculation of space averaged rate of droplet collisions. However, increase of Re increases probability of rare, large quiescent vortices whose long coherent interaction with the particles destroys the flow. Thus at higher Re the space averaged collision rate forms in rare regions where the assumption of smooth flow breaks down. We describe the transition between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Aeolian processes and effects
