Sharp depletion of radial distribution function of particles due to collision and coagulation inside turbulent flow
Xiaohui Meng, Ewe-Wei Saw

TL;DR
This study uses DNS to analyze how collision and coagulation in turbulent flow cause a significant depletion in the radial distribution function of particles, revealing dependencies on Stokes number, particle size, and flow Reynolds number.
Contribution
It introduces a collision-induced modulation factor to quantify RDF depletion and explores its dependence on particle and flow parameters, providing new insights into particle clustering behavior.
Findings
RDF strongly decreases near particle diameter due to coagulation
Depletion zone characteristics are weakly dependent on Reynolds number
RDF reduction scale shifts with particle diameter, starting around 2.4d-3d
Abstract
We perform direct numerical simulation (DNS) to study the clustering of small, heavy, monodisperse particles subject to collision-coagulation in turbulent flow (i.e., colliding particles always coagulate (coalesce) into large ones). We find that collision-coagulation causes the radial distribution function (RDF) of the particles to decrease strongly at particle separation distances close to the particle diameter . However, the RDF do not decrease indefinitely but approach a finite value in the limit of . We study how the characteristics of this "depletion zone" relate to the particle Stokes number (St), particle diameter, and the Reynolds number of the turbulent flow. A collision-induced modulation factor is defined to represent the degree of RDF depletion due to collisions-coagulation. In the region where is a quasi-power-law, the corresponding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Coagulation and Flocculation Studies
