Trapping and extreme clustering of finitely-dense inertial particles near a rotating vortex pair
Saumav Kapoor, Divya Jaganathan, Rama Govindarajan

TL;DR
This study investigates how inertial particles with finite density can become trapped and form extreme clusters near vortices in a rotating flow, revealing complex dynamics and routes to chaos.
Contribution
It demonstrates the trapping and clustering behavior of finitely-dense inertial particles in a rotating vortex pair, highlighting the importance of the Basset-Boussinesq force.
Findings
Particles can be indefinitely trapped near vortices.
Extreme clustering into fixed points, limit cycles, and chaotic attractors occurs.
Trapping behavior varies non-monotonically with Stokes number.
Abstract
Small heavy particles cannot get attracted into a region of closed streamlines in a non-accelerating frame (Sapsis & Haller 2010). In a rotating system, however, particles can get trapped (Angilella 2010) near vortices. We perform numerical simulations examining trapping of inertial particles in a prototypical rotating flow: an identical pair of rotating Lamb-Oseen vortices, without gravity. Our parameter space includes the particle Stokes number , measuring the particle's inertia, and a density parameter , measuring the particle-to-fluid relative density. We focus on inertial particles that are finitely denser than the fluid. Particles can get indefinitely trapped near the vortices and display extreme clustering into smaller dimensional objects: attracting fixed-points, limit cycles and chaotic attractors. As increases for a given , we may have an incomplete or complete…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Orbital Angular Momentum in Optics · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
