How interfacial tension enhances drag in turbulent Taylor-Couette flow with neutrally buoyant and equally viscous droplets
Jinghong Su, Yi-bao Zhang, Cheng Wang, Lei Yi, Fan Xu, Yaning Fan,, Junwu Wang, Chao Sun

TL;DR
This study uses direct numerical simulations to reveal that interfacial tension causes droplet deformation and asymmetrical forces, which hinder flow structures and significantly increase drag in turbulent Taylor-Couette flow with droplets.
Contribution
It uncovers the mechanism by which interfacial tension enhances drag, highlighting the deformation and force asymmetry on droplets in turbulent flow.
Findings
Interfacial tension causes droplet deformation and stretching.
Opposing forces on droplet front and rear influence flow.
Drag increase is mainly due to hindrance of high-speed streaks.
Abstract
The presence of dispersed-phase droplets can result in a notable increase in the system's drag. However, our understanding of the mechanism underlying this phenomenon remains limited. In this study, we use three-dimensional direct numerical simulations with a modified multi-marker volume-of-fluid method to investigate liquid-liquid two-phase turbulence in a Taylor-Couette geometry. The dispersed phase has the same density and viscosity as the continuous phase. The Reynolds number is fixed at 5200, the volume fraction of the dispersed phase is up to , and the Weber number is around 8. It is found that the increase in the system's drag originates from the contribution of interfacial tension. Specifically, droplets experience significant deformation and stretching in the streamwise direction due to shear near the inner…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
