2008 Annual Meeting
(186az) Cfd Studies of Drag and Heat and Mass Transfer from a Finite Hollow Cylinder In Uniform Flow Over a Range of Approach Angles
Authors
The results of the simulations show the complex nature of the microscale flow around such particles. At a zero incidence angle, the flat end of the particle causes instant separation of the flow and a large wake region is formed, while a jet-like flow results through the hole in the center of the particle. These strong flows give rise to a pattern of vortices behind the particle, with reverse flow along almost the entire particle length. These features are then distorted as the angle of incidence increases, with a boundary-layer formation on the upstream side of the particle and a complex pattern of vortices on the downstream. The flow through the particle hole decreases with incidence angle.
Macroscale drag coefficients and particle surface heat and mass transfer coefficients are determined and used to evaluate literature correlations such as the one mentioned above for use with these types of particle. The microscale features of the flow shed light upon the agreement between CFD simulation results and the empirical correlations, or the lack of it.