2011 Annual Meeting

(102c) Aggregation In Homogeneous, Isotropic Turbulence



Aggregation in homogeneous, isotropic turbulence

Aggregation of solid particles suspended in a carrier fluid
is an important particle growth mechanism. In many cases it is an unwanted
phenomenon as it interferes negatively with processes designed for generating
particle size distributions based on nucleation and growth. In other cases
aggregation is desired as it for instance improves the filterability of a slurry. Aggregation and flow dynamics are tightly
connected. For aggregation events to occur, particles need to collide and stick
together. For the bigger particles we are interested in, collisions are mainly
brought about by velocity gradients in the flow field the particles are
suspended in (orthokinetic aggregation); not so much
by Brownian motion. The same velocity gradients that bring together particles
also exert mechanical forces on aggregates that could break them again. We
study this dynamic process of the generation of aggregate size distributions
(ASD's) by means of numerical simulations that fully resolve the fluid and
particle dynamics. Turbulence with well-defined properties is created by means
of linear forcing in a fully periodic, three dimensional domain. In the domain
we release uniformly sized spherical primary particles that we make sticky by
letting them interact through a square-well potential. We study the ASD and its
dynamics as a function of the strength of the turbulence, and as a function of
the strength of the square-well potential. The figure shows some impressions of
the simulations. In the left panel all particles in the domain are shown; they
are colored by the size of the aggregate they are part of (red: small; blue:
big). The right panel shows the four biggest aggregate at the same moment in
time (each aggregate has a different color; the periodic conditions show in the
sense that the red aggregate is connected through the side boundaries).