화학공학소재연구정보센터
International Journal of Multiphase Flow, Vol.110, 218-237, 2019
Euler-Euler modeling and X-ray measurement of oscillating bubble chain in liquid metals
An Euler-Euler two-fluid approach was used to simulate the behavior of gas bubbles rising in a stagnant liquid metal. A single point injection in the range of moderate gas flow rates results in the formation of bubble chains undergoing distinct oscillations of the bubble trajectories. A set of interfacial closures and a shear stress transport k-omega (SST) turbulence model, namely the baseline model for bubbly flow (Rzehak and Krepper, 2013b) was applied for simulating the transient behavior of the bubble chain. X-ray radiography measurements were conducted to establish an experimental data base for validating the numerical results. The experiments provide a visualization of the two-phase flow in a flat container and allow for determining essential bubble quantities such as the size, shape, trajectory and velocity. The comparison between numerical simulations and experimental data showed a very good qualitative and quantitative agreement with respect to the distribution of the void fraction and the dynamics of the bubble chain. Wrong results were obtained by simulations where the effect of the bubble induced turbulence (BIT) was neglected. Two BIT models were applied within this study, the baseline BIT model and the Sato BIT model. Both models showed a good agreement with the experimental observations, while the results of the baseline model were even closer to the measurements. Thus, the baseline model originally developed for the air-water system has proved to be capable of reproducing the complex transient behavior of oscillating bubble chains in liquid metals. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.