Marshall Technical Reports Server

Modeling of Turbulence Effect on Liquid Jet Atomization

NASA/TM-2007-215189, Trinh, H.P., Modeling of Turbulence Effect on Liquid Jet Atomization, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, DC 20546–0001, December 2007, pp. 88, Format(s): PDF 8966k

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Recent studies indicate that turbulence behaviors within a liquid jet have considerable effect on the atomization process. Such turbulent flow phenomena are encountered in most practical applications of common liquid spray devices. This research aims to model the effects of turbulence occurring inside a cylindrical liquid jet to its atomization process. The two widely used atomization models—Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability of Reitz and the Taylor analogy breakup (TAB) of O’Rourke and Amsden—portraying primary liquid jet disintegration and secondary droplet breakup, respectively, are examined. Additional terms are formulated and appropriately implemented into these two models to account for the turbulence effect. Results for the flow conditions examined in this study indicate that the turbulence terms are significant in comparison with other terms in the models. In the primary breakup regime, the turbulent liquid jet tends to break up into large drops while its intact core is slightly shorter than those without turbulence. In contrast, the secondary droplet breakup with the inside liquid turbulence consideration produces smaller drops. Computational results indicate that the proposed models provide predictions that agree reasonably well with available measured data.
Keywords:liquid jet breakup, liquid jet atomization, atomization model, primary droplet breakup, secondary droplet breakup, turbulence effects, liquid spray model
Subjects:Engineering: Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics: Heat Transfer, Basic
Engineering: Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics: Combustion Physics
ID Code:771
Deposited On:28 February 2008