Experimental and numerical investigation of inertial particles in underexpanded jets

Meet Patel, Juan Sebastian Rubio, David Shekhtman, Nicholaus Parziale, Jason Rabinovitch, Rui Ni, Jesse Capecelatro

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Experiments and numerical simulations of inertial particles in underexpanded jets are performed. The structure of the jet is controlled by varying the nozzle pressure ratio, while the influence of particles on emerging shocks and rarefaction patterns is controlled by varying the particle size and mass loading. Ultra-high-speed schlieren and Lagrangian particle tracking are used to experimentally determine the two-phase flow quantities. Three-dimensional simulations are performed using a high-order, low-dissipative discretization of the gas phase while particles are tracked individually in a Lagrangian manner. A simple two-way coupling strategy is proposed to handle interphase exchange in the vicinity of shocks. Velocity statistics of each phase are reported for a wide range of pressure ratios, particle sizes and volume fractions. An upstream shift of the Mach disk in the presence of particles reveals significant two-way coupling even at low mass loading. A semi-analytic model that predicts the extent of the Mach disk shift is presented based on a one-dimensional Fanno flow that takes into account volume displacement by particles and interphase exchange due to drag and heat transfer. The per cent shift in Mach disk is found to scale with the mass loading, nozzle pressure ratio and interphase slip velocity and inversely with the particle diameter.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA60
JournalJournal of Fluid Mechanics
Volume1000
DOIs
StatePublished - 27 Nov 2024

Keywords

  • high-speed flow
  • particle/fluid flow
  • supersonic flow

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