论文标题
用有限大小的液滴对浓缩乳液的雷利 - 贝纳德对流的有效建模
Effective modelling of the Rayleigh-Bénard convection of concentrated emulsions with finite-size droplets
论文作者
论文摘要
我们在二维浓缩乳液中介绍了雷利 - 贝纳德对流的中尺度数值模拟,该乳液限制在两个平行壁之间,在浮力的效果下从下方加热并从上方冷却。所研究的系统包括有限大小的液滴,其浓度$φ_0$各不等,范围从稀释极限到开始挤满乳液并表现出非牛顿流变学。我们专注于从导电到对流状态过渡的对流传热特性的表征。对流流是限制和异质性的,这会导致乳液在空间中表现出浓度异质性$ ϕ_0(y)$,具体取决于壁到壁方向的位置($ y $)。为了定量评估此类异质系统的传热效率,我们求助于浓缩乳液系统与单相(SP)系统之间的并排比较,其本地粘度$η^{\ mbox {sp}}(y)$适当地从emuls emuls emuls emulsion的剪切式流动性中适当地构造出来。这种比较强调,需要在本地粘度$η_λ^{\ mbox {sp}}}(y)$中引入合适的粗粒度$λ$,以使单相系统达到乳液的相同热传递效率。具体而言,可以表明,只要在液滴尺寸的尺度上执行粗粒度时,两种系统之间的定量匹配就是可能的。
We present mesoscale numerical simulations of Rayleigh-Bénard convection in a two-dimensional concentrated emulsion, confined between two parallel walls, heated from below and cooled from above, under the effect of buoyancy forces. The systems under study comprise finite-size droplets, whose concentration $Φ_0$ is varied, ranging from the dilute limit up to the point where the emulsion starts to be packed and exhibits non-Newtonian rheology. We focus on the characterisation of the convective heat transfer properties close to the transition from conductive to convective states. The convective flow is confined and heterogeneous, which causes the emulsion to exhibit concentration heterogeneities in space $ϕ_0(y)$, depending on the location in the wall-to-wall direction ($y$). With the aim of assessing quantitatively the heat transfer efficiency of such heterogeneous systems, we resort to a side-by-side comparison between the concentrated emulsion system and a single-phase (SP) system, whose local viscosity $η^{\mbox{SP}}(y)$ is suitably constructed from the shear rheology of the emulsion. Such comparison highlights that a suitable degree $Λ$ of coarse-graining needs to be introduced in the local viscosity $η_Λ^{\mbox{SP}}(y)$, in order for the single-phase system to attain the same heat transfer efficiency of the emulsion. Specifically, it is shown that a quantitative matching between the two systems is possible whenever the coarse-graining is performed over a scale of the order of the droplet size.