Abstract

Regime maps that predict the heavy hydrocarbon droplet impingement behavior on a heated wall (Weber number of the impinging droplet v/s wall temperature) are constructed based on CFD simulations using the Volume of Fluid model with the geo-reconstruct scheme. Based on the simulation results, maps are constructed for single-component droplets with a diameter of 50 and of 100µm. The applied CFD model is validated by comparing these with regime maps available in literature, constructed based on experimental data for model liquids and liquid mixtures. The impingement regimes of Splash, Stick, Rebound and Breakup are well-predicted. Two distinct types of Splash (Splash with ligament formation and Splash with ring detachment) are reported for the first time. Using the validated CFD model, regime maps are constructed for multi-component heavy hydrocarbon droplets with a diameter of 50 and of 100µm. Significant differences between the single-component and the multi-component droplet impact behavior are observed. Improved and new correlations for regime transitions, droplet stretching on the wall, droplet rebounding velocity and number of splashed droplets are derived based on energy balances. They are found to correlate well with CFD predictions.

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