Abstract

Two-way momentum-coupled direct numerical simulations of a particle-laden turbulent channel flow are addressed to investigate the effect of the particle Stokes number and of the particle-to-fluid density ratio on the turbulence modification. The exact regularised point-particle method is used to model the interphase momentum exchange in presence of solid boundaries, allowing the exploration of an extensive region of the parameter space. Results show that the particles increase the friction drag in the parameter space region considered, namely the Stokes number $St_+ \in [2,80]$ , and the particle-to-fluid density ratio $\rho _p/\rho _f \in [90,5760]$ at a fixed mass loading $\phi =0.4$ . It is noteworthy that the highest drag occurs for small Stokes number particles. A measurable drag increase occurs for all particle-to-fluid density ratios, the effect being reduced significantly only at the highest value of $\rho _p/\rho _f$ . The modified stress budget and turbulent kinetic energy equation provide the rationale behind the observed behaviour. The particles’ extra stress causes an additional momentum flux towards the wall that modifies the structure of the buffer and of the viscous sublayer where the streamwise and wall-normal velocity fluctuations are increased. Indeed, in the viscous sublayer, additional turbulent kinetic energy is produced by the particles’ back-reaction, resulting in a strong augmentation of the spatial energy flux towards the wall where the energy is ultimately dissipated. This behaviour explains the increase of friction drag in particle-laden wall-bounded flows.

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