Abstract

Measurements of particle mean and r.m.s. velocity were obtained by laser-Doppler anemometry in a descending solid-liquid turbulent flow in a vertical pipe with volumetric concentrations of suspended spherical particles of 270 μm mean diameter in the range 0.1–14%. Similar measurements were obtained in the flow downstream of an axisymmetric baffle of 50% area blockage placed in the pipe with volumetric concentrations of 310 μm particles up to 8% and of 665 μm particles up to 2%. In order to enable measurements in high particle concentrations without blockage of the laser beams the refractive index of the particles was matched to that of the carrier fluid. The results show that the particle mean velocity profiles become more uniform and the particle r.m.s. velocity decreases with increasing concentration in both flow cases. The particle mean velocity in the pipe flow also decreases with concentration and the relative velocity, the difference between the particle velocity and the fluid velocity in single-phase flow, decreases with increasing Reynolds number. The length of the recirculation region downstream of the baffle was shorter than in single-phase flow by 11 and 24% for particle concentrations of 4 and 8%, respectively. The particle mean velocities were hardly affected by size for concentrations up fo 2%, but the r.m.s. velocities were lower with the larger particles.

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